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- SEASONS
-
- The picture of the seasons is dominated by the four great seasonal
- feasts, to which a religious significance has always been attached.
-
- These are :
-
- EASTER - the spring festival, when the earth is re-born
-
- MIDSUMMER - when the sun is at its most powerful
-
- HARVEST - the gathering in of the crops
-
- CHRISTMAS - the mid-winter festival, when the earth begins to turn
- again towards the sun.
-
- SPRING
-
- Spring was associated in pagan times with fertility, as the earth
- sprang into new life after the barren season of winter. This idea
- fitted in admirably with the Christian festival of Easter, when Christ
- rose from the dead, and so early Christians chose to celebrate Easter
- at the time of the spring festival.
-
- "Easter" comes from the Anglo-Saxon word "Eostre"; Eostre was goddess
- of spring, whose festival was celebrated at the vernal equinox of 21
- March. Easter is actually a "movable feast", which can fall on any
- Sunday between 22nd March and 25th April. It is the most solemn, as
- well as the most joyful, festival of the Christian church, as on Good
- Friday the Crucifixion is remembered, while on Easter Sunday the
- Resurrection is celebrated.
-
- One of the oldest customs associated with Good Friday is that of
- eating Hot Cross Buns. These are small currant buns marked with white
- crosses, eaten in memory of the cross on which Christ was crucified.
- The origin of these buns is actually pre-Christian. The Egyptians used
- small loaves stamped with a horn in the worship of their goddess Isis,
- and the Greeks baked cakes marked with crosses for use in devotions to
- the goddess Diana.
-
- There is an old superstition that the sun 'dances' when it rises on
- Easter Sunday, and another that a lamb and a flag appear on the sun.
-
- DO NOT check on these superstitions without wearing strong protective
- glasses, as you may damage your eyes !!!
-
- - There is no scientific truth in these old tales!
-
- An old custom associated with Easter Sunday is that of egg-rolling,
- as a symbol of the stone being rolled away from the tomb. The egg is
- an ancient symbol of resurrection and new life; they were forbidden
- during the Lenten fast, but were given as presents at Easter. For
- rolling, the eggs were hard boiled in coloured dye, and then children
- would have competitions to see who could roll them the furthest.
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