02-13-2012, 09:56 PM
Shlama! I had completely forgotten to reply to this one... but better late than never... <!-- s --><img src="{SMILIES_PATH}/blush.gif" alt="" title="Blush" /><!-- s -->
I would suggest consulting an official ecclesiastical calendar used by the church in order to know which of the 57 Sundays that are actually observed any given year and on which dates they fall. For 2012 I have taken the liberty to scan one of the Assyrian Church of the East's calendars.
<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://dukhrana.com/shared/ACOE-Ecclesiastical_Calendar_2012.pdf">http://dukhrana.com/shared/ACOE-Ecclesi ... r_2012.pdf</a><!-- m -->
However, if one really wants to get technical and get down to the bare details, then the ACOE has a book called "the Little Chronicle" by Rev. Emmanuel R. Joseph, which discusses in great detail how to calculate when events occur during a year and even contains calculated charts up until year 2506.
//Lars
I would suggest consulting an official ecclesiastical calendar used by the church in order to know which of the 57 Sundays that are actually observed any given year and on which dates they fall. For 2012 I have taken the liberty to scan one of the Assyrian Church of the East's calendars.
<!-- m --><a class="postlink" href="http://dukhrana.com/shared/ACOE-Ecclesiastical_Calendar_2012.pdf">http://dukhrana.com/shared/ACOE-Ecclesi ... r_2012.pdf</a><!-- m -->
However, if one really wants to get technical and get down to the bare details, then the ACOE has a book called "the Little Chronicle" by Rev. Emmanuel R. Joseph, which discusses in great detail how to calculate when events occur during a year and even contains calculated charts up until year 2506.
//Lars