Quick! What do eggs, flowers, the East, maidens dancing around phallic
symbols, the vernal equinox, fecund rabbits, chicks, flowers, Mardi
Gras, estrus cycles, and Christianity all have in common? SEX!
Well,
Christians actually call it Easter, named after Eastre, the Germanic
fertility goddess, which comes from the same origin as the word "east."
Why east? That's where the sun rises! The same spring sun that shines
on those brightly colored chicken ova and brings new life to the earth
-- flowers, chicks, bunnies, and the occasional god. Jesus wasn't the
only god allegedly reborn around the vernal equinox. There was also
Adonis, Osiris, Perseus, and Orpheus.
Spring is when we have the
licentious festivals of Mardi Gras, Carnival, and the ancient Roman
fertility festival of Lupercalia. It's when the Kanamara Matsuri
(Festival of the Steel Phallus) is celebrated in Japan. Nothing subtle
about those Buddhists and Shinto! It's when pre-Christian pagans all
over the earth celebrated the return of life after the dark death of
winter and propitiated their gods for a successful growing season by
celebrating their fertility. The early Christian church couldn't
eradicate this popular festival, so they hijacked it and assigned new
theological meaning to it. But under all that sanctimonious piety,
Easter is nothing but the spring fertility rites. Now that's something
even atheists can celebrate!