The pagan origins of Easter

Aviator

Elder Lister
Cc @Pastor

Easter is a Christian festival celebrated across the world, commemorating the resurrection of Jesus Christ after his crucifixion. It falls at a time of the year known as the spring equinox when the length of the nights in the Northern Hemisphere becomes identical to the length of the days. Spring is a time of renewal and rebirth as winter begins to fall away with the promise of sunnier, longer days lying ahead. For thousands of years, people from varying cultures have marked and celebrated the equinoxes and solstices (longest and shortest days of the year).

The pre-Christian ancient world is filled with stories of resurrection around spring. One of the world’s oldest civilisations, the Sumer who lived in southern Mesopotamia (modern southern Iraq), inscribed a story of their goddess Inanna onto a clay tablet some two thousand years before Christ.

The story goes that Inanna descended into the underworld to find her recently deceased husband. There she was killed before being brought back to life by other gods. She was permitted to return to the world as the sun for six months before having to descend into the underworld once again during the winter for a further six months. It is perhaps the first ancient story of resurrection and rebirth centred on spring.

There were many more stories amongst ancient civilisations that followed a similar theme including the resurrection of Horus, the falcon-headed ancient Egyptian deity and the death and rebirth of the Greek god Dionysus. They are stories that share ideologies about renewal and light conquering darkness.

As Christianity began to sweep across Europe, many pagan festivals and traditions were absorbed and adapted into the Christian faith. It made sense that the already ingrained concept of new life being celebrated during springtime should become associated with Jesus conquering death and being reborn.

If you’ve noticed, the date of Easter changes every year and this is because it is governed by the phases of the moon and not a specific date on which Christ was said to have risen from the dead. It falls on the Sunday following the first full moon after the spring equinox making it a celebration of the seasons, a concept rooted in paganism.

What about the name 'Easter', where did that come from? It is believed that in most European countries, the name came from the Hebrew word 'Pesach', otherwise known as Passover - the Jewish springtime holiday. However, in English-speaking languages and Germany, some historians have argued the word derives from a pagan springtime goddess called Ēostre, who is documented by an Anglo-Saxon monk who wrote during the 8th century AD. Ēostre was a goddess celebrated with a festival during the spring equinox and according to some scholars, her association with hares is the origin of the Easter Bunny story, although this is still hotly debated.

So it’s clear to see that many of our Easter traditions do not have their roots in the Christian faith. Whilst many people today do mark the occasion by celebrating the resurrection of Christ, many others see Easter as a time to rejoice at the coming of spring - to celebrate with Easter bunnies, egg hunts and hot cross buns and embody the same spirit of hope, renewal and new life that has existed around this time of year for thousands of years.

 

mzeiya

Elder Lister
We do not know what specific day Jesus was born neither do we know what day He died and arose.

We however celebrate Christmas, Good Friday and Easter not for Paganism but rather the significance of these three days in the Christian life.

In fact, who is to say that New Year's is actually 1st January? Who started counting and whatnot? That matters not because it's just a commemorative day. In fact, some countries like our northern neighbours Ethiopia have a different calendar altogether. Are they wrong or right? No one really cares.

I understand where you are coming from and I respect your views as a J.W. but really, we ought to let people be and as for me, I invite you to my house warming party kesho as I move to a new house in Ngong and also observe the holiday weekend made possible by our Lord and Savior dying and resurrecting to quash our sins. Sawa? Uje turarue mbavu za thenge 🐐

Happy Easter folks.
 

Aviator

Elder Lister
We do not know what specific day Jesus was born neither do we know what day He died and arose.

We however celebrate Christmas, Good Friday and Easter not for Paganism but rather the significance of these three days in the Christian life.

In fact, who is to say that New Year's is actually 1st January? Who started counting and whatnot? That matters not because it's just a commemorative day. In fact, some countries like our northern neighbours Ethiopia have a different calendar altogether. Are they wrong or right? No one really cares.

I understand where you are coming from and I respect your views as a J.W. but really, we ought to let people be and as for me, I invite you to my house warming party kesho as I move to a new house in Ngong and also observe the holiday weekend made possible by our Lord and Savior dying and resurrecting to quash our sins. Sawa? Uje turarue mbavu za thenge 🐐

Happy Easter folks.
It all sounds innocent and well intentioned until you consider the issue of date.
Why is this date not fixed like other dates for similar christian holidays? Why does it vary every year to coincide with the spring equinox, a day we'll known in history dedicated to gods of fertility, sex and reproduction?
 

Introvert

Elder Lister
Cc @Pastor

Easter is a Christian festival celebrated across the world, commemorating the resurrection of Jesus Christ after his crucifixion. It falls at a time of the year known as the spring equinox when the length of the nights in the Northern Hemisphere becomes identical to the length of the days. Spring is a time of renewal and rebirth as winter begins to fall away with the promise of sunnier, longer days lying ahead. For thousands of years, people from varying cultures have marked and celebrated the equinoxes and solstices (longest and shortest days of the year).

