Easter Eggs
April 7, 2009
With the rise of the virtual generation, the term “Easter egg” has taken on new meaning. A virtual Easter egg is an intentional hidden message, in-joke or feature in an object such as a movie, book, CD, DVD, computer program, web page or video game. If you use a Windows operating system, you can see an example of this by opening your Solitaire game and hitting the alt, shift and number 2 keys at the same time.
For a whole host of other examples, see this
We can trace “Easter Eggs” in computer games back to the 1970’s. But I think the idea goes back much farther than that. I believe the Easter Story itself contains hidden Easter eggs.
I think the folded cloth was one—I am not talking about something so trite as the current spam email going around. But I do believe there is a hidden message for those willing to step into the empty tomb and examine it. It certainly had some effect on John.
I believe the falling-down-dead guards are another. I am not sure of the full meaning, but in that scene we have a Guy who is supposed to be dead up walking around and two guys who are supposed to be alive acting like they are dead.
I believe the determined women are another. We have 3 women heading out to anoint the dead body of Jesus. On the way, the remember the big rock and know they will not be able to move it. And they keep going. If this had been 3 men, they would have headed back to town, found a group of the strongest men they could find (in the absence of a good 4 wheel drive Dodge) and then headed to tomb with pulleys and pry bars. But the women just kept going. What is hidden in that fact?
I know there are others—the sign over Jesus’ head, the wine-soaked sponge, the gambled clothes, and others.
Maybe I will have a different kind of Easter Egg hunt this year.
Entry Filed under: Scripture. .
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1.
Wordnut | April 7, 2009 at 9:55 pm
I go to a rather large church with lots of children where apparently the idea of HIDING Easter eggs has been lost. There the men’s club strews a thousand candy-filled plastic eggs on the athletic field and, at the sound of a whistle or gun, an army of over-indulged children run like ants to collect them. It takes all of about 20 seconds. Not exactly a “hunt.” More like a sortie. It’s too bad, really, because the real magic of an Easter Egg hunt–and as you have said, Easter, itself–is in the discovery.
2.
Bill Hugo | April 8, 2009 at 5:29 pm
We do something similar here. But we usually at least have snow banks in which to hide them. This year they will just be spread out around the playground.