Moon of Alabama Brecht quote
March 31, 2024
Let’s Go For A Easter Walk

Easter echoes the eons old human festivity to celebrate the arrival of spring. The dark and cold days of winter are gone. The bright time of fertility has come.

Today's fertility symbols of Easter, the egg and the hare, relate to the old Germanic fertility goddess Eostre (Ostara). Another related goddess is Ishtar, a Mesopotamian representation of love, who stepped down into the underworld of death but was revived. The Christian resurrection of Jesus is probably a transformation of this older tale.

When the Christian message spread from its eastern Mediterranean origin its incorporation of old local gods and fables helped to convert the multi-theistic societies to the new monotheistic believe. The gods of the pre-Christian religions were not completely discarded but their tales were transformed to support the message the Christian preachers were spreading.

It is finally spring, the darkness has vanished and this is my favored holiday.

Happy Easter


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Please join me, Johann van Goethe and Dr. Faust on our traditional Easter Walk:

Look from this height whereon we find us
Back to the town we have left behind us,

Where from the dark and narrow door
Forth a motley multitude pour.

They sun themselves gladly and all are gay,
They celebrate Christ's resurrection to-day.

For have not they themselves arisen?
From smoky huts and hovels and stables,
From labor's bonds and traffic's prison,
From the confinement of roofs and gables,
From many a cramping street and alley,
From churches full of the old world's night,
All have come out to the day's broad light.

How it hums o'er the fields and clangs from the steeple!
This is the real heaven of the people,
Both great and little are merry and gay,
I am a man, too, I can be, to-day.

Comments

Posted by: todd | Mar 31 2024 23:03 utc | 102
Don’t despair, Todd. I think Jesus, as a man or simply an aspirational character, was a great guy, who liberated religion for a universal audience, serving to unite diverse people in a time of tribalism and division.
People may have moved beyond religious thinking, but nobody in their right mind wants a return to the tribal Judaism that predated universal JC.

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Apr 1 2024 0:36 utc | 101

You know I really like how B hid this pleasant little Easter thread just like an Easter egg. You’re a good guy too, old B. Peace be with you!

Posted by: Ahenobarbus | Apr 1 2024 0:38 utc | 102

Absolutely beautiful, B!
Happy Easter to you!

Posted by: Kay | Apr 1 2024 1:34 utc | 103

I muddled the threads and put in two follow-up posts about the Christian historicity question. The first provides links to a site with many old texts etc. and the second provides a rather amusing excerpt from a letter to Pontius Pilate about a new troublemaker called Jesus and how the Sanhedrim are impossible to deal with. He is amused that Jesus is having run-ins with them too.
In the . MOA Week in Review thread

Posted by: scorpion | Apr 1 2024 1:45 utc | 104

PS Also a note-reply to juliana.
Now here also a youtube that popped up mysteriously:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qOoQrpaxhLw
Eye-Witness of Jesus Christ! Letter of Lentulus Describes Jesus in Great Detail to Ceasar of Rome!
(‘He is serious, never laughs, but cries often!’)

Posted by: scorpion | Apr 1 2024 1:55 utc | 105

Posted by: scorpion | Apr 1 2024 1:55 utc | 107
Two instances of Biblical laughter I can think of are these: The first, when the strangers visiting Abraham and Sarah in Mamre tell him he is to be the father of many and Sarah, overhearing this, laughs. The strangers say to Sarah, hey, you laughed. She replies, No, I didn’t laugh. The strangers say, Oh yes, you did laugh.
The second one comes to the reader when at long last the Gospel reading of the story of the blind man is related, which comes in the Easter cycle on the last Sunday before Pentecost. It occurs during the quesioning of the blind man about his having received his sight. I love this passage which includes his parents saying to the officials “Ask him: he is of age.” And when he is asked he says, I have no idea who cured me. All I know is that now I can see! [Exit officials, stage left].
Just thought of another one: The end of the Jonah story. Jonah is enjoying the shade of a vine, but it withers leaving him exposed to the sun. He is extremely angry, first about God forgiving Nineveh, but second the pesky plant having withered. God asks him: Do you do well to be angry for the vine? Jonah says, Yes, I do well to be angry, angry enough to die! God says, No, you don’t. Or rather, God says: You pity the plant [Note in my RSV says ‘probably a caster oil plant(!)] so shall I not pity Nineveh? No reply from Jonah. The end.
I guess probably I’m a bit slow – to me these are deliciously funny moments in Scripture, maybe because, as you say, it’s a serious business for the most part. And maybe most people wouldn’t find them funny at all. But I do.

Posted by: juliania | Apr 1 2024 5:24 utc | 106

Jean-Francois
Thank you very much, now I understand; sorry for the misunderstanding, mea culpa.

