Easter Is Not About the Bunny: Perspective From a Children’s Minister

Easter is not about the bunny
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As Christians, we know that Easter is not about the bunny. It’s about the Lamb…Jesus, the Lamb of God. What’s your take on the Easter Bunny and kids?

I’ll admit: I’m not a fan of the Easter Bunny. As a Children’s Ministry Director, I don’t bring the Easter bunny into any kidmin event our church offers. That’s because Easter is not about the bunny.

I just don’t believe my job is to teach kids at church about a fake bunny. Nor is it to decorate halls with cute Easter bunnies (or chicks, for that matter). I can’t bring myself to do it.

Recently, a friend texted to say she saw a sign that reminded her of my dislike for the Easter bunny. It said, “Silly rabbit…Easter is for Jesus!” I love that! Maybe I need to get one to display at church.

Easter Is Not About the Bunny

I believe in teaching my own kids and the kids at church about the true meaning of Easter. Jesus died on the cross for our sins and rose to life again. Easter isn’t about a cute bunny hopping into our houses to leave baskets of candy. It’s about the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

So if Easter is not about the bunny, where did that creature come from? I looked up the Easter Bunny’s origin, just to make sure it didn’t have religious meaning. It doesn’t. None! Every website I visited said it’s folklore.

The legend dates to 15th-century Germany. Much as with Santa, kids left out carrots hoping the Easter bunny would replace them with candy. The Easter Bunny has no religious meaning. Easter is not about the bunny!

Every year our church holds a family Easter event. It always includes an egg hunt and fun activities for kids. One year, I decided not to stuff the eggs. Not just for the ease (though that was a bonus). I wanted kids to search for eggs with no candy inside. That way, they could connect it with Jesus’ empty tomb.

I was worried some children would cry. But I was pleasantly surprised, because no one complained. When I asked what the empty egg might represent, kids knew it was the empty tomb!

I did tell kids they could trade in their eggs at the Resurrection station for candy, though. And they were very excited about that.

KidMin Stations for Holy Week and Easter

After the egg hunt, families rotated to five stations: Palm Sunday, The Last Supper, Garden of Gethsemane, Good Friday, and the Resurrection. At each station, families read a card together and then did an activity. For Palm Sunday, they decorated palms and waved them, shouting, “Hosanna!” At the Last Supper station, they ate bread and washed each other’s feet.

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Vanessa Myershttp://www.vanessamyers.org
Vanessa Myers is the Children’s Director at Dahlonega United Methodist Church in Dahlonega, GA. She holds a Masters in Church Ministries from Duke Divinity School and is professionally certified in Christian Education through the United Methodist Church. Vanessa also loves to write about faith, family, and ministry on her blog www.vanessamyers.org. She is married to Andrew and they have two daughters.

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