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Posts Tagged ‘Easter’

Happy Easter Sunday To All of You

by Bob in Breckenridge ( 67 Comments › )
Filed under Christianity, History, Religion at April 4th, 2010 - 4:25 am

It’s not about baskets filled with candy, fuzzy cute bunnies or colored eggs…It’s about the resurrection of Jesus.

Easter and Eggs

by Bunk Five Hawks X ( 128 Comments › )
Filed under Art, Christianity, History, Open thread, Religion at April 3rd, 2010 - 8:30 pm

easter_pysanka1.jpg

The History of the Easter Egg:

To keep a Christian perspective of Easter in your home, please note the following research that can help you explain the history of the Easter egg to your children.

The earliest Christian history of the Easter egg tradition is found approximately 50 years after Jesus’ resurrection. Bright red-colored eggs were simply exchanged as gifts as a symbol of continuing life and Christ’s resurrection. The red color was an intentional Christian tradition commemorating the blood of Christ. The red Easter eggs in Christian history were originally used when two friends met on Easter day. The two friends would know to tap their eggs together and one would greet the other with the words, “Christ is Risen!” and the other would respond, “Christ is Risen Indeed!” Then the eggs were eaten in fellowship.

In the Reformation years, the church instituted the custom of breaking the Lenten fast with hard-boiled eggs. The eggs were brought to the Easter morning service, and the priest blessed them saying, “Lord, bless these eggs as a wholesome substance, eaten in thankfulness on account of the resurrection of our Lord.”

Our main focus must always be that our children meet Jesus in a personal way. If an Easter egg will bring Jesus alive to a child as a symbolic illustration, we should rejoice in the revelation of Jesus and his Resurrection to our children!

[History of the Easter Egg from here, image from here, and previously posted here.]

This is an open thread for all the reverent, as well as for heathens like myself.

Remembering John Paul II

by Kafir ( 86 Comments › )
Filed under Blogmocracy, Christianity, Guest Post, Religion at April 2nd, 2010 - 4:00 pm

Blogmocracy in Action!
Guest post by: MTC!


I’ve never written a blog post before. I hope you like this one.

April second marks the fifth anniversary of Pope John Paul II’s death. He died after a lon bout with Parkinson’s disease. He was beloved around the world and some of his greatest contributions were toward the end of his life. He practiced what he preached; simply by remaining in office, he gave hope to the marginalized of society as well as hope to the physically challenged.

I had the pleasure of seeing him at Yankee Stadium in 1979. It was magical. When he drove around the stadium in the popemobile, I could feel the presence of God. There was an electricity in the air and his vestments were whiter than white. He seemed to be extraordinary yet he was also very ordinary. He seemed to be the type one could sit down with and have a normal conversation.

The greatest tribute I heard after he died was when I asked one of the developmentally disabled adults I had worked with what made her sad about the Pope’s death.

She said, “He was my friend.”

I think that sums it up nicely. Also, the fifth anniversary of Pope Benedict’s election is coming up on April 19th. He was elected on his 78th birthday; I guess the cardinals wanted to give him a present he would never forget!

Lately, he has been hammered by the press for the Vatican’s response to the abuse of children in the Church. I have tried to make heads or tails out of it. The Anchoress’s blog has a lot of good links and so does www.wdtprs.com by Father Z. There is a greater agenda at work here. The Pope came into office with an undeservedly bad reputation. As the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, he was the Church’s chief theologian. He was thought to be rigid (not true). His nicknames were God’s Rottweiler and Der Panzerkardinal. He was the one who sent the abusive German priest away when he was Archbishop of Munich. He also took charge of investiating abusive priests starting in 2001. Once he saw how slow the process was for removing abusers, he did his best to speed things up. Unfortunately, he wasn’t always able to move as fast as he would like.

The Vatican is very hierarchical; only the Pope can make a final decision about a priest. Pope Benedict thinks that the best cure for abusive priests is to keep gay men out of the seminary as well as tighter standards for admission. He is the first Pope to meet with abuse victims and, shortly before his election, he called on the Church to get rid of the “filth”. This campaign, in the MSM and in certain blogs, to call for his abdication is just an excuse to bring down someone they don’t like. “We want another John Paul”, they say but they forget that they didn’t care for his ideas either. The Achoress, among others, thinks that if this papacy is ruined, it would be damaging to the church. The liberals can’t tolerate someone who thinks life begins at conception and it really burns them that Pope Paul’s encyclical Humanae Vitae is correct. Pope Benedict also advocates improved worship and sticking with an all-male priesthood. So for this Easter season, let’s remember Pope John Paul II and pray for Pope Benedict XVI.

Maybe we could share some of our memories of John Paul II

-mtc

Pauley says…

by Kafir ( 88 Comments › )
Filed under Christianity, Open thread at March 29th, 2010 - 8:30 am

Pauley the Patriot