after that little bunny lays that gaint egg
you get to string that little fuzzy bunny up on the cross and your saved
oh dont forget to eat that holy egg it has magical powers
2007-04-05 11:50:30
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answer #1
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answered by Truthasarous rex 3
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Rabbits and eggs are the two symbols of the fertility goddess Eostre/Easter/Ishtar/Ostara. Her image is likewise the moon, wherein some cultures see a rabbit incredibly of a face. Eggs additionally characterize the moon and are the applicable image of creation and new existence. The basket is an emblem of the womb wherein this new existence is carried. there's a pretty legend relating to the moon goddess Eostre, wherein she found a death fowl. to keep its existence, she grew to become it right into a rabbit, her maximum useful image. It lived yet persevered to place eggs. In gratitude for its existence, the rabbit supplies her assorted the eggs each year. The ceremonial dinner day is pagan and replaced into extensively celebrated way earlier the time of Jesus. Like tremendously plenty all holiday journeys, it replaced into observed by ability of Christians to help get greater converts. whether, because of the fact the element is to rejoice new existence and the desire of continuance, Christian symbols of a Resurrection day and the previous pagan symbols mean a similar element on the middle of all of it. merely like Christmas, we are all celebrating a similar element, merely utilising distinctive symbols.
2016-11-07 07:53:26
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Absolutely, positively nothing. Us Americans for some retarded reason thought it would be a good idea to slap a mascot on every single holiday we celebrate, and well Easter got the short end of the stick, and thus got stuck with the only mascot that wasn't taken already.
2007-04-05 11:53:21
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answer #3
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answered by The Librarian 2
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Well what does your god dying and being resurrected have to to with Easter? It is after all a Pagan fertility holiday!
Christian church absorbed Pagan practices. After discovering that people were more reluctant to give up their holidays and festivals than their gods, they simply incorporated Pagan practices into Christian festivals. As recounted by the Venerable Bede, an early Christian writer, clever clerics copied Pagan practices and by doing so, made Christianity more palatable to pagan folk reluctant to give up their festivals for somber Christian practices.
In second century Europe, the predominate spring festival was a raucous Saxon fertility celebration in honor of the Saxon Goddess Eastre (Ostara), whose sacred animal was a hare.
The colored eggs associated with the bunny are of another, even more ancient origin. The eggs associated with this and other Vernal festivals have been symbols of rebirth and fertility for so long the precise roots of the tradition are unknown, and may date to the beginning of human civilization. Ancient Romans and Greeks used eggs as symbols of fertility, rebirth, and abundance- eggs were solar symbols, and figured in the festivals of numerous resurrected gods.
Pagan fertility festivals at the time of the Spring equinox were common- it was believed that at this time, when day and night were of equal length, male and female energies were also in balance. The hare is often associated with moon goddesses; the egg and the hare together represent the god and the goddess, respectively.
Moving forward fifteen hundred years, we find ourselves in Germany, where children await the arrival of Oschter Haws, a rabbit who will lay colored eggs in nests to the delight of children who discover them Easter morning. It was this German tradition that popularized the 'Easter bunny' in America, when introduced into the American cultural fabric by German settlers in Pennsylvania.
2007-04-05 11:51:07
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Just wiki it! This question is asked every few minutes on here lately. In his De temporum ratione the Venerable Bede wrote that the month Eostremonat (Eosturmonath) (April) was so named because of a goddess, Eostre, who had formerly been worshipped in that month.
It's based on a pagan fertility holiday. Eggs and bunnies = fertility. Get it?
2007-04-05 11:48:04
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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my religion teacher said that in the roman culture
eggs are a symbol of fertility
and Easter is like the Resurrection of Jesus or something same thing with bunnies
2007-04-05 11:50:45
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answer #6
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answered by . 3
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It originated from the pagan celebration. The rabbit and the egg is a symbol of fertility and new life.
2007-04-05 11:51:55
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answer #7
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answered by Prayer Warrior 5
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1.The giant egg laying rabbitt has nothing to do with it.
2. It is actually the remembrance of Jesus Christ being crucified and then rising again on the 3rd day.
3. Man has to commercialize EVERYTHING to make a buck.
Brings up another point, .....why the marshmallow chicks?
2007-04-05 11:52:54
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answer #8
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answered by blaze 4
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Christianity was smart to make holidays so fun for kids. It's the best fishing device they have. Give presents to kids for the "Lords" birthday, give candy when he was resurrected. It's a tool to attract and keep kids involved so when they become Mothers and Fathers the tradition is alive.
2007-04-05 11:51:18
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answer #9
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answered by apple juice 6
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The same as Santa Claus (a fat copy of a real Saint) has to do with Christmas. Niente, nothing, nada.
2007-04-05 14:31:39
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answer #10
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answered by Yuri 3
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One must not confuse Christianity with christendom.
Christendom is a counterfeit, hypocritical abomination.
She has let in all kinds of pagan practices and given them a 'christian' facade.
Christianity, on the other hand, keeps rolling along almost unnoticed.
2007-04-05 11:49:03
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answer #11
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answered by Uncle Thesis 7
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