When Is Lent?
In 2026, Lent is observed from Wednesday, February 18, to Thursday, April 2. Some key dates of this Lenten season include:
Ash Wednesday: February 18, 2026
Palm Sunday: March 29, 2026
Maundy Thursday: April 2, 2026
Good Friday: April 3, 2026
Holy Saturday: April 4, 2026 The above dates do not apply to Eastern Orthodox churches, whose religious calendar uses the Julian calendar. For this branch of Christians, Great Lent 2026 begins on Monday, February 23, and ends on Saturday, April 11.
What’s the Difference Between Easter and Orthodox Easter?
The holidays both celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ, but have some different traditions and are based on different calendars.
The holidays both celebrate the resurrection of Jesus Christ, but have some different traditions and are based on different calendars.
Origin of Lent
The practice of Lent has ancient roots in early Christianity, dating back to the first centuries after Christ’s death and resurrection. According to Eusebius, a fourth century historian of the early church, the earliest Christians seem to have practiced fasting in preparation for Easter, even if it was for just one or two days.
After the legalization of Christianity in A.D. 313, the practice of Lent gradually became more established, including a 40-day period of Easter preparation that focused on prayer and fasting. The number 40 holds biblical significance: During Noah’s flood, it rained for 40 days and 40 nights; Moses remained on Mount Sinai for 40 days and nights preparing to receive the Ten Commandments; and Elijah walked for the same amount of time to reach the mountain of God. More importantly, observers of Lent fast and pray in imitation of Jesus, who was led by the Holy Spirit into the wilderness for 40 days and 40 nights to face temptations from the devil before he began ministering to the public.
Leaders of the early Christian church agreed at the Council of Nicaea in A.D. 325 that Easter should be celebrated on the Sunday following the first full moon after the vernal equinox. They also acknowledged the existence of a 40-day preparatory period leading up to that holy Sunday, though they did not mandate the observance of Lent.
In 601, Pope Gregory I moved the start of Lent to 46 days before Easter, allowing for 40 days of fasting plus six Sundays, the traditional feast day, when the rules of fasting did not apply. The Lenten season still spans 46 days today.
Gregory (590–604) also established the tradition of Ash Wednesday, including the foundations of the now-common practice of marking parishioners’ foreheads with ashes in the shape of a cross. Like the number 40, ashes have roots in ancient Christian traditions. Several figures in the Old Testament, including Mordecai, Job and Daniel, marked themselves with ashes and wore sackcloth as a sign of their repentance before God. People in the early church carried on this usage of ashes for symbolic reasons. In his book The History of the Church, Eusebius chronicled the experience of an apostate named Natalis clothed in sackcloth and ashes begging forgiveness from Pope Zephyrinus (A.D. 199–217).