The pre-Christian ancient world is filled with stories of resurrection around spring. One of the world’s oldest civilisations, the Sumer who lived in southern Mesopotamia (modern southern Iraq), inscribed a story of their goddess Inanna onto a clay tablet some two thousand years before Christ.

The story goes that Inanna descended into the underworld to find her recently deceased husband. There she was killed before being brought back to life by other gods. She was permitted to return to the world as the sun for six months before having to descend into the underworld once again during the winter for a further six months. It is perhaps the first ancient story of resurrection and rebirth centred on spring.

There were many more stories amongst ancient civilisations that followed a similar theme including the resurrection of Horus, the falcon-headed ancient Egyptian deity and the death and rebirth of the Greek god Dionysus. They are stories that share ideologies about renewal and light conquering darkness.

As Christianity began to sweep across Europe, many pagan festivals and traditions were absorbed and adapted into the Christian faith. It made sense that the already ingrained concept of new life being celebrated during springtime should become associated with Jesus conquering death and being reborn.

If you’ve noticed, the date of Easter changes every year and this is because it is governed by the phases of the moon and not a specific date on which Christ was said to have risen from the dead. It falls on the Sunday following the first full moon after the spring equinox making it a celebration of the seasons, a concept rooted in paganism.

What about the name 'Easter', where did that come from? It is believed that in most European countries, the name came from the Hebrew word 'Pesach', otherwise known as Passover - the Jewish springtime holiday. However, in English-speaking languages and Germany, some historians have argued the word derives from a pagan springtime goddess called Ēostre, who is documented by an Anglo-Saxon monk who wrote during the 8th century AD. Ēostre was a goddess celebrated with a festival during the spring equinox and according to some scholars, her association with hares is the origin of the Easter Bunny story, although this is still hotly debated.

So it’s clear to see that many of our Easter traditions do not have their roots in the Christian faith. Whilst many people today do mark the occasion by celebrating the resurrection of Christ, many others see Easter as a time to rejoice at the coming of spring - to celebrate with Easter bunnies, egg hunts and hot cross buns and embody the same spirit of hope, renewal and new life that has existed around this time of year for thousands of years.

Well put.
However, I trained Omosh to snap at the heels of Jehovah's Witnesses.
They avoid my gate like a fakken.
Pure TOJ.
😁
 

Mzichi

Lister
It all sounds innocent and well intentioned until you consider the issue of date.
Why is this date not fixed like other dates for similar christian holidays? Why does it vary every year to coincide with the spring equinox, a day we'll known in history dedicated to gods of fertility, sex and reproduction?
Do you know the pagan origins of the name 'God'?

What of the name 'Jesus'?

Should we also abandon the use of these names?
 

Mzichi

Lister
No, I don't
Enlighten me.
God is derived from old English words that referred to both Gautan and Odin.

A closer example.

Kiuks call God Ngai.

Ngai was originally the deity that resided on Mt Kenya (Mwene Nyaga).

Should Kikuyus and all tribes of the earth abandon the tribal names they use for God because of their origins and the gods to which the names were coined for?

God is derived from Old English for Idols to which libation is poured. That's how it became synonymous as a name for Odin.

Also, Thursday is Thors Day, should we also desist from using the name because of its pagan origins?

Wednesday is Odin's day, should we also stop using it because of it's pagan origins?

Or there's no problem with all of these, and the problem only arises when people pay tribute to the sacrifice of the son of God?
 

Mzichi

Lister
@Aviator also consider SunDay... the day of the Sun God. The Day to worship the Sun God.

Should we stop Sunday worship because of its pagan origins?
 

DeepInYourMind

Elder Lister
For a time, early Christians used the Jewish calendar as a reference, celebrating Easter on the first Sunday after Nisan 15. But at the First Council of Nicaea in a.d. 325, the Church decided to set its own date for Easter, independent of the Jewish reckoning. Today most Christian communities celebrate Easter on the first Sunday after the first full moon after March 21. But sometimes this full moon isn’t the same as the Jewish one.

And here arises the second, deeper answer. The lunar mismatch occurs because both calendars must grapple with the same underlying problem: A lunar year is not the same length as a full solar year. In fact, nothing is exactly the same length as a solar year, because not all solar years are the same length. This challenge ails not only both religious calendars, but also every human attempt at timekeeping on Earth

 

Kasaman

Elder Lister
We do not know what specific day Jesus was born neither do we know what day He died and arose.

We however celebrate Christmas, Good Friday and Easter not for Paganism but rather the significance of these three days in the Christian life.

In fact, who is to say that New Year's is actually 1st January? Who started counting and whatnot? That matters not because it's just a commemorative day. In fact, some countries like our northern neighbours Ethiopia have a different calendar altogether. Are they wrong or right? No one really cares.

I understand where you are coming from and I respect your views as a J.W. but really, we ought to let people be and as for me, I invite you to my house warming party kesho as I move to a new house in Ngong and also observe the holiday weekend made possible by our Lord and Savior dying and resurrecting to quash our sins. Sawa? Uje turarue mbavu za thenge 🐐

Happy Easter folks.
Nothing good from pagans ?
 
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