The Easter Idea Place

Ideas for Easter eggs, baskets, crafts, decorations and more!


April 11, 2006

Using Child Stories to Teach the True Meaning of Easter

Filed under: Easter Ideas @ 10:01 pm

by Paul Arinaga

There’s a lot of controversy about the true meaning of Easter. Some claim that it’s actually a pagan celebration in origin. Others lament that retailers, greeting card companies and television are changing Christianity’s greatest feast into something with meaning “the size of a jelly bean.”

In any case, the most common view about the real meaning of Easter is that it’s a celebration of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, and that through this act, sin and death are conquered. Easter also can be seen as a season of joy. The time of sorrow is over. Lent’s penitential forty days have passed, and the fifty days of the Easter season have begun. Winter is over and spring is in the air. In times past, it’s said that priests would regale their parishioners with funny stories. Easter was truly a time to rejoice. To rejoice that Our Lord has Risen and that one day we too shall pass through death (which has lost its sting) and rise to New Life!

While I am certainly not erudite enough to give you the definitive answer on what Easter means. I believe that it offers many valuable insights about life, no matter what your religious beliefs. In fact, the Easter story is so powerful that it probably offers something even to an open-minded atheist!

One of the biggest lessons from the Easter story, I believe, is the power of forgiveness. Unfortunately, there are many misconceptions about what forgiveness actually is. In my opinion, it doesn’t mean condoning the wrong that has been committed or allowing it to happen again. Moreover, the act of forgiving is not necessarily something you do for the transgressor (although it can be), although its power can transform the transgressor, too. It is something you may do for yourself.

When you can forgive, you can finally be free of the burden of guilt, anger, hatred or resentment. The healing process can begin or finally conclude. You can also let go of the person who hurt you. This makes you stronger and removes the power that person has over you. It’s somehow ironic that by not forgiving we allow the person who has harmed us to continue to harm us, even if they themselves are unaware of the long-term damage that is being inflicted. Of course, ultimately, we are responsible. By taking responsibility now for our own interpretation of what happened in the past, we become much stronger – I think that’s what people mean when they talk about “self-empowerment”.

Teaching children the power of forgiveness is both difficult and easy. It’s difficult because forgiveness is an advanced skill that can take a lifetime to master, and because there’s so much confusion about what it actually means to forgive. It’s easy because children often have fewer pre-conceived notions and see life more clearly than adults do. I’m always struck by how children seem more pragmatic and matter-of-fact than adults.

So, how can you teach something as sophisticated as forgiveness? I like to use children’s stories to explore difficult themes like forgiveness. It’s easier to understand forgiveness through the lens of other people or even other creatures. Once you understand what the characters in the child story are going through, you can relate it back to your own life or situation.

You can use the choices made by different characters or their attitudes as a jumping off point for a general discussion of forgiveness. If you really want to be systematic about it, you can use an appropriate children’s story in conjunction with scripture and a list of prepared questions (a kind of teaching or discussion guide).

I’m not sure whether forgiveness is the main lesson of the Easter story or even a primary message from it. But I am sure that it is a valuable one. And I’m also certain that if we can teach our children how to forgive, that they will be more productive – and happier – human beings.

Copyright 2006 Paul Arinaga

About The Author
Paul Arinaga is founder of the Child Stories Bank.

http://www.child-stories-bank.com

The Child Stories Bank provides FREE original children’s stories as well as resources to help writers create and get their stories published, and a directory of child storybook illustrators.

April 10, 2006

Send Flowers Online at 1-800-FLORALS

Filed under: Easter Ideas,Easter Lily @ 7:17 pm

Send Flowers Online at 1-800-FLORALS
Easter Week is April 10 – 16. Celebrate the season with a beautiful Easter Lily or Spring Centerpiece. Flower delivery is a snap with 1-800-FLORALS. Fresh flowers and plants are available for same-day and next-day delivery throughout the USA and Canada. Secure online ordering. Send Easter Flowers today.

April 9, 2006

Luxury Easter Chocolates

Filed under: Easter Candy @ 6:35 pm
Luxury Easter Chocolates This joyful assortment of fine Easter chocolates is truly unique: each shaped into charming figures of eggs, bells, bunnies, birds and seashells. Discover an exclusive variety of dark, milk, white and orange-flavoured chocolates, almond pralines and hazelnut filled chocolates.Buy now at zChocolat.com.

