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The Easter Story
This is from "Heathen Holidays"
by Denise Snodgrass
CHAPTER III
EASTER: THE GODDESS OF SPRING
The name of this festival, itself, shows its heathen origin. "Easter" is
derived from Eastre, or Eostre, the Anglo-Saxon Goddess of spring and dawn.
There also is some historical connection existing between the words "Easter"
and "East," where the sun rises. The festival of Eostre was celebrated on
the day of the Vernal Equinox (spring). Traditions associated with the
festival of the Teutonic fertility Goddess survive in the Easter rabbit and
colored eggs.
Spring is the season of new life and revival, when, from ancient times,
the pagan peoples of Europe and Asia held their spring festivals,
re-enacting ancient regeneration myths and performing magical and religious
ceremonies to make the crops grow and prosper.
From "The American Book of Days," by George William Douglas we read: "As
the festival of Eostre was a celebration of the renewal of life in the
spring it was easy to make it a celebration of the resurrection from the
dead of Jesus. There is no doubt that the Church (of Rome) in its early days
adopted the old pagan customs and gave a "Christian" meaning to them.
From "Easter: its Story and Meaning," by Alan W. Watts is found: "The
story of Easter is not simply a Christian story. Not only is the very name
"Easter" the name of an ancient and non-Christian deity; the season itself
has also, from time immemorial, been the occasion of rites and observances
having to do with the mystery of death and resurrection among peoples
differing widely in race and religion."
From "Easter and its customs," by Christina Hole is found: "Vernal
Mysteries (spring heathen rites) like those of Tammuz, and Osiris and Adonis
flourished in the Mediterranean world and farther north and east there were
others. Some of their rites and symbols were carried forward into Easter
customs. Many of them have survived into our own day, unchanged yet subtly
altered in their new surroundings to bear a "Christian" significance."
TAMMUZ AND THE VERNAL MYSTERIES
The rites connected with the death and resurrection of the gods Tammuz,
Osiris, and Adonis are the Forerunners of the "Christian" Easter; they are
the first East services.
Let us look in the Word of God in Ezekiel 8:13-16
(13) He said also unto me, Turn thee yet again, and thou shalt
see greater abominations that they do. (14) Then he brought me
to the door of the gate of the Lord's house which was toward the
north; and behold, there sat women WEEPING FOR TAMMUZ (15) Then
said he unto me, Hast thou seen this, O son of man? Turn thee
yet again, and thou shalt see greater abominations than these
(16) And he brought me into the inner court of the Lord's house,
and, behold, at the door of the temple of the Lord, between the
porch and the alter, were about five and twenty men, with their
backs toward the temple of the Lord, and their faces toward the
EAST; and they WORSHIPPED THE SUN toward the EAST.
Here the people of God, Israel, had back-slid into idolatry. Tammuz was a
Babylonian god. Like Christ Mass and New Year's, Easter, too, began in
Babylon.
Let us look into the Mythologies of the death and resurrection gods, such
as Tammuz from "Easter: its Story and Meaning."
"Wife and beloved of Tammuz was the goddess Inanna, or Ishtar,
in whose person is represented she whom we now call Mother
Nature of Mother Earth -- she who, when refreshed with the
spring rains, with the water from heaven, brings forth the
fruits of life. We are told that when Tammuz died, Inanna was
so stricken with grief that she followed him to the underworld,
to the realm of Eresh-Kigal, Queen of the Dead, a "land from
which there is no returning, a house of darkness, where dust
lies on door and bolt." In her absence the earth was deprived
of its fertility; crops would not grow; animals would not mate;
life was in danger of coming to an end.
"O my child!" at his vanishing aways she lifts up a lament; "My Damu!" at
his vanishing away she lifts up a lament; "My enchanter and priest!" at his
vanishing away she lifts up a lament, At the shining cedar, rooted in a
spacious place, In Eanna, above and below, she lifts up a lament.
This ancient text is called "The Lament of the Flutes for Tammuz." He had
gone away to the underworld, and this was why there was winter. "The Lament
of the Flutes for Tammuz" describes the grief which moved Ea, god of water
and wisdom, to send a heavenly messenger to the underworld to rescue the
goddess whose absence was removing life from the earth. Assenting
reluctantly to his supreme will, Eresh-Kigal allowed the messenger to
sprinkle Inanna and Tammuz with water of life--a potion which gave them
power to return into the light of the sun for six months of the year. But
for the other six months, Tammuz must again return to the land of death,
whither Inanna would again pursue him, and once more with her lamentations
move Ea to give the water of life so that year after year the miracle of
resurrection and spring would recur."
In the course of centuries, the story and the yearly rites connected with
the death and resurrection of Tammuz moved westward to Phoenicia and Syria
on the extreme east of the Mediterranean. Here the name of Tammuz was
changed to Adon or Adonai, and the name of Inanna to Astarte. In Greece the
two names are Adonis and Aphrodite.
The myth underwent some changes in passing from Sumeria to Syria.
A Greek myth tells of Demeter, like Inanna, the goddess of the earth, and
her daughter, Kore (Persephone). The girl was abducted by Pluto, the ruler
of the underworld, and her absence brought about a famine on earth through
the failure of the crops. Pluto was therefore moved to restored Kore to her
mother, but because she had eaten a pomegranate in the underworld she was
bound to return to Pluto for as many months of each year as there were seeds
of the pomegranate caught in her mouth. In joy at her annual return, the
earth (Demeter) brings forth her fruits and flowers.
