The Easter Bunny?

It is Good Friday 2012, and I am working (not right this minute, but still). I am not bitter about it because it was my choice to try to catch up with some things today. I live alone and really had no other plans today so I’m fine with it.

I was sitting here doing some research and started thinking about the whole Anglo-Christian celebration of the holiday and the odd traditions that have sprung from it. Don’t get me wrong, I understand the underlying purpose and lesson of the holiday…it’s the other stuff I can’t wrap my head around. I usually research historic stories that I write, but this time…what the heck…I’m going to wing it.

The Easter Bunny? Rabbits don’t lay eggs. And no species that does lay eggs, lays eggs filled with marshmallow or candy filling. The Easter Bunny?

As an aside it seems that we (Anglo-Christians) have a tendency to celebrate religious holidays with gift giving. I’m okay with that, I just have never figured out the association. As a child at Christmas time, I surely enjoyed receiving gifts, and learned the story of Christ’s birthday. Christ was born and spent his life teaching us to be good, loving, compassionate people…and I got gifts on his birthday. I used to think that if I was good, and got presents on Christ’s birthday, just think how incredibly good I would be if I got presents on EVERYONE’s birthday…a concept that never caught on…but I digress.

Back to the bunny. Rabbits don’t lay eggs! So where did this come from? Well, either a large group of chickens volunteered to give up their young as gifts to fill baskets…or a large group of chickens were FORCED to give up their young as gifts to fill baskets, and the bunny is responsible for a long standing atrocity. The only other explanation I can come up with is a gross misinterpretation of the tradition. It could be that the Easter bunny was in fact a platypus…the only mammal that actually lays eggs, but in any case given the multi-colored, tie-died appearance of the eggs I am left thinking that psychedelic drugs are involved.

As an end-note the basis of the holiday revolves around Jesus dying for the sins of mankind (for which I am grateful). A few days later, Jesus resurrected and ascended to heaven to continue watching and guiding human kind (for which I am thankful). To that end in the context of modern thinking, Jesus dying and resurrecting…is the ultimate, extreme re-gifting.

Now, don’t get mad, and by all means I’m not looking for comments that start religious debate. Think of it this way. God has a sense of humor. He created a being that could somehow turn the birth, life, and death of his son into a holiday that includes psychedelic eggs…and he created the platypus…look at life from their perspective!

I’m just saying.

14 comments:

saviragupta said...

Never thought about bunnies laying eggs till you mentioned it. NOw you got me thinking...

Martha J. M. Orlando said...

Absolutely marvelous post, Ron!
Oh, and the Easter bunny? Think that's a carry-over from pagan times with bunnies being extremely reproductive and plentiful in the spring.
Eggs? A symbol of the closed tomb - what lies within is new life waiting to burst forth.
Blessings to you!

Corinne Rodrigues said...

I loved the pictures that accompanied this fun read, Ron. Martha's absolutely right about the symbols. As you know Christmas and Easter were Christian holidays created to replace the 'pagan' ones.

Anna L. Walls said...

What a delightful chain of connections. hahaha

Priyashmita said...

I think Jesus would love your analogy. Have a wonderful easter and I hope your ideas of getting gifts on other people's birthdays catch on :)

tbaoo said...

good to see you back and make sure you enjoy some relaxation on the weekend .. to quote a bloke i.e. you - "i'm just saying" i know we all miss that :)

injaynesworld said...

You've clearly given this a lot of thought. I really think we should see little chocolate Jesus figures right alongside the Peeps. Is that wrong?

Happy Easter, Ron.

Debbie McConnell said...

Fun interesting read Ron. Martha is right about the bunny and the egg. Gifts on other's Birthdays bring it on. I do prefer the cute floppy eared bunny over a platypus.

Ron said...

Thank you all for stopping by to give this a read. I do appreciate it!
Savira - Psychedelic eggs no less ;)

Martha - ;). I kinda knew about the pagan traditions...but I like my theory as well ;)

Corinne - Thanks for reading. I still want presents on everyone's birthday - my own pagan tradition ;)

Tbaoo - glad to be back even if only temporarily.

Anna - Thank you ;)

Priyas - I hope Jesus does see the humor in it...rather than strike me with lightening ;)

Jane ;)...I don't think it's wrong ;)...thinking "Buddy Christ" from Dogma ;)

Debbie - Thanks for stopping by ;)

Priyashmita said...

Ron, I am a firm believer that God not only has a sense of humour but also can handle any criticism without batting an eyelid..it is we humans who make him weak by pretending he needs us to defend him...

Dangerous Linda said...

Happy Easter, Ron! ~

One (big) point of clarification in your wrap-up: "He created a being that could somehow turn the birth, life, and death of his son into a holiday that includes psychedelic eggs…" should read, "He created a being that could somehow turn the birth, life, death and RESURRECTION of his son into a holiday that includes psychedelic eggs…"

I once read that Easter is the most popular Christian holiday, followed in close-second by Christmas, because Easter is the holiday that preaches life after death. That is not such a bad match with psychedelic eggs from a bunny after all. Just sayin...

Bongo said...

The bunny and eggs .. i really like and understand what Corinne said....As far as little chocolate Jesus?????? Guess what I found yesterday??????? Just sayin..... As always...XOXOXOXO

Mary Hudak-Collins said...

I always love your spin on words Ron :) This was a delightful stint on Easter. I have often found myself wondering about a lot of our celebrations throughout the year, but have never done much researching. Love your 'just sayin' s!

Healing Morning said...

I find charm in some of our holiday traditions. Whimsy always delights my soul, and I am determined to believe that God/Universe/Spirit embraces whimsy as well. Sometimes I don't dig deeply or dwell on rigid reasons for the bright side of religious holidays; other times, I enjoy learning every arcane and obscure scrap of knowledge behind those traditions. I guess it depends on how I feel on that given holiday, in that given year. Bottom line, the magic of Easter and that bunny still delight my imagination. :)

- Dawn

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