đŁ âEaster comes from the Babylonian goddess Ishtar.â There is no etymological connection between these two words. Ishtar comes from the Semitic âattar,â meaning âstar,â while Easter comes from the European âeastre,â meaning âdawn/beginning.â The myth of a connection was first popularized in the now discredited 19th century book âThe Two Babylons,â by Alexander Hislop.
âď¸ âEaster comes from the Anglo-Saxon goddess Eostre.â Itâs true that the Venerable Bede theorized that there was an ancient goddess named Eostre as an explanation for the month of Eosturmonath. Outside of Bedeâs one reference, however, there is no evidence that such a goddess existed. In his 725 work âThe Reckoning of Time,â Bede offers explanations for the etymological origins of the English months, which he prefaces by saying, âut suspicamurâââwe suspect.â Whatâs more, several of his other suspicions have proved wrong: he theorized that âHrethmonth is named for their goddess Hrethaââanother goddess who did not exist; and that Solmonath is so named because âthey offered cakes to their gods in that monthââalthough the prefix âsol-â actually means âmudâ and indicates that the February equivalent was a muddy season. Most scholars agree that Bede was mistaken, and that Eosturmonath was named thus because it was the âbeginningâ of the months.
đ âConstantine and the Catholic Church invented Easter.â The early church called this holiday âPascha,â the Greek transliteration of the Hebrew âPesach,â meaning âPassover.â Whatâs more, the overwhelming majority of Christians *to this day* refer to the holiday as some version of âPassoverâ (Spanish: Pascua, French: Pâques, Dutch: Pasen, Filipino: Pasko, Hawaiian: Pakoa, Turkish: Paskalya, Swahili: Pasaka). Very few languages (like English, German, and Japanese) call it something related to âEasterââwhich, again, simply means âBeginning/Dawn month.â
đď¸ âThe Catholics changed the calendar.â According to the biblical text, Jesus died during Passoverâthe first full moon after the spring equinoxâand was raised three days later on the day after the SabbathâSunday. Leviticus 23 gives a name for the Sunday after PassoverââFirstfruits,â a celebration of resurrection (v. 11). Thus, Christians celebrate the resurrection of our Passover Lamb on the biblical prescribed dayâthe Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox.
𪺠âEggs are a part of pagan worship.â Ova PaschaliaâPassover eggsâfirst show up in the 13th century, hundreds of years after Christianity was uniformly adopted across Europe, for a very practical reason. Families were not permitted to eat eggs during Lent, meaning that (by Pascha/Easter) they had a surplus of uneaten eggs. This abundance of hardboiled eggs was subsequently viewed as a fun treat after forty days of fasting. It wasnât until the mid-1800s that traditions like Easter Egg Hunts became popularized to make the Paschal feast more fun for kids.
đ âThe Easter Bunny is pagan.â Bunnies/hares were not regarded as a pagan symbol in Babylonian/Celtic religions. The hare actually became associated with Christianity in the Middle Ages, because they reproduced so quickly that they were lightheartedly viewed as being able to reproduce without sexâi.e., virgin births. Medieval manuscripts around this time sometimes featured illustrations of hares to represent the Virgin Mary. Around the 1600s, folktales were told to children connecting the abundance of eggs with the abundance of haresâalong with a message that if you followed the rules, the hares would leave you extra treats.
What about my family?
đ§âđ§âđ§âđ§ We typically call the holiday âPassover Sundayâ or âResurrection Sunday,â as these are the words the Bible uses to describe this day. âEasterâ isnât a bad wordâthere are just better titles for this celebration.
đ§âđ§âđ§âđ§ If time permits and the kids ask, weâll let them dye a few eggs. Usually friends or family might give our kids chocolate bunnies, and weâre cool with that. These are harmless and silly traditions, and thereâs not a great need to deprive our kids of a few fun treats.
đ§âđ§âđ§âđ§ We go to church, just like we do every Sunday morning. We worship corporately with the people of God, receive communion, hear the Word of God preached, and rejoice in His glorious triumph over death. Then we bring that celebration home, where we feast around a table with our family and friends.