i Register
In some senses, pasch is marked as archaic. Watch for register when choosing this word.
VERB + PASCH
called, celebrate, eat
PASCH + NOUN
jesus
PREP.
on
noun
Passover
Easter
noun
The feast of Passover or (specifically) the Paschal Lamb, or (for Christians), Easter, seen as the fulfillment of Passover.
And on the first day of the Azymes, the disciples came to Jesus, saying: Where wilt thou that we prepare for thee to eat the pasch? But Jesus said: Go ye into the city to a certain man, and say to him: the master saith, My time is near at hand, with thee I make the pasch with my disciples.
NOW the feast of unleavened bread, which is called the pasch, was at hand.
The Paschal Mystery; the death and resurrection of Jesus.
The Man-God had scarcely returned to His Father when the Apostles hastened to establish a solemn festival to commemorate His pasch, that is to say, His glorious passage from death to life.
The immediate future of his pasch is his saving death, through which humanity is reconciled. The long-term, eschatological future is found in the promise of his resurrection and embraces the whole future of the life of the Church […]
And on the first day of the Azymes, the disciples came to Jesus, saying: Where wilt thou that we prepare for thee to eat the pasch? But Jesus said: Go ye into the city to a certain man, and say to him
WiktionaryNOW the feast of unleavened bread, which is called the pasch, was at hand.
WiktionaryVictor, bishop of Rome, A. D. 192, thus writes: ‘[…] (we find) the catholic church celebrate ^([sic]) pasch, not on the fourteenth of the moon, with the Jews, but from the fifteenth day to the twenty-
Wiktionaryi Register
In some senses, pasch is marked as archaic. Watch for register when choosing this word.