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Torbjörn Larsson
April 21st, 2025 5:28 AM

Easter is religion based!? I don’t think the majority of people here think of it that way.

May the Easter Bunny be with you!

Teastar
Teastar
April 21st, 2025 6:49 AM
Reply to  Sage

Yeah, I don’t see many people actually treat it with religious seriousness, but I do see most people aware that it’s a christian thing.

Torbjörn Larsson
April 22nd, 2025 1:18 AM
Reply to  Sage

Well, to keep it simple with “here” I was intending to refer to where I live, which is about as biased as your take on it. But now I know that people can interpret it as the readership as well.

But if we go neutral and let “here” mean on Earth, last I checked US is not the majority of the world. In fact, population wise it is about 4 % of it.

Darius Drake
Darius Drake
April 21st, 2025 9:48 PM

It’s religious twice-over. It was originally a “Pagan” Spring/Fertility Festival, and was converted into a “Jesus resurrecting from the grave” festival when Christianity became the dominant religion in Europe. The former of which being the reason why Eggs and Rabbits are a part of the festival.

Darius Drake
Darius Drake
April 21st, 2025 9:53 PM
Reply to  Darius Drake

Additional note, I put quotation marks around the word Pagan simply because I don’t actually know what religion it came from, and assume that the word Pagan was originally or developed into a derogatory term that Christianity used for any polytheistic religion, regardless of their differences. Which would suggest that followers of Norse Mythology and Celtic Mythology would both be called Pagan’s, despite their religions & beliefs having no similarities or parallels.

Torbjörn Larsson
April 22nd, 2025 1:33 AM
Reply to  Darius Drake

So this covers a lot of ground, and I’ll just jot down the synopsis of a wide search. There is a wide span between folklore and religion – which is why I prefer to refer to the latter as “organized superstition” – and the Germanic spring traditions that were co-opted may have been more in the direction of lore.

It is hard to tell now, and the religionist tarring of anything they disliked – so not only competing religions – as “Pagan” didn’t help. [“late Middle English: from Latin paganus ‘villager, rustic’, from pagus ‘country district’. Latin paganus also meant ‘civilian’, becoming, in Christian Latin, ‘heathen’ (i.e. one not enrolled in the army of Christ).”]

Martin L.
Martin L.
April 21st, 2025 8:10 AM

Easter is a mashup of religious traditions.
To the jews it is when the angel of death passed over the jewish households marked with the blood of lambs.
To the christians it is the celebration of Jesus death and resurecction.
To the pagans it is a celebration of fertility rites.
To the rest of us it is a couple of day off from work.

masterofinfinity479
April 21st, 2025 9:14 AM
Reply to  Martin L.

i thought pagans and christians were the same

Martin L.
Martin L.
April 21st, 2025 12:41 PM

Christians are monotheistic, pagans are polytheistic.

Torbjörn Larsson
April 22nd, 2025 1:44 AM
Reply to  Martin L.

Pagans can be whatever you dislike, for a muslim a “heathen” can be another monotheist. But common pagan beliefs are polytheism, shamanism or animism.

This is where it gets iffy – the connotation to Germanic fertility goddess Ēostre is authored by catholic priests. Most likely it is an “explanatory” retcon of what could have been simply spring festivities. People having fun could have been more threatening than competing religions, for all I know.

Martin L.
Martin L.
April 21st, 2025 8:11 AM

It is the perfect outfit for cleric of a godess of love.

masterofinfinity479
April 21st, 2025 9:05 AM

WOOOOOOOOOOO YEAH

SFCGator
SFCGator
April 21st, 2025 4:18 PM

Very nice! Has she shown up for Valentines Day? If not, I’d vote for an appearance next year.

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