Q & A -- Breaking down the importance of Easter
- Share via
Today is Easter, which Christians believe is the time that Jesus
Christ was resurrected from the dead after being crucified on the cross.
And while the Easter Bunny has become the symbol for some to celebrate
the Christian holiday with Easter eggs and candy, for many others, the
bunny is only part of a larger and more important celebration.
The Rev. John A. Huffman Jr., senior minister at St. Andrew’s
Presbyterian Church in Newport Beach, sat down with Daily Pilot Asst.
City Editor James Meier recently to discuss how important Easter is to
Christians.
What is the genesis of Easter?
It’s the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Easter is the church’s
celebration of the literal, physical resurrection of Jesus Christ.
What should Easter mean to Christians?
We celebrate that Christ is risen. Exclamation point. That’s the
affirmation of the earliest church worship with the affirmation that
Christ has risen. The pastors would say “Christ is risen!” “The
congregation would respond Christ is risen indeed!”
The meaning is that God has come in uniform. His name is Jesus Christ.
He died for the sins of the world on the cross bearing our sins and, on
the third day, he rose from the dead in victory over sin and death. And
the Holy Spirit is with us until Jesus returns again. That’s the essence
of the Gospel. That’s the essence of any Roman Catholic, Protestant,
Orthodox. That is the essence of the faith.
Does the Easter Bunny demean the holiday?
No, the Easter Bunny is wonderful for kids. At our home, we always
have the Easter Bunny, Easter eggs, Easter candy and Easter dinner. But
that is a fun family occasion supplemental to -- that’s not the essence
of -- Easter. The Easter Bunny isn’t Easter.
Easter is Christ on the cross. Bad Friday followed by the resurrection
that makes bad Friday Good Friday.
How important of a holiday is it for Christians?
I would say that, in terms of what it represents, it is the most
important of the holidays. I try, at St. Andrew’s, to emphasize that
Christmas Eve is only meaningful in the context of Easter, which I would
rather call the Resurrection of Christ.
We could get very sentimental about a baby in a manger and we could
diffuse the significance of Easter by jumping to Palm Sunday right over
Holy Thursday and Good Friday, avoiding the cross to a positive message
of Christ’s victory over life and death and forget the cost that was in
it. And we could dress up Christmas with Santa Claus and Easter with the
Easter Bunny, and for some people, that’s all there is.
I have some friends who don’t have any idea what’s it all about, and
their celebration is a big deal. It’s probably a bigger deal for them
than it is for me and my family on the basis that it’s their chance to
have a big, big family celebration. But they aren’t believers in Jesus
Christ, and they don’t go to church. They have absolutely no touch with
the spiritual significance. And they’re good people.
How much does church membership swell at Easter?
Membership doesn’t swell, but attendance does. That happens at every
church. I’m excited about welcoming everyone who comes on Christmas Eve
and Easter, but the real St. Andrew’s you see 365 days a year isn’t
Christmas Eve and Easter.
The joke is a guy says “I don’t go to church because every time I go,
they sing the exact same songs and have the same exact message.” Then
he’s asked, “Well, how often do you go?” “Every Christmas Eve and every
Easter.” So, they’re always singing “Away in a Manger” and “Little Town
of Bethlehem.”
How does Easter differ in the Presbyterian Church than the other
Christian churches?
I’m not that sure I can answer that. If there’s one thing that all the
Christian churches have in common is the Resurrection of Christ. That’s
why we celebrate the first of the week. The true Sabbath is Saturday. The
Jewish people celebrate their Sabbath from sundown on Friday to sundown
on Saturday.
Do any of the traditions differ at all?
Oh, I’m sure they do. Basically, I would say it’s a joyous occasion to
declare and celebrate Jesus Christ rising from the dead and the victory
over death. Satan is defeated. Christ is victor. God is in charge. It’s
an affirmation that no matter how lousy, how miserable and how difficult
life is, God is in charge.
Anything else to add?
I thank God for every Christ-centered community affair here in Orange
County and throughout the world where believers celebrate that their
lives have been transformed by the good news in the Gospel that Christ
has conquered.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.