Tag Archives: Easterbunny

THE PROMISE OF ETERNAL LIFE: FAIRY TALE OR TRUTH?

The dogwood tree bloomed outside my bedroom window this past week and as I admired the beauty of organic nature, I also reflected on the finite nature of all earthly things that live. From people, animals and insects to trees, plants, and flowers, the common component of all these things is that they will all die.

Perhaps, this is one of the most easily understood reasons that the religion of Christianity appeals to someone. That promise of a life after this one – and an eternal one, at that – brings much needed hope to dark days in an increasingly broken and uncertain world.

If you are anything like me, you enjoyed reading fairy tales as a child. The heroic figures of fanciful stories, embellished with the often hyperbolic descriptions that enhance their appeal not only attract us as children but they also speak to the still childlike parts of ourselves when we reach adulthood. If being a sophisticated “adult” is important to us, we may deny our interest in fairytales. For our society is much more likely to encourage us to be “productive” citizens than visionary dreamers.

As C. S. Lewis, a fervent proponent of fairy tale reading once said, “One day you will be old enough to start reading fairy tales again.” Interestingly, he also spoke of reading fairy tapes in secret at the age of ten, declaring he would have felt shame had his predilection for them been discovered.

Yet, there’s no denying that Christianity has a fairy tale aspect to it, for when one starts incorporating miracles, babies born of virgins, and people being raised from the dead into stories one would certainly classify the genre as science fiction, fantasy, or a little bit of both.

It’s an ironic twist of how things often play out, that a day like Easter, a holiday that is supposed to celebrate Jesus’s Resurrection from the Dead, has become enveloped in a candy coated wrapping of pastel hued Easter eggs that are the main attraction of Easter egg hunts, oversized bunnies (people dressed up in rabbit costumes), and baskets brimming over with candy and other sugary treats. If we are too “sophisticated” for fairy tales, should we not also be too “sophisticated” for such childish celebrations?

Now before you imagine that I was never a child myself or that, if I was, I never enjoyed the so-called “childish” things, I remember being four or five years old and fetching all the hidden Easter eggs at an elementary school across from where my grandparents lived. With the naive excitement of a child, I imagined that since I had found the eggs, they were all mine. Of course, I didn’t end up keeping them, lest you wonder how the story turned out.

I realize many of the Easter celebrations I have mentioned are “for children,” but the trouble is, they aren’t giving anyone, including the children, an accurate idea of what Easter is intended to signify.

If one does even a fair amount of research, the fact that the “Christian” Easter originated in paganism is easily discovered. The eggs are connected with fertility and the name itself, “Easter,” is inspired by the pagan goddess of fertility, known as “Ostara” or “Eoster.” As for the rabbit, it also has origins in paganism. Bede, an early medieval monk who has often been regarded as the father of English history, once noted that in eighth century England, the month of April was called Eosturmonath after the goddess Eoster. He went on to write that a pagan festival of Spring in the name of this goddess had become incorporated into Christianity’s celebration of Christ’s Resurrection.

These worldly, or, to be more specific, pagan rituals have been incorporated into a holiday named by and celebrated by professing Christians, and if and when the pagan aspects of the day are embraced (as they will be), remaining mindful of the genuine hope found in Christ’s Resurrection is even more important.

In all truth, we don’t need the stardust and tinsel of made up fairy tales to give us hope. People dressed up as giant Easter bunnies and eggs dyed nearly every shade under the rainbow are temporal attractions, offering a joy that is both short lived and lacking in genuine fulfillment.

We can say what we like about Christianity being a fairy tale and can mock those who adhere to its teachings, but unless one has not ever believed in anything that wasn’t visible or that didn’t obey the “rules” of logic, discounting Christianity based simply on the fact it has supernatural elements isn’t a solid argument.

Although Sigmund Freud once called Christianity a “fairy tale ” and his followers replaced this with “folk tale,” those who open their minds enough to do some research know that Jesus was a real person and that the accounts of him in the New Testament were eyewitness accounts written before and after his death.

Easter, if one believes the research on its origins, is pagan and yet the same things being celebrated by pagans in this Springtime holiday- hope, life rebirth and renewal are also what Jesus offers those who follow Him.

So, eggs, Easter baskets, and bunny rabbit impersonators aside, we can all agree on the sentiments behind the holiday, even if those sentiments are evoked by different things. And, perhaps, those who have not yet gotten to know Jesus or taken the time to contemplate whether there is indeed truth in his identity as the Son of God as well as hope in the promise He offers of eternal life, will do so.

As C.S. Lewis said, “Christianity is both a myth and a fact. It’s unique. It’s the true myth.”

