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Easter is a religious holiday that
commemorates the resurrection of Jesus Christ three days after his death by
crucifixion some 2,000 years ago. For Christians, Easter is the most important
holy day of the year. It is a day of religious services and gathering of
family.
In many churches, Easter is preceded by a season of prayer,
abstinence, and fasting called Lent. This is observed in memory of the 40 days'
fast of Christ in the desert. In Eastern Orthodox churches Lent is 50 days. In
Western Christendom Lent is observed for six weeks and four days.
Ash Wednesday, the first day of Lent, gets its name from the
practice, mainly in the Roman Catholic church, of putting ashes on the
foreheads of the faithful to remind them that man is but dust. Palm Sunday, one
week before Easter, celebrates the entry of Jesus into Jerusalem. Holy Week
begins on this day. Holy Thursday, or Maundy Thursday, is in memory of the Last
Supper of Christ with his disciples. Good Friday commemorates the
crucifixion.
Lent may be preceded by a carnival season. Elaborate pageants
often close this season on Shrove Tuesday, the day before the beginning of
Lent. This day is also called by its French name, Mardi Gras.
The name Easter comes from Eostre (pronounced yo'ster), an
ancient Anglo-Saxon goddess. In pagan times an annual spring festival was held
in her honor. Some Easter customs have come from this and other pre-Christian
spring festivals. Others come from the Passover feast of the Jews, observed in
memory of their deliverance from Egypt.
The Easter Bunny, a popular secular image of the holiday,
originated with the hare, an ancient symbol for the moon. According to legend,
the bunny was originally a large, handsome bird belonging to Eostre, the
Goddess of Spring. (Eostre is also known as Ostara, a Goddess of fertility who
is celebrated at the time of the Spring equinox) She changed the bird into a
rabbit, which explains why the Easter bunny builds a nest and fills it with
colored eggs. The first edible Easter bunnies were made in Germany during the
early 1800s. They were made of pastry and sugar.
Around the time of the Civil War, Americans began to celebrate
Easter in much the same manner as Europeans, with children building nests for
the Easter bunny to fill with eggs. Since that time, Easter has become a major
religious and secular celebration in the U.S.
The egg is another popular symbol of Easter. Eggs were dyed and
eaten during spring festivals in ancient Egypt, Persia, Greece and Rome.
Colored eggs were not associated with Easter until the 15th century. Many
Americans follow old traditions of coloring hard-boiled eggs and giving
children baskets of candy. On the next day, Easter Monday, the president of the
United States holds an annual Easter egg hunt on the White House lawn for young
children.
The white lily, the symbol of the resurrection, is the typical
Easter flower. The white lily stands for purity. Artists for centuries have
pictured the angel Gabriel coming to the Virgin Mary with a spray of lilies in
his hand, to announce that she is to be the mother of the Christ child. The
white Madonna lily was used for years as the Easter lily. It often failed to
bloom in time for Easter, however, and so Bermuda, or white trumpet, lily was
substituted. The Bermuda lily was brought to the United States from Bermuda in
the 1880s by Mrs. Thomas P. Sargent of Philadelphia, and it has become a
mainstay of Easter floral arrangements and church decorations.
Easter Candles are sometimes lit in churches on the eve of
Easter Sunday. Some believe that these can be directly linked to the Pagan
customs of lighting bonfires at this time of year to welcome the
rebirth/resurrection of the sun God. |