Not to split hairs, but I am on both sides of some of this, Easter and the Easter Mass are both historically a celebration of Christ's ressurection and coming into a new life after death. This does not matter what is or is not in the Bible. The date and the fact of the celebration are indeed man made. The symbolism used by this writer is what I personally believe Easter should be about. One of the symbols that I have been part of in my own faith's Easter celebration is a fire lit by flint and steel, one is rock that sparks, and the other iron which has never had life, but both cause a spark to drop on, and kindle a pile of tinder which is poetically, "the skeletal remains of once living plants" and the flame that comes is a symbol of life and light beginning anew. I can and do know how to actually light a fire with flint and steel, and have done this for about 18 years at my church.
I too this year have found my transgendered nature to be a sort of ressurection in the way the writer of this artlcle has written it. I lost a part of my fear this year, and opened a doorway that let me go out to the cemetary where several of my relative are buried as my female self. It felt wonderful, and I did not feel ashamed of being in public as Vicky, I also went to a seashore area where my youngest sister's ashes were spread and felt a happy smile in wind and wave. She was the only family member who knew "my horrible secret" for many years and had told me that I would become happy with being her sister and not a brother. She had insisted that I be with her as Vicky on the night she actually died, and it seemed that she waited until I got ready as Vicky to make her final crossing with peace.
Whatever our differences, if we can see life, death, and even transness as having beauty, we really are not too far apart.