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And I don't know why we do it backwards. I guess people like Santa more than the easter bunny... Santa brings STUFF while the bunny only brings chocolate?
Mostly I think it is because we just don't get how HUGE easter is. If we really GOT it we would certainly celebrate it more.
"Have yourself a happy little Easter..."
"I'm dreaming of a green Easter..."
"Here comes the Easter Bunny, Here comes Easter Bunny, right down Easter Bunny Lane...!"
Nope. Just doesn't have the same ring to it, does it?
Hmmm... backwards indeed.
Focusing on the genealogy of Jesus, ministry of Jesus, death of Jesus and resurrection of Jesus.
I have Easter songs, Easter movies, etc. etc.
It is a celebration of victory. Pure and simple.
even the non-Christian knows that a man named Jesus was born... and that Christmas is supposed to be about that. but less people like to think about the fact that this man supposedly rose from the dead. Him raising again is something a lot more people don't believe in at all.
we as Christians and we in ministry do a CRAPPY job of making Easter a priority. after all, it is that He was born or even that He died... it is that He rose again... that's what is worth celebrating above all.
or it could be that the Easter Bunny is way less believable than Santa Claus so we don't spend as much time and money on the holiday.
Not to mention....it's officially Holy week...the most important week on the Christian calender.
Maybe the celebration just looks a little different. Sometimes we focus so much on the "YAY JESUS ROSE FROM THE GRAVE" that we forget to share in his sufferings...it could be a humbling experience if we open ourselves up to the understanding of what Jesus REALLY did on the cross.
just sayin.
However, you're totally right about it being backwards. This Friday/Sunday is what our Faith is built upon. The sacrifice of God to give us freedom from sin. Christ's birth is certainly important, but it's his death and what that means to all of us that we should truly be focusing on.
Thanks for reminding me...Easter sneaks up on me a bit. Probably because there isn't a huge secular following surrounding the holiday that signals from the malls that it's here.
Anne, I agree with you too. Think of what our weekend gatherings would be like if we put the same effort into them every week as we do Christmas and Easter - now there's something to think about!!!!
The truth is: Easter is the day that proved Jesus was more than a man...He was God. But does it have to trump God becoming man? They are both equally meaningful days. But so was the day the dirty woman was made well, the lame guy could walk, the children sitting in his lap and being blessed. They all were events of His love, compassion, and deity being displayed.
Easter...YIPPIE!
easter = death defeated. sin defeated. HALLELUJAH!!!
then, i thought we should REALLY celebrate Pentecost - that's when Christ's Spirit came to live INSIDE man. that's just AMAZING. we have Him here. now. NOW.
Jesus is Risen!!
(and all the schools and stores are closed here on Good Friday)
Brad Ruggles
www.bradruggles.com
my guess is more folks genuinely are celebrating the risen Christ at Easter than are celebrating the Incarnation at Christmas (though many still miss the main thing). the sad truth is that culture has overwhelmed what ought to be a sweet, simple time of celebrating the birth of Jesus.
i got no problem with gift-giving/receiving, but i fear it hides for many people the purity of the season. even as a Christ follower, i need to regularly ask the Lord to keep me focused during the Christmas season.
I thought this was interesting and basically states what I would have said in a much more eloquent, thought-out way.
http://watersofmormon.org/archive/2007/12/20/ho...
OMG. I nearly fainted.
My old churches did recognize and celebrate the days leading up to Easter (Lent). I remember we used to have a big ceremony for Palm Sunday where we would wave palms in the air and sing songs in celebration of Jesus. I just don't see churches doing that anymore. I think it's one of those things where we've become so focused on going against tradition that we've forgotten some of those practices that help us remember and observe why we're Christians in the first place. Maybe we've thrown some babies out with the bathwater.
Yes, we always had Good Friday off when I was in school. I graduated in '82 - I think alot depends on where you are from. I did an unofficial survey in the Chicago area and most schools are closed, even the public ones. Out in the suburbs is where I found some schools open, which caused me to question why...
Dolores