What Are the Catholic Origins of Easter Traditions?

Michie

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Is the Easter Bunny Catholic? Does Easter have pagan origins?

In this episode of the Catholic Talk Show, the Ryan Scheel, Ryan DellaCrosse, and Fr. Rich Pagano share the Catholic origins of Easter traditions like the bunnies, eggs, and more!

Where does the name Easter come from?
In most languages, it’s a variation of “Pascha,” linking it to Passover. In English and German, Easter comes from “Ēostre-monath,” the Old English word for the month of April, which itself was likely named after a Germanic goddess. Scheel explains associating them though would be like mistakenly “saying anything that happens on Thursday is actually a pagan tradition for Thor.”

Does Easter have some sort of secret Pagan origins?
Easter’s origin is squarely in Christian theology, marking the resurrection of Christ, rather than some co-opted pagan festival. This persistent myth “was started in the 1830s by Grimm’s Fairy Tales” without any historical backing, Scheel explains.

Why does Easter happen on a different day each year?
Easter’s date changes because it is based on the lunar calendar. “Easter would always be celebrated on the Sunday after the first full moon of the vernal equinox,” Scheel explains. This makes sure Easter aligns with Passover, reflecting the time which the Crucifixion and Resurrection occurred, rather than a fixed date.

Is the Easter Bunny Catholic?
Rabbits have surprising roots in Christian symbolism. Known for their prolific breeding, they were associated with Mary in medieval art, symbolizing purity and the virgin birth of Jesus. “Rabbits really became very tied up with the Virgin Mary,” Scheel explains.

How Did Eggs become associated with Easter?
Historically, eggs weren’t eaten during Lent, leading to an abundance by Easter. To prevent waste, people would boil and decorate them into symbols of Jesus’ resurrection and new life. Scheel explains they would “dye them red to signify the blood of the Lord and then when you crack them open on Easter it’s white and it’s cracking open the tomb.”

Listen to the guys explain the Catholic origins of even more of your favorite Easter traditions!

Video below.
 

Michie

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I thought Easter was pagan. It is a good thing I was wrong.
It’s not. :)

'Easter' as a translation of the pagan goddess 'Ishtar' has no basis in reality​




 
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DJWhalen

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It’s not. :)

'Easter' as a translation of the pagan goddess 'Ishtar' has no basis in reality​


I can always count on you and take away any concerns I have.
 
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WarriorAngel

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I thought Easter was pagan. It is a good thing I was wrong.
Many Johnny come lately [mostly wiccan pagan related authors] since the 1800's have rewrote history, by no surprise.

Just like Hallow's Eve sounded like Hallow-een and it got stuck like that.
Hallow means holy, but pagan wanna be's and wiccans claim the name derived from paganism.

ALL of which started in the 1800's much to their own historically uneducated thinking.
 
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Mockingbird0

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Does Easter have some sort of secret Pagan origins?
Easter’s origin is squarely in Christian theology, marking the resurrection of Christ, rather than some co-opted pagan festival. This persistent myth “was started in the 1830s by Grimm’s Fairy Tales” without any historical backing, Scheel explains.
Jakob Grimm proposed that there had been a Germanic goddess named "Ostara" but this thesis does not appear anywhere, so far as I know, in Grimm's Fairy Tales.
Why does Easter happen on a different day each year?
Easter’s date changes because it is based on the lunar calendar. “Easter would always be celebrated on the Sunday after the first full moon of the vernal equinox,” Scheel explains. This makes sure Easter aligns with Passover, reflecting the time which the Crucifixion and Resurrection occurred, rather than a fixed date.

In the Rabbinic Jewish calendar, in three years out of every nineteen, the Feast of Unleavened Bread happens at the second full moon after the equinox. The Gregorian lunar calendar tries to place its week of Unleavened Bread (the week whose Sunday is Easter) always at the first full moon after the equinox. So three years out of every nineteen, Gregorian Easter does not "align" with Rabbinic Unleavened Bread.

Is the Easter Bunny Catholic?
Rabbits have surprising roots in Christian symbolism. Known for their prolific breeding, they were associated with Mary in medieval art, symbolizing purity and the virgin birth of Jesus. “Rabbits really became very tied up with the Virgin Mary,” Scheel explains.

Not rabbits, but hares.
 
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