Another difference between Christmas and Easter is that people don't pig out on food at Easter like they do at Christmas. There isn't even any specific Easter food apart from hot cross buns and a few cakes and biscuits with bunnies and chicks on them sold in supermarkets. You don't find many people piling their shopping trollies with food in supermarkets like there is no tomorrow a few days before Easter like you see a few days before Christmas. As far as the British people are concerned, Christmas isn't Christmas without a dead turkey on the table along with the obligatory sprouts and a heavy alcohol infused pudding - despite 90% of the population detesting them. The traditional Easter dinner is roast lamb but the only people who serve it are the folk who regularly cook roast dinners on Sunday. I wouldn't be surprised if chicken (not necessarily roast) is more popular than lamb nowadays but rabbit meat will always remain a niche item. It's tradition (rooted in Christianity) to eat fish on Good Friday and Holy Saturday, and abstain from meat both days, but only devout Christians (and fish lovers) seem to adhere to this tradition nowadays.
Easter is also a relatively dry event compared with the booze fuelled Christmas. Is this because there is a certain Christmas spirit that's absent at Easter which in the modern day translates to whisky, gin, and vodka?!
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Originally posted by Arran View PostI have wondered why, in recent decades, Easter hasn't become commercialised in a similar way to Christmas with parents buying toys etc. for their kids. All that is sold are chocolate products and a bit of cheap tat.
Apart from the church service (in which Justin Welby himself is doing this year at Canterbury Cathedral - worth watching as a result), and Urbi et Orbi (with the Pope as Francis and his predecessors have done so for donkey's years), and one or two documentaries on Jesus, TV programmes are business as usual, probably because it is on a Sunday anyway - in fact, Easter Monday Bank Holiday reinforces it in lieu of Sunday. BBC 1 and ITV used to show films like The Robe or Jesus Christ Superstar on Easter Sunday afternoon, or perhaps Mary Poppins or some Disney film like that. Channel 5 starting on Easter Sunday in 1997 was probably a good choice of day to launch in that respect.
Also, there doesn't seem to be songs about Easter in the charts (Bing Crosby's Easter Parade is the only song about Easter that I can think of), compared to Christmas songs in December. Because of COVID, I have even heard of some people putting trees up in their living rooms this year, making comparisons with Christmas trees in December.
I ordered seven different Easter eggs with my Tesco online shop, but only two were delivered on Tuesday (Csdbury Roses and Kit-Kat Chunky) - they were probably selling like hotcakes never mind hot cross buns.
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I have wondered why, in recent decades, Easter hasn't become commercialised in a similar way to Christmas with parents buying toys etc. for their kids. All that is sold are chocolate products and a bit of cheap tat.
A (now closed down) local bike shop used to do promotions to encourage parents to buy their kids a bike as an Easter gift but it failed to catch on. The twisted irony is that Christmas is actually the worst time to buy kids a bike and Easter is the best time - and the owner of the shop even admitted it.
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Why the Dickens is Easter celebrated less than Christmas?
https://religionnews.com/2015/04/02/...ess-christmas/
Why Easter never became a big secular holiday like Christmas
https://www.vox.com/2018/3/29/171688...unny-egg-pagan
Today is Spy Wednesday. The day that Christians believe Judas betrayed Jesus. It's actually a religious celebration with a church service in the evening.
There is a strange twisted irony that Easter has more events in the run up to the big day than Christmas has, yet the run up to Easter Sunday feels very ordinary to say the least compared with that for the run up to Christmas day.
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Re: Easter
All eggs BOGOF at Morrisons ....treat yourself, i know i have
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Re: Easter
Nobody allowed in cemeteries today on palm Sunday to put flowers on loved ones graves
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Re: Easter
My family didn't even get round to planning easter, but we can't have any get togethers.
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Re: Easter
So is easter cancelled?... some logistical probs with the usual distribution of easter eggs amongst family members outside of the household. Don't reckon i'll bother this year
....Still, can look forward to watching The ten commandments on telly
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Re: Easter
Originally posted by Arran View PostNot on the same day.
Has anybody here celebrated Eid or Diwali even if (like most people who celebrate Christmas) you don't follow the religions? Some primary schools hold celebrations for them.
They also did Diwali but I think that the difference is that the lights and fireworks (more prominently seen in places like Leicester) nicely fit in quite closely to Guy Fawkes Night almost every year. I had a best friend in Infant school who was Hindu, I think, so I was aware of the culture of that.
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Re: Easter
Originally posted by Arran View PostNot on the same day.
Has anybody here celebrated Eid or Diwali even if (like most people who celebrate Christmas) you don't follow the religions? Some primary schools hold celebrations for them.
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