Remind Me What a #Bunny has to do with Yeshua's Death-&-Resurrection? | @YahooNews @GoogleBooks @ChaseOaks #EasterBunny #TheBunny @VeggieTales #Bunnies #HouseBunny #PlayboyBunny #HoppinDownTheBunnyTrail

Today is Resurrection Sunday (the Christian adaptation of a pagan festival that they-themselves chose to name "Easter"), and Bing (through Bing Rewards) sent me to a couple webmasters' works---one on 'how Easter Eggs originated in #Mesopotamia,' and one on 'how the Easter Bunny (or #EasterHare #EasterRabbit) originated in Germany.

I'll read the reports and put them together either 'below the Subscribe-bar' or on the paying forum you can access through 'the bold word(s)' below; but first I want to teach you about those words. And I find you understand words better if you see 'the words at their base' (then going on to look at the words at those words' bases, then the words at those words' bases, etc.-etc. ad infinitum into their Foundation)

The word “Bunny” is built on the pet-name for “Rabbit, Squirrel, |Attractive Woman (Playboy Club Hostess), |Child,”  with a hint of ancient meanings "|Tail of a Hare, Good." 

The Hare was allegedly the sacred animal of #Ostara (a.k.a. #Eastre or #Eostre or #Oestera, a Saxon goddess of Spring, Fertility of Humans & -Crops, & The Dawn), but "there is no shred of evidence" of this

It is supposed that this goddess (the namesake of Estrogen) mated with the sun-god in the Spring and gave birth to a demi-god at Yule/Winter.

I'm not sure of any connection between The Bunny & The Eggs (much like the connection between Santa Claus & The Coal). My source on Easter Eggs naturally leans on the 'Christian' origin, but it gives clues to the pagan origins before it was adapted by Christian missionaries in ... 

"Mesopotamia" (literally 'a country between two Rivers (the Tigris & Euphrates, in Babylon (modern Iraq))') is built on ancient words that mean "Middle & River" (the word is said in Legend to give Comfort to the Hearer ...).

#Mesopotamian #Mespot


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You might remember that Old Testament story of 3 Hebrews who were thrown into the fire (but weren't burned—reportedly protected by "the fourth man in the fire") when they wouldn't bow to the Babylonian idol.

That story is retold in this Childrens' Video about three guys who are condemned to execution because they won't show obeisance to the food-product their co-workers idolize (or something ... it's been a while since I've seen the whole video)

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