Thursday, April 5, 2012

Make This a No Bunny Easter

I spent eight years from 1972 - 1980 serving as director of Christian education on the staff at Immanuel Lutheran Church in Downers Grove, Illinois. My teammate during those years was Pastor Bill Huener. Bill was a great mentor and also one of the most colorful people I have worked with. He had a real servant's heart, and a passion for the liturgy. As a congregation we celebrated every festival, major or minor. I seldom saw Bill lose his cool, but I witnessed it one Easter. Someone decided to use an inflatable bunny to greet people at the church's Easter breakfast. Bill was indignant and the offending rabbit quickly disappeared. Bottom line: Bunnies have no connection with the Christian celebration of our Lord's Resurrection.

While bunnies are a symbol for fertility, and thus have no connection with Easter, chickens and eggs do. The Easter egg serves as a reminder that Jesus broke free from the tomb, in the same way the baby chick does from the egg. Christians decorate eggs in festival colors to celebrate the Easter feast.

In the same way, butterflies are an appropriate symbol. Caterpillars form a cocoon and in time emerge as beautiful butterflies, a reminder that Jesus emerged from the cocoon of death to be our Beautiful Savior. Easter lilies are another reminder. If you've ever seen a lily bulb, you get the picture. From something ugly and unattractive comes a beautiful flower.

One way of passing on the heritage of faith is through symbols. Easter provides a great time to do that. Spend time this season talking with you children about the significance of the season. While you are at it, take time to talk about how your faith in the Risen Savior has sustained you through times of pain and grief.

Easter is the most significant festival in the Christian Church year. Without the Resurrected Savior we would have no faith, and no hope.

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