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Easter: A Season of Renewal
By Jay Sharp History News Service
The concept of Easter, a spring festival of renewal, a
celebration of resurrection, lies anciently and deeply
embedded in the human spirit.
Hunters and gatherers, who foraged across a primal
landscape, danced at springtime campfires to celebrate the
return of migratory game, the reemergence of wild food
plants, the warmth of lengthening days, the retreat of long
nights. The ageless spring festivals continued in the
United States, among the plains tribes, for example, well
into historic times.
Early agriculturists watched the heavens and built
monuments to mark the vernal equinox, the first day of
spring, a time of planting, a time of rejuvenated hope. The
puebloans of the American Southwest marked the beginning of
spring, and the other three seasons, by tracking the path of
the sun. They calibrated their planting of corn and other
crops with the arrival of spring. In rituals lost in time,
their shamans painted and chiseled images on stone,
petitioning their spirits for fertility and abundance.
The first civilizations, many so old they had already
risen and fallen by the time of Jesus' crucifixion, rejoiced
at the arrival of spring and wove the concept of
resurrection into their traditions and mythology.
The Sumerians, for instance, who lived seven thousand
years ago in the valley of the legendary river Euphrates,
believed that Tammuz, their god of "deep waters," and his
wife, their goddess Ishtar, or "Mother Earth," returned
from death to life to assure the miracle of spring each
year.
The Greeks believed that their god Adonis, slain by Ares,
the god of war, returned from death to life to bring
abundance in the spring of each year. The people of the
Phrygian Hills, in Asia Minor, believed that their god
Attis, who committed suicide when frustrated in love,
returned to life in the spring. The Egyptians, too,
believed that their god Osiris, slain by Set, the Evil One,
returned to life in the spring.
Perhaps those civilizations, which could have had some
contact through the ages, took their belief in resurrection
from a single source, but other, geographically separated
civilizations held similar beliefs.
On our own hemisphere, the Mayans believed that their
Hero Twins arose from the dead and that they held the power
to resurrect others from death. This story of resurrection
had such appeal and staying power that it spread from
southern Mexico and Central America into the southwestern
United States, where the Indians wove the story into their
own mythology and painted Twins images on ceramic bowls.
The theme of renewal and resurrection in spring runs like
a deep river through history.
Easter symbols, many of them a part of our children's
celebration of the season, have equally ancient origins.
The egg, a universal part of Easter, served as a metaphor
for the birth of the universe in the mythology of India and
Egypt and, centuries ago, it became a symbol of hope, a
wellspring for new life, in the spring celebrations of the
Christian religion.
The colored Easter egg enriches the metaphor, although
the origin is uncertain. One legend holds that it began
with Mary, who offered eggs to the Roman soldiers at the
cross as she pleaded with them to restrain their cruelty to
Jesus. Her tears splashed on the eggs, dashing them with
brilliant colors.
The rabbit, an equally pervasive part of Easter, has long
represented fertility, a critical concern for the survival
of early foragers, agriculturists and civilizations, and it,
too, became a symbol of hope for abundance in the spring.
The lamb carried over as a symbol from the 4,000-year-old
Jewish Passover, celebrated in the spring, to Christian
Easter festivals. The lamb's role as the hope for the
future of the flocks of early Middle Eastern shepherds
reinforced its role as an Easter symbol.
Like the emotion of love, the ideas of life from death,
symbols of fertility and hope, the welcoming of a
re-awakened earth have spanned culture and time and
geography. They often arose spontaneously, without outside
influences, from somewhere deep in the human soul.
The crucifixion and resurrection of Jesus, therefore,
struck a universal chord, with profound historical
parallels. From its defining moment, Jesus' triumph over
death, Christianity emerged as a religion of hope, a
fundamental belief among the faithful that whatever happened
during life on earth, a paradise awaited during an eternal
life with God.
Easter is perhaps the most ancient and widespread of
mankind's annual festivals. The common themes of
resurrection and hope, the universal symbols of renewal and
abundance, remind us every spring of the shared values of
the human species.
Jay Sharp, an independent scholar and photographer based
in Las Cruces, N.M., specializes in southwestern history and
archaeology. He is a writer for the History News Service.
[Jay W. Sharp, 2465 El Dorado Court, Las Cruces, NM
88011. Phone: (505) 521-2619; fax: (505) 521-0875; e-mail:
jsharp@totacc.com]
History News Service
Co-Directors:
Joyce Appleby: appleby@history.ucla.edu
Telephone: 310-470-8946
James M. Banner, Jr.: jbanner@aya.yale.edu
Telephone: 202-462-5655
Website designed and administered by Christopher
Bates.
This article was posted on March 17, 1997.
Pictured at top (left to right): The Norman
Invasion of England, Magellan, Rene Descartes, The siege of
Atlanta, Jackie Robinson.
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