The Pagan Roots of Easter
Spring is here! Birds are laying eggs and joyfully singing in the mornings. Wildflowers are popping up and fruit trees are blossoming as bees and butterflies swirl in the breeze. People are falling in love, planting seeds in their gardens, cleaning their homes and decorating them with flowers. Fertility, new beginnings, hope and beauty are being called in and celebrated.
Spring is a time of renewal of the earth and whether we are conscious of it or not, we may notice that in our ancient bones we too are feeling called to awaken and renew ourselves.
Perhaps you have felt called to do a large Spring cleaning of your home. Maybe you are finding yourself reaching for more greens, juices and living foods that bring vitality and energy into your awakening body.
Out with the old, in with the new
~the mantra of Spring is echoing in many aspects of our lives.
Some of us grew up celebrating the Judeo-Christian Spring holidays of Easter and Passover. If so, we may associate this time of the year with rituals of renewal that feed the forces of rebirth. Many modern people will organize egg hunts in gardens, dye eggs, decorate their homes with fresh flowers and images of baby animals, while celebrating these holidays of renewal with families and friends.
When we pause to reflect upon the symbolism of the foods, rituals and festivities of the Spring holidays, we can gain a valuable perspective into the energy, mystery and magic available to us at these times. With this awareness, we can drop into our own hearts and find the medicine we each need for our Spring renewal, creating new and personal rituals with ancient tools and deep meaning.
While I am not a practicing Christian, Easter has always been one of my favorite holidays and I am flooded with joyful memories of Polish and American Easter customs of my childhood that have clear roots in paganism and earth worshipping practices. What I am sharing with you is based on my personal experience working with plant shamanism, Earth based spirituality and my upbringing in Poland and the US as a Roman Catholic. I would be interested to explore the pagan roots of Passover, Nowruz and other spring holidays as well, but for the purpose of this piece, I will focus on my own experience and cultural roots. Feel free to share your reflections on Spring customs and festivities in the comments below!
The Pagan Roots of Easter
Easter celebrates the resurrection of Jesus and before Christianity, the Spring Equinox represented the return of the sun God from the underworld - the rebirth of light, life and creation. The two vernal equinoxes—the two times each year when there is a perfect balance between light and dark, day and night—were auspicious, potent and celebrated by people whose lives depended on the fertility of the earth. People all around the world created rituals and celebrations to tip us from that point of balance into a fertile Spring, a time of renewal, regeneration and resurrection. Henceforth, the days would be longer than the nights, and Mother Earth would begin stirring and waking up from her winter slumber.
Today, we celebrate Easter on the Sunday following the first full moon after the Spring Equinox — the date of celebration alone is deeply rooted in the earth based traditions that follow the cycles of nature.
The symbols associated with Easter — the egg and the bunny or hare, are also ancient pre-Christian symbols of fertility, birth, creation and the Goddess. The rabbit is connected to fertility — and Spring is a time of creation, sex and birth. Imagine our ancestors who lived so close to the earth — their lives depended on animals procreating, bees fertilizing their fruit trees. We live thanks to all of nature having sex! Celebrating the fertility of the Earth and feeding Her life giving forces was an important way of doing our part of honoring the source of our lives.
The egg is a powerful and ancient symbol as well and thus when used in rituals such as egg painting, it becomes a tool for magic and transformation. Symbolizing the universe, we can imagine the shell as the crust of the earth, the magma as the egg white and the yolk the core. The egg represents life, and has a long history of ritualistic and shamanic use around the world. Adding the symbols of color to the eggs specifies the power given to them -- the Druids were said to dye eggs red, like menstrual blood, and bury them in the newly plowed fields in late winter to draw life force energy into the land and encourage fertility and abundance. Following the traditional origins of painting eggs, we discover a sacred and magical ritual of transformation and manifestation.
While today many people dye eggs in rainbow colors, the tradition of egg painting was once more elaborate and the process was in fact a prayer and magical rite involving “writing” sacred symbols and prayers onto the egg.
Still practiced in my home country of Poland and in Eastern Europe, the ancient art of “Pysanky” (meaning “to write” in Ukrainian) dates back to 1300 BC. The symbols that are traditionally inscribed are rooted in the Trypillian culture, a matriarchal society that worshiped mother earth and flourished six thousand years ago in Eastern Europe. Each aspect of their creation, as well as the actual creative energy of the egg itself, adds meaning and power.
The budding tree, the bird, the sun, the stars — these are the types of symbols we find on the pysanky. One of the most notable ancient symbols found on all traditional designs is the unending line, which denotes the cyclical nature of life. Other examples include the circle, cross, dots, matriarchal symbols, wheat, fir tree, horse, stag, horns and bear’s paws.