A Virtual Easter is Still Easter
Easter celebrates
the resurrection of Jesus Christ. The
death and resurrection of Christ represent the temporal manifestation of an
ecclesiastical gift of grace. Faced with
the perfection of God, the imperfection of man condemns us to eternal
death. But, God used the sacrifice of
his son, Jesus Christ, to atone for the sins of all mankind. If we accept that sacrifice through faith in
its reality, we are given eternal forgiveness.
To
the world and the worldly, this seems almost too easy. We could live the high life, violate every
commandment, indulge every vice and still know that we face no eternal
retribution. Our earthly partners may
find us to be reprehensible, vile, even criminal, but our Heavenly Father would
still welcome us with open arms because Jesus has paid the penalty. What a sweet deal! This could be the ultimate, “get out of jail
free” card. However, this concept of
Grace, undeserved mercy, starts bending your mind. It touches your heart, and, ultimately, frees
your soul. Now the good that you do is
motivated by love and gratitude, not fear.
There is no way that a person can accept God’s gift of Grace without being
touched by it. This makes Easter a
weighty and wonderful celebration.
For non-believers the quaint and
worldly customs surrounding all religious holidays may cloud the religious
skies. For a theologically heavy event
like Easter that confusion is both easy and insidious.
Easter is celebrated on the first
Sunday after the first full moon, after the first day of spring, seemingly
making it more astronomical than celestial.
Christ was crucified after observing Passover, so the holiday is tied to
the Jewish calendar. It is actually a
much longer festival than just a single day.
It represents the 40 days preceding Easter (Lent and Holy week) and the
50 day period after Easter (leading up to Jesus’ ascension into Heaven). Every part of this time is commemorative of
some important aspect of Jesus life and ministry. Just as the theological meanings of Easter
are thinned and dispersed over better than two months, the temporal traditions
of Easter are concentrated in eggs and bunnies.
The
name, “Easter” may be an adaption of the name, “Eostre” a Teutonic goddess of
spring and fertility. Certainly with all
of the chicks, eggs and bunnies we have rolling around the Easter scene that
would be a reasonable association to make.
Eggs have been dyed and decorated for hundreds of years starting in India by
Zoroastrians. They were adopted by the
early church to symbolize the empty tomb of Christ as well as resurrection of
life. Easter bunnies (hares to the old-world
Christians) were symbols of both fertility and, oddly, eggs. This may be because hares nested on the ground
as did many birds common to the same areas.
In any eventuality those egg carrying bunnies made it into the religious
celebration. So between the Jewish
calendar, Pagan goddesses and far Eastern traditions, we have a Christian
holiday.
There is a lesson here for those who
have eyes to see, ears to hear and minds to think. The early church had a core message that
transcended all temporal disputes. It
spread by adapting to the customs of its constituency. The Gospel was too big to be lost to small arguments. The breadth of the goal could handle small
course corrections.
Christianity
is the biggest idea this world has ever known.
How else does the preaching of a man with no family, no money and no
power become a world encompassing credo?
Live the faith to keep the faith.
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