Adonis (Greek god) was the child of Myrrha, the myrtle tree. (It seems
that almost all the gods of death and resurrection are associated with a
tree.) When the infant Adonis was born, Aphrodite was so charmed with his
beauty that she adopted him and concealed him in a chest, which she gave for
safekeeping to Persephone--the counterpart of Eresh-Kigal, the Babylonian
Queen of the Dead. In the underworld Persephone opened the chest, and was
herself so enchanted with the babe that she decided to keep him. This led to
a dispute between Aphrodite and Persephone, between love and death, in which
Zeus (taking the place of the Babylonian Ea) had to intervene. Zeus decreed
that for four months of the year Adonis should belong to Aphrodite, for four
to Persephone, and for the remaining four he should do as he wished--Adonis
chose to spend them with Aphrodite.
When he had grown to young manhood, Adonis roused the envy of Artemis,
the forest goddess of the hunt, or according to another account, or Ares,
the god of war. Thus, while he was out hunting, Artemis slew Adonis with an
arrow--the arrows of Artemis being the cause to which sudden death was
generally ascribed--or in the version, he was gored by Ares in the form of a
wild boar. He died, and where the earth had received his blood, Aphrodite
sprinkled the ground with nectar, so that the blood turned into anemones and
other flowers of the field. But the grief of Aphrodite was so piteous that
the gods of the underworld allowed Adonis to return to her every spring for
six months of the year.
In Asia Minor the Phrygians believed that their omnipotent deity went to
sleep at the time of the winter solstice and they performed ceremonies with
music and dancing at the spring equinox to awaken him.
Of the same essential pattern is the great Egyptian myth of Osiris. The
common elements in all these stories are so apparent that one may think of
them as a single drama performed again and again by different actors.
It would be tedious to describe in detail all that has been handed down
to us about the various rites of Tammuz, Adonis, Kire, and many others.
Their rites had many basic elements in common. Their universal theme--the
drama of death and resurrection--makes them the forerunners of the
"Christian" Easter, and thus the first easter services. Many of the customs
and ceremonies of the "Christian" Easter resemble these former rites, for
instance, the present day "Sun Rise Services." Easter descended from pagan
sun worship. Catholic Doctrine simply paralleled the pagan death and
resurrection myths of the gods with the story of Christ's crucifixion and
Ascension. Christ now rises from the dead with the ascending sun at the time
of the Vernal Equinox when plant life and all forms of vegetation appear
again on the Earth, and is celebrated with the same customs as that of the
Heathen rites namely, rabbits, chickens, and colored eggs!
COLORED EGGS
The Easter egg takes us back to some of the oldest known civilizations on
earth where the symbol of an egg played an important part in mythical
accounts of the creation of the world. According to this tale heaven and
earth were formed from the two halves of a mysterious World-Egg. The Easter
egg is associated with this World-Egg, the original germ from which all life
proceeds, and whose shell is the firmament. So there is a heathen connection
between the egg and the ideas or feelings of birth, new life, and creation.
Easter eggs do have a very long ancestry. In their modern chocolate or
cardboard form they date only from the later years of the last century, but
giving real eggs, colored or gilded at Easter and also at the pre-Christian
spring celebrations are infinitely older.
Long before the Christian era, eggs were regarded as symbols of
continuing life and resurrection. The ancient Persians and Greeks exchanged
them at their spring festivals when all things in nature revived after the
winter. To the early pagans converted to "Christianity" under Emperor
Constantine's rule, eggs seemed the obvious symbols of the Lord's
resurrection and were therefore considered "holy" and appropriate gifts at
Easter time. Pope Paul V appointed a prayer in which the eggs were
"blessed." The eggs could then be eaten in thankfulness to God on account of
the resurrection of the Lord. The custom of coloring eggs at Easter
continued from paganism with only a change of dedication. These eggs are
often red. Scarlet eggs were given in the spring by pagan peoples centuries
before the birth of Christ. It is probably the favorite color because, like
the egg itself, it is an emblem of life.
THE EASTER RABBIT
The hare is the true Easter beast, not the rabbit. He was sacred to the
Spring-Goddess, Eostre. Hares were sacrificed to her. The hare was an emblem
of fertility, renewal, and return of spring to the heathen. The egg, in
modern American folklore, is the production of the rabbit or the hare. The
story is that this hare was once a bird whom Eostre changed into a
four-footed creature.
HOT-CROSS BUNS
Eating hot-cross buns is one of the Good Friday customs that has taken
root in America. They are pagan in origin, for the Anglo-Saxon savages
consumed cakes as part of the jollity that attended the welcoming of spring.
Early missionaries from Rome despaired of breaking them of the habit, and
got around the difficulty by blessing the cakes, drawing a cross upon them.
but the cross was a pagan symbol long before the crucifixion. Bread and
cakes were sometimes marked with it in pre-Christian times. Two small loaves
each with a cross on them were discovered under the ruins of Herculaneum, a
city overwhelmed by volcanic ash in A.D. 79. It is probable that the crosses
here had a pagan meaning like those which appeared on cakes associated with
the worship of Diana.
There are other pagan customs associated with Easter, but we have
discussed the most common ones.
Information for writing this chapter was obtained from: "Easter: its
Story and meaning," by Alan W. Watts; "The American Book of Days," by George
William Dougolas; "Easter and its customs,": by Christina Hole; "The Book of
Religious Holidays and Celebrations," by Marguerite Ickis; "Funk & Wagnall's
New Encyclopedia."
Chapter III from HEATHEN HOLIDAYS by Sister Denise Snodgrass.
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