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Easter!

I would say that Easter is one of the most misunderstood holidays, but in reality, most Christian holidays (including Groundhog’s Day) are based on pagan holiday and, by default, are misunderstood.

“Whoa, Gwen,” you say, “I understand that Christmas and Halloween are based on heathen practices but Easter? The most holy day of Christianity?”

And Gwen says, “Yup.”

First, consider the word “Easter.” It is based on a Celtic/Germanic goddess of the dawn/spring, Ostara or Eostre. Several years ago, fundie Christians claimed the name descended from “Ishtar,” the Babylonian goddess of fertility. This only showed the ignorance of those claimants. While the names sound alike, consider the likelihood that a Babylonian name would survive thousands of years to be chosen as a title for a pagan holiday in Europe. There is no direct lineage of practices and any deities/myths are archetypal in nature. The name also far predates Wicca (which dates from the mid 20th century) but Ostara is one of the sabbats in the Wheel of the Year.

Then, there are the pagan symbols associated with the day. Bunnies and eggs are symbols of fertility, which, in turn, symbolize birth. Note that this reference to “birth” is actual physical birth, not necessarily resurrection. However, while on the topic of resurrection, Jesus joins other deities who are reborn/resurrected in spring. Most notably, Persephone ascends from Hades and lives above ground until autumn dictates her return. When Inanna died and was dead for three days (a precursor to the time Jesus spent in the tomb), all fertility stopped; her return to the upper world meant “things” could return to normal. The seasons differ in Mesopotamia than they do in Europe, but the emphasis is on growing seasons. Spring officially began with the vernal equinox, but most signs that spring is here occur around this time.

In the modern world, Jesus is the most famous dying/resurrecting deity, but he is based on thousands of years of history preceding him.

Celebrate what you like, but this is the celebration of the reaffirmation of life . . . And life goes on. Yup, we will die someday, and some believe that they will be resurrected in an afterlife. For those who do not hold this belief, life goes on because the human race goes on.

That is, of course, until the earth is burnt to a cinder by the red giant of the sun. By then, humans will be extinct--don't worry, we have a few more centuries! In the meantime, sit in the sun and acknowledge that without it, we would not be alive. Eat, drink, be merry, and begin to prepare for the coming winter.

(I like to think of the Cosmic or Universal Egg that exists in many creation myths as a giant Easter egg. And on that image . . . Enjoy!)

Gwendolyn2018 9 Apr 4
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6 comments

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0

Ishtar has gone by many names, i guess?

1

What would Christians do if Jesus saw his shadow? I had a phone message to that effect once for the "leave a message beep" Needless to say I got lots of hangups!

1

Personally I prefer to follow the pagan celebrations as they are more fun to be involved in and at least have some grounding in reality, being most are based on the seasons etc. Although being in the southern hemisphere the dates are all messed up right now it would be samhain not eostre. But also being near the equator it is hard to tell the difference as we don't get four distinct seasons.

2

One thing I can never understand is that eating the flesh of animals with cloven hooves is forbidden in the Old Testament. So why do American Christians eat tens of millions of sacrificial pigs every Easter Sunday? Is eating pork representative of eating Jeezus meat?

The revelation of St Paul gave Christiians permission to ignore the diet laws.

MY understanding , ( certainly could be wrong on this) it had to do with the inability to safely cure/store the meats of that era. Anyone know the backstory?

1

I'm just glad I could pull and extension cord and my Sawzall out to finish up chopping up some Mulberry that I need to cure for the smoker lol

@Gwendolyn2018 no. It's more commonly called a reciprocating saw.

@Gwendolyn2018 a Sawzall is a "reciprocating saw", it is used extensively in home heavy-duty renovations as it can easily remove walls, saws through big nails, beams, piping, whatever. However, after 47 years here my renovations are Almost done, so I use mine more often as a "chainsaw"...I especially like using old blades to go below the surface of the dirt to cut the roots of bushes, woody weeds, saplings & etc. However, a Sawzall needs a good heavy-duty electrical cord, most chainsaws are gasoline-powered,and so you can roam more. Both have "deadman" cut-off switches.

@Gwendolyn2018 Recommend getting a battery powered chainsaw, then you don’t have to deal with mixing and storing old fuel for something used infrequently. I just cut up a medium sized tree with plenty of power left in the battery.

@Gwendolyn2018 you can get quite long blades for them, if that is the issue,

@Gwendolyn2018 you would really have to work at it! 😁 If you’re determined enough, you could do it with a pocket knife. I do consider the reciprocal saw much safer than a chain saw though not as fast on green wood.

@Canndue the 20v Dewalt is excellent. My dad has it

@Gwendolyn2018 best to have someone show you the tool and things to watch out for regarding stresses on the trees. They are relatively safe when used properly.

@Gwendolyn2018, @redhog I have the ego tools. Started there (they were innovators), not the best tools, but they do the job.

@Gwendolyn2018 I only have this stuff because I grew up as a 6th generation carpenter. The Sawzall I have is over 40 years old and still running and was handed down by my 63 year old father to me last year because he got cordless lol

@Gwendolyn2018 luckily I'm not as accident prone as my 9.5 fingered adopted middle brother lol

2

I don't celebrate the Xian Easter, but I acknowledge the fertility rites of peoples of history, and I'm just damn glad winter seems to be over, and chocolate.

@Gwendolyn2018 You have a most accurate background post here on where Easter really came from and how we got to where we are with it today. My posts and ideas are simply into the Christian belief and the myth is disproved by the ever changing calendar dates. This is all a big part in why I am no longer Christian.

Still fine to celebrate, solstices/equinox is as good a reason as any. We need more secular celebrations, religious don’t have a monopoly on celebrations...

@Canndue Very true!! We just need to give them better namess.

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