Easter Bunny drops more than 54,000 eggs and other goodies from helicopter in Owasso, Oklahoma

The Easter Bunny took to the sky on Saturday, dropping tens of thousands of eggs by helicopter on Owasso’s Centennial Park.

The congregation of Lifepoint Baptist Church and area sponsors filled more than 54,000 plastic eggs with candy, toys, stickers and other freebies for the annual Owasso Egg Drop.

“We think it’s a fun event for families,” said Pastor Doug Gregg.

Gregg’s fond memories of Easter egg hunts as a child inspired him to organize the first Owasso Egg Drop six years ago.

He approached Tulsa Helicopter to participate, and the company has since donated its annual egg-dropping services.

Families decked in sunglasses, colorful holiday wear and carrying an array of festive egg-carrying receptacles poured into the park for front-row spots along the yellow caution tape marking six drop zones, five divided by age and one designated for special needs children.

Then the waiting began as the chopper rained down bagfuls of the loot in each zone.

As volunteers signaled the all clear, children made a mad dash for the eggs, picking the fields clean in less than two minutes.

As 8-year-old Wyatt Cargill of Owasso inventoried his spoils moments later, he described the event as “very cool.”

“He has a lot of fun. He enjoys the bouncy places, the egg drop,” his father, David Cargill, said.

Gregg estimated attendance at between 5,000 and 10,000 people and said the draw has “gotten bigger every single year.”

Saturday was the Cargills third year in attendance.

Mother Terrie Cargill said the event is a good way to reach a lot of people and touch lives.

“It probably takes all year to put together,” she speculated.

Gregg said a large majority of Lifepoint’s 100-person congregation helps with the Egg Drop, which also offers paid helicopter rides, inflatable attractions, a Christian illusionist and a live band.

http://www.tulsaworld.com/communities/owasso/easter-bunny-drops-eggs-other-goodies-from-helicopter-in-owasso/article_c70561b5-d48c-51be-a853-3efb9992e437.html

Thanks to Dr. HGP for bringing this to the attention of the It’s Interesting community.

Pope Receives Gigantic Chocolate Easter Egg

A pleased-looking Pope Benedict XVI has been presented with a colourful, two-metre high Easter egg weighing 250 kilograms as Catholics and other Christians prepare to celebrate Easter.

The egg, made by Italian chocolate maker Tosca, was unveiled in a Vatican courtyard. The brilliant yellow and blue wrapper was decorated with the Pope’s coat of arms, wreathes of flowers and doves – the symbol of peace.

The head of the Roman Catholic Church, who will be 85 later this month, will not be cracking open the egg himself, but will give it to young offenders in Rome’s Casal del Marmo institute, which he visited in 2007, according to the Vatican’s official newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano.

Tosca, based in the northern town of Cremona, is known for its oversized delicacies.

http://bigpondnews.com/articles/OddSpot/2012/04/05/Pope_given_whopper_Easter_egg_736440.html

 

Lego Jesus

WA church in Sweden has been displaying a life-size Lego statue of Jesus Christ since 2009.

Churchgoers donated nearly 30,000 Lego bricks to build the 1.78 metre (5.8 foot) high statue, said Per Wilder, the pastor of the Oensta Gryta Church in Vaesteras, about 110 kilometres (70 miles) west of Stockholm.

“It is a fantastic installation and it will be there as long as we think it is in a good spot,” he said.

The model was based on Danish sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsens’s 19th century work Christus, which depicts the resurrection of Jesus Christ.

Wilder said the statue would remain permanently at the church and there were no plans to sell it to raise funds.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jfvsy2G44S1zgbkMgubhgKUEEPuQ

Men nailed to crosses in Philippines Good Friday ritual

At least 24 Filipinos were nailed to crosses to re-enact Jesus Christ’s suffering in a Good Friday rite rejected by Catholic church leaders but witnessed by throngs of believers and thousands of tourists.

Ruben Enaje, a 50-year-old sign painter, screamed in pain as villagers dressed as Roman centurions hammered four-inch stainless steel nails through his palms and set him aloft on a cross under a brutal sun for a few minutes in San Pedro Cutud village in Pampanga province.

Twenty-three other Filipino men were nailed to crosses in the rice-growing province, officials said.

It was Enaje’s 25th crucifixion. He says surviving nearly unscathed when he fell from a three-story building in 1985 prompted him to undergo the annual ordeal. Aside from thanking God, Enaje now prays for more painting jobs.

“Not a bone in my body was broken when I fell from that building,” Enaje said. “It was a miracle.”

“Now, I’m praying for good health and more clients,” Enaje told The Associated Press.

Ahead of the cross nailings, throngs of penitents walked several miles through village streets and beat their bare backs with sharp bamboo sticks and pieces of wood, sometimes splashing spectators with blood. Some participants opened cuts in the penitents’ backs using broken glass to ensure the ritual was sufficiently bloody.

The gory spectacle reflects the Philippines’ unique brand of Catholicism, which merges church traditions with folk superstitions. Many of the mostly impoverished penitents undergo the ritual to atone for sins, pray for the sick or a better life and give thanks for what they believe were God-given miracles.

The most number of crucifixions were staged beside a rice field in San Pedro Cutud, where 15 men were nailed to crosses three at a time on a dusty mound as more than 30,000 people, including three European ambassadors, watched and snapped pictures. An ambulance stood by and more than 20 tourists fainted or became dizzy in the heat, officials said.

Amid the festive air — villagers peddled bottled water, food and religious items everywhere — police and marshals kept order. Some displayed banners with a reminder: “Silence please and take care of your belongings.”

Foreigners have been banned from taking part after an Australian comic was nailed to a cross under a false name a few years ago near Pampanga. Authorities also believe that a Japanese man sought to be crucified as part of a porn film in 1996, tourism officer Ching Pangilinan said.

“They made a mockery out of a local tradition,” she said.

PhotoBlog: Penitents nailed to crosses in Philippine ritual

Church leaders in the Philippines, Asia’s largest predominantly Roman Catholic nation, have frowned on the Easter week rituals, saying Filipinos can show their deep faith without hurting themselves.

Archbishop Angel Lagdameo, based in Iloilo province, said the crucifixions and self-flagellations are an “imperfect imitation with doubtful theological and social significance,” adding that only Jesus Christ’s death saved mankind.

Pampanga Bishop Pablo Virgilio David said the bloody rites reflect the church’s failure to fully educate many Filipinos on Christian tenets.

Enaje and the other penitents said the church should respect their belief.

“When I’m up there on the cross, I feel very close to God,” Enaje said. “We grew up with this tradition and nothing can stop us.”

Red Cross officials urged devotees to consider other forms of penance, including donating blood, and expressed concern over possible health problems such as infection, heat stroke, blood loss and even death from the beating.

San Pedro Cutud village leader Remigio dela Cruz said no penitent has experienced any major health problem since the cross nailings began there in the 1950s. The nails are soaked in alcohol for as long as a year and then sprinkled with holy water before use, he said.

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/42721319/ns/world_news-asiapacific/#.T32gg442GRA