There's no
story in the Bible about a long-eared, cotton-tailed creature known as the
Easter Bunny. Neither is there a passage about young children painting eggs or
hunting for baskets overflowing with scrumptious Easter goodies.
And real
rabbits certainly don't lay eggs.
Bunnies,
eggs, Easter gifts and fluffy, yellow chicks in gardening hats all stem from
pagan roots. These tropes were incorporated into the celebration of Easter
separately from the Christian tradition of honoring the day Jesus Christ rose
from the dead.
Spring symbolized
new life and rebirth; eggs were an ancient symbol of fertility. According to
History.com, Easter eggs represent Jesus' resurrection. However, this
association came much later when Roman Catholicism became the dominant religion
in Germany in the 15th century and merged with already ingrained pagan beliefs.
The first
Easter Bunny legend was documented in the 1500s. By 1680, the first story about
a rabbit laying eggs and hiding them in a garden was published. These legends
were brought to the United States in the 1700s, when German immigrants settled
in Pennsylvania Dutch country, according to the Center for Children's
Literature and Culture.
The
tradition of making nests for the rabbit to lay its eggs in soon followed.
Eventually, nests became decorated baskets and colorful eggs were swapped for
candy, treats and other small gifts.
Happy Easter!
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