April 7, 2006

Gift Baskets A Great Way to Celebrate Easter

Filed under: Easter Baskets,Easter Ideas @ 10:10 pm

by Kingston Amadan

Easter is such a special time of year. I can recall fond memories of Easters past when my mother and father would hide brightly colored eggs in the yard and send my sisters and I out to find them. What joy we had running around the yard, looking in every nook and cranny for the eggs we had hand decorated together as a family. As I recall, whoever found the most always received a special gift, usually a dollar or two. That was a lot of money to us kids in those days. After the hunt, we would eat dinner together and then my parents would give each of us an Easter basket.

They were smart to make sure we had dinner first, knowing full well that we would never touch our food if we were given the baskets beforehand. I can still recall the happiness we shared, eating our chocolates, jelly beans, marshmallow candies and other sweet treats. I think I always enjoyed digging through the plastic green “grass” the most. It was like discovering gold to dig through the basket and find one of the last few treats which had fallen to the bottom.

Today, I get just as much enjoyment from watching my children having the same fun I had as a child. It’s wonderful to view the next generation enjoying the traditions of the past that still remain so much part of our culture. Today, however, I give Easter gift baskets to my children, my siblings, and close friends every year at this time. They’re wonderful for the kids and the adults all appreciate them as well since, like me, they remember the joy of getting an Easter basket. Easter gift baskets are filled with delectable treats that both children and adults can enjoy.

I order enough for my friends and family and my extended family as well since Easter gift baskets can be shipped anywhere. I find that they make a great gift for kids or for the kid in all of us. This year, I may even order one for myself. I may be older, but I still have a sweet tooth!

About the Author

To purchase a Easter gift basket visit http://www.giftbasketontheweb.com/

April 6, 2006

Easy Easter Crafts for Kids

Filed under: Easter Crafts,Easter Ideas @ 6:23 pm

by Margaret Rench

Easter is right around the corner. Soon the kids will be out of school for spring break. Prepare yourself for their cries of “I’m bored” by having some craft projects planned. Here are some easy to make and fun crafting projects to keep them busy.

Bubble Photo Frames:
Supplies needed: a short wide mouth cup, dish detergent, water, food coloring, paper photo frames, a straw.

You can find paper photo frames in the scrap-booking section of any craft store and some grocery stores. Fill the cup with water and add a drop or two of dish detergent. Color the water with food coloring. Blow into the water using the straw until bubbles form and start overflowing the cup. Press the photo frame lightly into the bubbles and pull it away. You now have some nice designs transfered to the frame from the bubbles. Continue the process until you have the frame coated in a pleasing way. You can use more than one color on the frame by making cups with different colors in them.

Grass Basket:
Supplies needed: basket with plastic liner, potting soil, rye-grass seed, gravel, charcoal(optional)

Line the bottom of the basket with the gravel this allows for drainage. Add a layer of charcoal on top of the gravel. The charcoal keeps things fresh smelling in case of over watering. Put your topsoil into the basket up to about 1/2 from the rim. Sprinkle the grass seed liberally onto the soil. Top the grass seed with a sprinkling of topsoil, just enough to cover the seeds. Sprinkle water onto the soil and keep moist. Set the basket into a sunny warm area away from drafts. Rye grass seed usually sprouts in 4-7 days. When the grass gets taller than one inch, you can trim it back with scissors. If you start the project early enough, you will have a nice basket to lay Easter eggs into for Easter.

Indoor Basketball:
Supplies needed: styrofoam cup, tissues, tape, scissors

Cut the bottom out of the styrofoam cup. This is your basket. Tape it to the wall, onto a door or on the side of a bookcase. Wad up some tissues to use as your basketball. You might make three per person. Each person gets three tries at making a basket. If you make a basket you get a point. Play until someone gets 25 points.

For more fun crafts visit Easter Crafts
About the Author

Margaret Rench is the webmaster of Theme Party Palace. A mother of two and grandmother of one. They have taught me the joy of parties.

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