In honor of the upcoming Rottentail graphic novel from us at Abnormal Entertainment, the Cheese presents the REAL scoop on this venerated holiday. WARNING: The following may seem blasphemous to sheeple.
Unknown
to many Christians, the icons and traditions of most of the celebrations of
Easter are from a pagan, or non-Christian, origin. According to the gospel,
Easter is the celebration of Christ's resurrection and ascension into Heaven.
It is a day of prayer, feasting and penitent worship. Most of the treasured and
valued traditions of Easter celebrations, though, are the work of a much older
pagan religions and simply have been adopted by first the Catholic church and
then, subsequently, by the splinter groups, most prominently the Protestant
sects.
Hebrew
celebrations center around the Equinox also and coincide with Easter. April was
termed mensis paschalis, and many
other names for Easter are taken from the root pasch. Jesus was crucified during Passover (pesach in Hebrew). The month of April has stood as a month of
celebration for most religions.
Easter
rabbits are not a completely Christian or even Western convention of Easter,
either. Rabbits were a pre-Christian fertility symbol for hundreds of years.
Due to the rabbit's notable capacity for the abundant production of young in
the spring, they were adopted as a symbol of rebirth. Often times, the rabbits
were used as symbols of Christ's post-Resurrection appearances. They would
appear and then disappear, and then seen somewhere else entirely. The first mention
of the actual Easter Bunny, and his habit of leaving eggs lying around for
children to find, apparently began in Germany in the 1500s. The belief
was that the Easter Bunny laid red eggs on Holy Thursday and multi-colored eggs
on the night before Easter Sunday.
The
ancient Egyptians and Persians would give multi-colored eggs to one another at
the dawning of the Spring Equinox. They were a symbol of creation, fertility
and new-life. Apparently, the idea that a living creature could be born from an
egg was awe-inspiring enough to promote the egg to mythical heights. Christians
of the Near East adopted this tradition and
the Easter Egg became a religious symbol. It represented the tomb that from
which Jesus escaped into Heaven. Many times the eggs were colored red,
representing the blood of Christ and given to children and servants as a
special treat in the Middle Ages (eggs were a forbidden food during Lent).
Other
conventions of Easter celebrations are very modern and were not practiced until
recent times. Easter Lilies, for example, are a very popular representation of
Easter celebrations throughout the West. The tradition is less than 100 years
old when the first white trumpet lilies were brought to North America from Bermuda. Blooming in the Spring, coinciding with Easter,
and quickly becoming an Easter tradition.
Many
of the traditions and representations of the Easter Holiday are steeped in
thousand-year-old beliefs and myths, and not uniquely Christian ideals.
Borrowing from ancient Egypt
and Persia,
the mythology of the Greek gods, pagan Goddess worship and Norse deities and
even Hebrew beliefs.
No comments:
Post a Comment