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Conference tecrus::mormonism

Title:The Glory of God is Intelligence.
Moderator:BSS::RONEY
Created:Thu Jan 28 1988
Last Modified:Fri Apr 25 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:460
Total number of notes:6198

401.0. "Easter - Pagan or Christian Trappings?" by CAPNET::RONDINA () Tue Apr 14 1992 16:21

    My 6 year old daughter came to me this week and asked me if
    we were going to put up an Easter Tree with eggs on the branches.
    Later she asked if she could write a letter to the Easter bunny.
    I started to get the feeling that Easter is becoming another Christmas,
    only worse because none of the images of Easter are Christ-centered.
    Below is what I learned after a little study.
    
    Name:      Easter got its name from the Germanic/Anglo-Saxon goddess
               Oestre or Oestern, who represented the spring and fertility.
    
    Myth:      Oestre's brother Baldur-the Sun God had died.  It was 
               Oestre who opened the gates of Valhalla for him to enter.
    
    Symbol:    The rabbit was Oestre's symbol, because she was the goddess
               of the moon, and rabbits are born with eyes that are glazed
               over like the moon. German immigrants brought the bunny to
               America.
    
    Baskets:   Originally the baskets were filled with straw to duplicate
               rabbit's nests.
    
    Eggs:      Eggs are symbols of new life in several Near Eastern
               cultures, like the Persians, Greeks, Hindus, Egyptians, etc.
               European crusaders brought back decorated eggs from their
               adventures.
    
    Sunrise    These ceremonies were held by Druids (and many other
    Ceremonies cultures) because as the days shortened it was believed that
               the sun was dying.  To encourage it not to die, but to
               renew itself, the Druids held early morning worship rites.
        
    Ham:       The traditional Easter Ham dinner was started by the English
               in the late 1800's as an act of contempt against Jews for
               having crucified Christ. 
               
    Clothes:   A Roman emperor ordered his court to wear new togas at the
               new moon after the vernal equinox.
    
    Date:      The Roman emperor Constantine fixed the date to be the first
               Sunday after the vernal equinox.
    
    The original Christians did not celebrate Easter.  As a matter of fact
    there was a lot of debate in the early church about whether the date
    should be celebrated at all.  Those who celebrated it were called the
    40-day celebrators (in Latin).
    
    If you have any other ideas or information about the origins of this
    holiday, I would be glad to hear about it.
    
    Paul
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401.2TRACTR::QUAYLEi.e. AnnThu Apr 16 1992 11:5215
    If I had it to do over, and thank goodness I don't, I'd do at least two
    things differently with my children at holidays.  At Christmas we'd
    use an actual sock instead of the (seems bigger every year) cute
    stocking, and we'd celebrate the egg and chocolate bunny "holiday" on
    Saturday, saving Easter Sunday for a true Holy Day.
    
    I don't think the hoopla around Easter is a resurgence or glorification
    of paganism, I think it's just standard (to 20th century USA
    culture, that is) consumerism/capitalism.  Still, as Paul points out,
    the result is lessened focus on our Savior, particularly the atonement and
    resurrection.
    
    aq
     
    
401.3traditions can make good memoriesTRACTR::QUAYLEi.e. AnnThu Apr 16 1992 11:5814
    Another thought:  my children have some very happy memories of the
    coloring and hiding eggs, setting out baskets, and the Easter tree 
    (actually a large branch or bunch of pussy willows in a vase), and each 
    year we try to add at least one bought or homemade ornament to it, but I 
    hope I've positioned it to them more as a family tradition in celebration 
    of spring than as the main focus of Easter.
    
    I'm thinking of bagging the tree this year because my family now
    consists of my youngest daughter (who rather dislikes me), myself
    and two cats, one of whom would undoubtedly turn the tree into a
    stressor.  We'll see though.
    
    aq
    
401.4A Christ-centered EasterCAPNET::RONDINAThu Apr 16 1992 12:5921
    Ann,
    
    You evoked some family traditions I grew up with as a boy.  Palm
    Sunday I received a palm made into a tiny cross and wore it on my
    lapel, representing Jesus' triumphal entry into Jerusalem. Holy
    Thursday and Good Friday were holy days wherein we fasted, attended
    Easter vigil/prarer services (which usually when around the clock).  
    Clerygymen re-enacted the Last Supper, even to the washing of the 
    feet.  Special Easter candles were used, icons draped in black.
    Friday no sound was allowed between noon and 3pm,  Christ's hours on
    the cross.  No music, TV, etc. was allowed on these very holy days.
    Easter Sunday was filled with joyous celebration, not of Spring, but of
    the resurrection of Christ.  All of the above was so very Christ-
    centered.
    
