A
Short History of Easter
The story behind eggs, lamb, and hot cross buns
By Emily Helgersen
If a visitor from outer space were to go to any Christian country,
he would probably conclude that the most important religious holiday
there was Christmas. He might be forgiven for thinking so: Christmas
after all receives much more attention, whether in the media, at home
and especially in the business world, than virtually any other holiday.
However, from a spiritual standpoint Christmas ranks far behind Easter.
My father explained it well for me: anybody can be born, but not everyone
can rise from the dead. Therefore as Christians it behoves us to know
a little bit more about the history of this pivotal feast day.
The original word for Easter was Pascha in Greek (the
root of the term paschal). Pascha in turn
stems from the Hebrew Pesach, Passover, an important Jewish
holiday that occurs in early spring and commemorates the Israelites'
freedom from slavery in Egypt. Unlike Christmas and Hanukah, which
also occur at roughly the same time of year but have nothing in common
religiously, Passover and Easter have always been intricately connected.
Jesus' Last Supper was essentially a Passover meal. In fact, there
was great controversy in the early Church as to whether Easter should
be observed on the date of Passover itself or on the Sunday immediately
following the first full moon on or after March 21. As the Jewish
influence in the Church began to wane, the latter date prevailed -
partly on the grounds that Jesus was resurrected on a Sunday. The
Eastern Orthodox Churches go by the Julian rather than Gregorian calendar,
so their Easter often falls on a different Sunday - occasionally a
month apart - from that of the Western (Catholic and Protestant) Churches.
______________________________
Passover and Easter have
always been intricately connected.
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As Christianity spread from its original homeland of Palestine, Easter
celebrations took on a number of pre-Christian customs, including
ones familiar to us like the rabbit and painted eggs. The reason for
adopting these traditions was to make Easter and Christianity in general
more palatable to pagan converts so that they didn't have to feel
that embracing the new religion meant an end to fun and games. Easter
egg decoration has become quite an art in some countries, particularly
those in Eastern Europe. Though now artificial dyes are used for this
purpose, traditionally the eggs were coloured by wrapping them in
onion skins and boiling them. The colour from the onion peel would
then seep onto the egg. The most famous Easter eggs in
history were those made in enamel, gold, silver and other metals by
jeweller Peter Carl Faberge for the Russian royal family in the late
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries.
After the Reformation, the many Protestant denominations took different
approaches to Easter. Groups like the Lutherans and Anglicans continued
to observe it as the Catholics before them had done. On the other
hand, the Puritans in early colonial America shunned overt Easter
celebrations. Some historians say this was because they saw the holiday
as Popish, a derogatory term for Roman Catholic, others
that they were suspicious of the pagan origins of some popular Easter
traditions (what always comes to my mind is the old adage that a Puritan
is a person who gets upset at the notion that somebody somewhere may
be having more fun than he or she is). In fact Easter was not celebrated
widely in the United States until the mid-1800s, in contrast to the
rampant commercialism surrounding the holiday today.
______________________________
Easter egg decoration has
become quite an art in some
countries, particularly those in Eastern Europe.
Most Christian countries have developed their own Easter
traditions. Many of these customs involve food.
______________________________
For example, the Russians bake a delicious
bread called kulich with butter, eggs, milk and sometimes fruits and
nuts (hint from a seasoned shopper: if you wait until after Easter
to buy kulich, you can often get it half-price). England's famous
hot cross buns are also a traditional Easter serving. Baking bread
for Easter seems to have a long history in that nation. Twelfth-century
chronicles from the village of Biddenden in Kent County speak of two
women, Siamese twins named Eliza and Mary Chalkhurst, who ordered
in their will that following their death breads and cakes with an
effigy of the girls on the top be distributed to the poor of their
town on Easter Sundays. My father, who is Sicilian, told me of how
his parents would buy a lamb in late February or early March. After
a few weeks of eating to its heart's content and putting on several
extra pounds, the lamb would - to my father's and his siblings' dismay
- end up on the Easter Sunday dinner table.
So have a Happy Easter - but remember how it got here!
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Emily
Helgersen is a secretary, translator and musician based in Toronto,
Canada. In her spare time, she likes to write about music, religion
or anything else that strikes her fancy. In this picture she's
enjoying her spare time by holding her nephew Tommy
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