Posted by: Simon | Apr 1 2024 7:47 utc | 107

“By the way the shortest day is on December, 21 not 25.”
And who cares, what difference does it make.
Everyone gets the idea: the birth of Jesus called “the Christ” (that is: the Christ to come) was placed (ca. 300/400) at the darkest time of the year to symbolize the birth of a hope in the darkness.
Posted by: Simon | Mar 31 2024 14:19 utc | 62

Good summary of the astronomical/seasonal aspect of the story from 18minutes 55 seconds here:
#youtube.com/watch?v=XVYlxHteUMs#
Briefly, the heliacal rising of Sirius is the ‘star in the east’ which presages the position on the horizon where the winter solstice Sun rises at it’s most southerly station of the year. ‘Standstill’ last a few days. On the 25th it rises noticeably further north.

Posted by: oldhand | Apr 1 2024 11:54 utc | 108

I wish you a blessed Easter as well.
Regarding ancient pagan rituals intermingling with Christianity, I would dare say non-Roman catholic Eastern Europeans have the strongest level of integration. Though all Christian denominations were quite hostile towards pagan rituals, different rulers approached the issue differently. Some wiped out the very essence of the pre-Christian culture, whereas other integrated the pre-Christian traditions with the Christian ones. But due to the continuous warfare throughout the middle ages not much written proof/evidence is left over (When the Austrians “liberated” Hungary from the Ottomans they burned down the Budapest library that was considered the greatest of its kind in all of Europe…Unlike the Ottomans who, although destroyed countless books, were so impressed by the sheer size decided to keep it intact). We only have the cultural legacy that shows the traditions of the past.
One walks always in two shoes, one of the past and one of the future. It is wise to have both on your feet…It is a long walk.:)

Posted by: ForWhomTheBellTolls | Apr 1 2024 12:52 utc | 109

So, in these unbearable times b has given us this jewel post with the title “Let’s Go on an Easter Walk.” Thank you so much, b.
I am feeling like continuing that Easter Walk as long as possible. I know that Orthodox Easter isn’t calculated to occur until May 5th, but there are traditions within Orthodoxy whereby monasteries would give the Easter blessings early, and sing the Easter hymns in anticipation for those who might not be alive by the time that long period of Lent came to a conclusion, even sending the monastic inhabitants out to face hardships ouside the safety of the monastery.
Let’s go on b’s Easter walk, with Johann von Goethe, all the Saints of the Kiev Caves and Ukraine, and the children of Palestine.
Today is the day of the Resurrection
O nations,let us be jubilant
For this Passover is the Passover of the Lord
In that Christ our God
Made us pass from death to life
And from earth to heaven
We who sing to him triumphal praise.
Christ is risen from the dead
Trampling down death by death
And upon those in the tomb
And apon those in the tomb
Bestowing life
Bestowing life!
Indeed let the heavens rejoice!
Let the earth be glad!
Let the whole universe
Visible and invisible
Rejoice in the feast!
For Christ our eternal joy is risen.
Christ is risen from the dead!
Let’s keep walking!

Posted by: juliania | Apr 2 2024 4:43 utc | 110

Insofar as anybody can or will discover, the word Easter comes from the venerable Bede, a famous and much admired relative scholar of Europe and England and Britain of the middle ages. But he had no idea what the word meant for his pagan ancestors. Apparently. He says it was a Goddess, but declined, probably for very good Christian reasons, to describe her sacrifices. Probably because they disgusted him, and not only because he was a monk.

Posted by: T J Foster | Apr 2 2024 23:01 utc | 111

It is one thing to attack the Christians. But to defend pagans?! At least you are not stalked by hysterical blood rituals and superstition generally and can claim the innocent spring symbols adapted to Christianity! But Christianity overthrew the blood rituals, the fallen nonsense, you ridiculous fools! It was and is a relative step toward the light.

Posted by: T J Foster | Apr 2 2024 23:19 utc | 112

You can read (and probably should now) the whole of the Bible as a tour de force, sui generis polemic on the ancient Mesopotamian and Mediterranean world. That is what it is. ‘Revaluation of all values,’ as Nietzsche said. He meant a comment on the military ruling class. So the humour is not contrived, its native or original.

Posted by: T J Foster | Apr 2 2024 23:31 utc | 113

This is not a funny moment in scripture but a funny story that erupted in Mexico during Easter. This gay guy who happens to be one of the richest men in Mexico by owning the department store chain Coppel, also owns a fancy hotel on the main beach. No idea if he is/was actually at the hotel when this happened but the story goes that he asked the police to ask the banda players on the beach, a Mazatlan tradition, to go away whilst his hotel was having a classical music concert for his gringo clientele around their swanky swimming pool.
That didn’t go down well.
Fast forward a few days and Mazatlan is now hosting a three months long 24/7 banda-on-the-beach festival to break the Guinness Book of Records whilst telling the Coppel guy, and gringos in general, to stuff it. Their favourite spot, of course, is right in front of that fancy hotel – festooned, naturally, with lots of ‘Gringos Go Home!’ signs. My wife just showed me a picture of looks like well over a thousand people marching along the beach behind a front row of banda players.
Mexicans are fiercely proud of their culture. Maybe woke stuff is big in parts of Mexico City but not in most of the country. This is a good old-fashioned patriotic resent-fest creatively leveraged into a huge beach party for a few months kicked off during Easter Week. Musicians from all over Latin America are pouring in…
Only in Mexico!

Posted by: scorpion | Apr 3 2024 0:50 utc | 114