    Contrast all of the above with eggs, baskets, bunnies, etc. and you
    can see why the current celebration of Easter leaves me cold.
    
    Just my thoughts,
    
    Paul
401.5One Small Fact about EasterCGHUB::WREDEFri Apr 17 1992 09:419
    Fact:
    
    Easter Sunday is the most attended Church service by members of the
    church.  Statics show that this Sunday has a higher percentage of
    attendance than any other Sunday.  Christmas Sunday running a close
    second.
    
    
    Lee
401.6XCUSME::QUAYLEi.e. AnnFri Apr 17 1992 10:002
    Good, since I bought plenty of extra programs!  :)
    
401.7ROCK::LEIGHModeratorFri Apr 24 1992 16:472
FYI: I moved the replies that are discussing the
resurrection to note 297, the resurrection note.
401.8Easter- a Druid HolydayAKOCOA::RONDINAThu Mar 31 1994 09:0934
    It's Easter time again, and I can't help being repulsed by the
    commercialism that crops up.  So, just a reminder of what Easter is
    about:
    
    Easter	Name of the Druid Goddess of the Moon (and fertility)
         	(actually it was Oestre.)
    
    Bunny	Her symbol
    
    Baskets	Were filled with straw as a replica of rabbit's nests
    
    Sunrise	Druid practice to encourage/celebrate the sun's longer
    Ceremonies	stay in the sky
    
    Ham		Started by the British as a slam against the Jews for
    		their role in Christ's death
    
    Clothes	Started by Roman emperor for his court
    
    Eggs	Near eastern symbol for life and fertility
    
    Egg Trees	Latest American fad
    
    From the above you can see how all the symbols around Easter are so
    truly Christian.  We do not observe any of these pagan symbols in my
    house, rather the kids of events in Christ's life surrounding
    Resurrection Day (which by some accounts was on a Saturday morning).
    
    Since here in the Northern Hemisphere Easter is more a celebration of
    Spring, I often wonder what people in other climates do.
    
    Paul (who knows he's beating the drum on this topic, but, somebody's
    gotta do it)
                        
401.9more on EasterFRETZ::HEISERanother day in DECrestaurantThu Mar 31 1994 12:1338
    Paul, thanks for entering that.  I'd also like to add a couple from
    some research I've read on the subject:
    
    Easter Lily - also associated with fertility and reproduction.  "The
    fragrant, waxy white flower we call the Easter lily is not a spring
    flower or an American flower at all.  A lily growing on islands near
    Japan was taken to Bermuda and then traveled to the United States to
    become our most special Easter plant.  Flower growers have learned how
    to make it bloom in time." - Edna Barth, "Lilies, Rabbits, and Painted
    Eggs : Story of the Easter Symbols", New York: The Seabury Press, 1970.
    
    More on the Lily - "Having become symbolic of the season, churches
    [sic] worldwide decorate their altars with these beautiful flowers, and
    innumerable thousands of them are given away to women at Easter as
    gifts.  Few, however, realize the ancient significance of such gifts! 
    The so-called 'Easter lily' has long been revered by pagans of various
    lands as a holy symbol associated with the reproductive organs.  It was
    considered a phallic symbol!  One might easily surmise what was being
    suggested by sending a gift of such nature in ancient times."  Russel
    K. Tardo, "Rabbits, Eggs, and Other Easter Errors", by Faithful Word
    Publications, Arabi, Louisiana.
    
    Hot cross bun - often associated with Good Friday, but its real
    significance pertains to Easter.  It goes back to the ancient pagan
    custom of worshipping the Queen of Heaven with offerings of cakes
    marked with her image.  It is said that the Egyptians made buns with 2
    horns on them to offer to the moon goddess, and that the Greeks changed
    the symbol to a cross so the bun could be more easily divided. 
    Anglo-Saxons marked theirs with a cross to honor the goddess of light. 
    Jeremiah refers to these in Jeremiah 7:18, 44:17-19,25.  The Queen of
    Heaven is Ishtar (Easter).
    
    The wearing of new clothes and hats and the so-called Easter parade
    originated in heathenism.  
    
    Easter fires are a leftover from spring rites.
    
    Mike