And just as goodness triumphs over wickedness in the fairy tales we love most, and just as redemption is offered to villians who seem beyond hope, so, too, Jesus offers us both redemption and promises us the ultimate triumph of good over evil, if not in this life, then in the next.

Peace & Blessings,

Sascha 🕊

March 31. 2024.

This page and all written material at A Pilgrim’s Odyssey is written by Sascha Norris. (C) Copyright 2023-2024 by Sascha Norris. All Rights Reserved.

(Images are: Cover Art- Easter Lamb of God and Cross by Sara Tee. Other images by artists John Pototschnik and Yongsung Kim)

SILENT FAITH

I am guessing most people will agree that when you believe in something sincerely and with your whole heart, you don’t feel shame in believing it. Much of the time, your sense of security in whatever this belief happens to be is grounded in the fact that you think it is “right.”

Now, before you began throwing philosophical perspectives in my direction, claiming that both “right” and “wrong” are cultural “constructs” or similar ideas, I shall assure you that I am speaking about people in general, most of whom have little interest in perusing books by philosophers like Plato, Aristotle, or Friedrich Nietzsche with their morning cup of java.

Let’s think, for a moment, of a child who believes in Santa Claus or the Easter Bunny. Have you ever come across one who seemed ashamed to share his or her belief with you?

If you’ve encountered children anything like the ones I have, they are bubbling over with excitement over the thoughts of Santa coming to town or the Easter bunny bringing goodies in a basket.

Their enthusiasm for “beings” that are not real and, rather, the fanciful concoctions of a combination of myths, fairy-tales, and other stories is so genuine that it is often contagious.

Yet, adults, specifically those who claim to be Christians, seem to demonstrate the opposite behavior when it comes to the Savior they say they believe in. Rather than wanting to tell everybody about Him and what He’s done for them in their own lives, they hesitate to even speak about their faith and, much of the time, one wouldn’t be able to tell one bit of difference between them and someone with no religion at all.

Perhaps, there is something I’m overlooking about this, and maybe there is some very sensible explanation. Could not talking about one’s faith be part of the new trendy term called “adulting?”

And, if so, might this be why God has placed such an importance in those who come to Him having childlike faith?

Please do understand that I am no expert on the subject of faith nor do I claim to take advantage of every opportunity that comes my way to share my faith.

However, I am trying to understand this seeming contradiction between being a Christian and feeling that one has made the best possible choice in this respect and yet simultaneously not wanting to tell other people about it. Surely, there is some key element in this equation that I am missing.

Now, as for me, because it took decades for me to finally acknowledge my own weakness and insufficiency to the point that I accepted Jesus Christ as my Savior, I am eager to share my journey. For, you see, in doing so, I’m hoping I can spare others some of the pain, suffering, and utter despair I have endured from not making this choice sooner.

You can think I’m being dramatic if you like and you can also imagine I’m saying whatever needs to be said in order to convert others to my way of thinking, but that’s simply not so.

It isn’t my job to convert you, and, even if I wanted to, accepting Jesus as your Savior is something an individual must do on his or her own – or not. I won’t go into a detailed discussion about how we all have Free Will, but we have been given the freedom to choose. “By whom?, ” you may ask. Well, if you don’t believe in any sort of Higher Power, I’m not sure what conclusion you can come up with that’s the least bit logical. If you do believe in a God of any kind, then you can credit Him (or Her if you wish to go that route) with giving you Free Will.

However, let me get back to the main subject I am addressing rather than getting diverted by the Free Will debate, which will probably go on until time in this earth ends.

Might it be that God, when speaking of one needing to have the faith of little children, was anticipating how difficult it would be for those sober oh-so-grown-up professing Christians to eagerly share their faith with others? After all, it is Jesus who calls the children to Him in the Gospel of Luke (18:16-17), saying, “Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of God belongs to such as these. Truly, I tell you, anyone who will not receive the kingdom of God like a little child will never enter it.”

As God is omniscient, I am guessing He knew precisely the type of meek attitude and childlike spirit that would be required for a Christian to embrace Him and their faith with assurance and confidence rather than with silence and shame.

That being said, unless those of us who say we love and believe in Him are willing and able to channel that little girl or little boy in ourselves and share what He’s done for us with childlike awe, we will forever be like lamps that choose to remain unlit.

Peace & Blessings,

Sascha 🕊

This page and all written material at A Pilgrim’s Odyssey is written by Sascha Norris. (C) Copyright 2023-2024 by Sascha Norris. All Rights Reserved.

(Painting is “Secret Promise” by Japanese artist Shiori Matsumoto)