Easter thread

Lamb

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For most of us here it's Palm Sunday. For George, I think Lent has just begun since Eastern Orthodox do not celebrate on the same days we do?

But this is the Easter thread. What are some of your traditions?
 

MoreCoffee

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It's Palm Sunday for us, so we receives palm frond pieces which we'll keep until a week or two before Ash Wednesday next year when they will be burned to make the ashes for next Palm Sunday. Next week is special, we have the blessing of the oils on Tuesday, Holy Thursday, Good Friday, and Easter Vigil/Easter Sunday, so it's a busy week. On Holy Thursday the feet of twelve men are washed by the pastor in each parish and by the bishop in the cathedral. Good Friday is marked by the stations of the Cross in the morning, the Good Friday communion service (it is not a mass) at 15:00 and then in the evening/night a vigil and adoration of the Lord. Easter Vigil starts after sunset on Saturday and is the most important of all masses in the liturgical year, in it there are seven old testament readings a reading from the new testament and from one of the psalms and a reading from the Gospel, we start outside of the church building with the lighting of a small fire from which the pastor lights the Easter Candle and from which we all receive the flame for our own candles which we carry into the church building (which is in darkness and progressively receives light as our candles are brought in) we process into the church behind the Easter candles with the Pastor and the candidates & catechumens following along with acolytes and deacons and finally the congregation. The procession is done in silence. When the Easter candle reaches the middle of the church the deacon proclaims loudly "Christ our light!" and the people respond, when the candle reaches the foot of the sanctuary the proclamation is made again and responded to and finally when the congregation is all present and in their positions for seating the proclamation is made once more from the altar and the people respond the church lights are turned on and the mass proper begins.
 
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psalms 91

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Palm Sunday for me as well
 

TurtleHare

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Palm Sunday for us and we began the service outside and processed into the sanctuary waving our fronds, it was fun with all singing loudly the praises of Hosannah Loud Hosannah.
 

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We typically bring our.palms home and fold them into crosses but we already have several from past years.
 

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Does arriving early at church to get a seat every Easter count as a tradition?:eek:uttahere:
 

Alithis

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dont celebrate Ishtar (pronounced easter in english)
passover is the correct term and the correct time -the apostles kept the passover. and the lord Jesus is the true passover lamb .

-and you all knew i would say this :) .

thats all .
 

Lamb

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We typically bring our.palms home and fold them into crosses but we already have several from past years.

I hang my palms up near the doorway and keep them there for a year. It's a lovely reminder.
 

Lamb

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dont celebrate Ishtar (pronounced easter in english)
passover is the correct term and the correct time -the apostles kept the passover. and the lord Jesus is the true passover lamb .

-and you all knew i would say this :) .

thats all .

I celebrate the Resurrection of our Lord. This isn't going to be a debate thread, thanks.
 

MoreCoffee

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dont celebrate Ishtar (pronounced easter in english)
passover is the correct term and the correct time -the apostles kept the passover. and the lord Jesus is the true passover lamb .

-and you all knew i would say this :) .

thats all .

"Easter" is an English language word, in the Greek text of the new testament it is "Pascha" (in Greek letters, of course). In French, Italian, Spanish and many other languages it is called by a name very like Pascha. I do not think one need worry about the English word too much.
 

Lamb

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tango

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dont celebrate Ishtar (pronounced easter in english)
passover is the correct term and the correct time -the apostles kept the passover. and the lord Jesus is the true passover lamb .

-and you all knew i would say this :) .

thats all .

I often find it amusing when non-Christians throw the whole Ishtar (aka Eoster) at me, only to be surprised when they realise I know more about the pagan roots than they do :)

Either way I don't see a problem with celebrating Christ's resurrection even if the name of the day does happen to be named after a Germanic fertility goddess (ETA: IIRC the Germanic goddess was Freyja rather than Ishtar). We can celebrate Christ's death and resurrection whatever other religions may happen to do on the same day. I don't care much for backing away from a day just because some other group decided to claim it as their own.
 
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Lamb

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I often find it amusing when non-Christians throw the whole Ishtar (aka Eoster) at me, only to be surprised when they realise I know more about the pagan roots than they do :)

Either way I don't see a problem with celebrating Christ's resurrection even if the name of the day does happen to be named after a Germanic fertility goddess (ETA: IIRC the Germanic goddess was Freyja rather than Ishtar). We can celebrate Christ's death and resurrection whatever other religions may happen to do on the same day. I don't care much for backing away from a day just because some other group decided to claim it as their own.

Right! It's more about the focus of the celebration which is always our Savior!
 

MoreCoffee

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I do not think that "Easter" is named after any fertility god or goddess.
 

psalms 91

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Then what do you think the origins are?
 

MoreCoffee

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Lamb

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I bought some eggs but I'm not sure I'm going to color any this year. I probably won't have time but it's always fun. I love how people use the egg to try to explain the concept of the trinity.
 

tango

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It appears to be from a German word for east "Ostern".

The links to pagan fertility goddesses seem too strong to be coincidental.

Firstly there's the name (Ishtar/Eostre/Eoster), eggs are obvious fertility symbols and I'm sure I don't need to explain how rabbits are related. They are certainly more related to fertility than anything relating to the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Even getting eggs into the Christian ceremony seems a bit of a stretch, I remember as a child being told that the stone in front of the tomb was shaped like an egg, I've heard other kids being told the egg is a symbol of new life and so on. None of it explains chicks and bunnies.

Either way, the pagans will do what the pagans will do and in the meantime we can celebrate Christ's resurrection. Interestingly I don't see any specific mandate to commemorate the day that it happened, only the fact that it happened.
 

MoreCoffee

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The links to pagan fertility goddesses seem too strong to be coincidental.

Firstly there's the name (Ishtar/Eostre/Eoster), eggs are obvious fertility symbols and I'm sure I don't need to explain how rabbits are related. They are certainly more related to fertility than anything relating to the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Even getting eggs into the Christian ceremony seems a bit of a stretch, I remember as a child being told that the stone in front of the tomb was shaped like an egg, I've heard other kids being told the egg is a symbol of new life and so on. None of it explains chicks and bunnies.

Either way, the pagans will do what the pagans will do and in the meantime we can celebrate Christ's resurrection. Interestingly I don't see any specific mandate to commemorate the day that it happened, only the fact that it happened.

As far as I am aware the only historical link is from saint Bede saying that the Saxons had a goddess whose name was related to the spelling for Easter in his time. That is a rather weak link.
 
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