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Shocking
Facts about EASTER SUN-day
Pagan
Sun Worship and Catholicism Celebrating the Risen Sun.
Every Spring, thousands of
Christians get up very early in the morning to attend special sunrise
services in celebration of the resurrection on "Easter" morning.
Have you ever wondered about the origin of the word Easter? Believe it or
not, it actually can be found in the King James Bible-
Acts 12:4 And when he had
apprehended him, he put him in prison, and delivered him to four
quaternions of soldiers to keep him; intending after Easter to bring him
forth to the people.
The word in the Greek translated as Easter is pasha
which Strong's defines as follows-
3957. pascha, pas'-khah; of Chald.
or. [comp. H6453]; the Passover (the meal, the day, the festival or the
special sacrifices connected with it): --Easter, Passover.
Pascha is most commonly translated
as Passover, and of the 29 times this word appears in the New Testament,
only on this one occasion is it translated as Easter. Today Easter is by
far the most commonly used term for the day of the resurrection, but would
the disciples have recognized the term and used it in connection with the
resurrection of Christ? Just where does the word Easter originate from?-
The origin of Easter
The English word Easter and the
German Ostern come from a common origin (Eostur, Eastur, Ostara, Ostar),
which to the Norsemen meant the season of the rising (growing) sun, the
season of new birth. The word was used by our ancestors to designate the
Feast of New Life in the spring. The same root is found in the name for
the place where the sun rises (East, Ost). The word Easter, then,
originally meant the celebration of the spring sun, which had its birth in
the East and brought new life upon earth. This symbolism was transferred
to the supernatural meaning of our Easter, to the new life of the Risen
Christ, the eternal and uncreated Light. Based on a passage in the
writings of Saint Bede the Venerable (735), the term Easter has often been
explained as the name of an Anglo-Saxon goddess (Eostre), though no such
goddess is known in the mythologies of any Germanic tribe. Modern research
has made it quite clear that Saint Bede erroneously interpreted the name
of the season as that of a goddess.
Source: Francis X. Weiser, Handbook
of Christian Feasts and Customs (New York: Harcourt, Brace &
World, Inc., 1958), p. 211. Copyright 1952 by Francis X. Weiser.
What means the term Easter itself?
It is not a Christian name. It bears the Chaldean origin on its very
forehead. Easter is nothing else than Astarte, one of the titles of Beltis,
the queen of heaven, whose name, as pronounced by the people of Ninevah,
was evidently identical with that now in common use in this country. That
name, as found by Layard on the Assyrian monuments is Ishtar.
Source: The Two Babylons, by
the Rev. Alexander Hislop, published 1943 and 1959 in the U.S. by Loizeaux
Brothers, Neptune, New Jersey, page 103.
The word Easter, which comes from
the Anglo-Saxon, is a term derived from the pagan goddess of the dawn.
Source: The Catholic
Encyclopedia, Revised and Updated, Copyright 1987, Robert C.
Broderick, Editor, Thomas Nelson Publishers, page 177.
So, there is no doubt that the word
Easter is not Christian, but pagan in origin. Now as to the date itself,
anyone who has studied the Bible knows that the crucifixion and
resurrection happen during the Jewish festival of the Passover, which
began on the 14th of Nisan. For millennia the Jews have observed this
festival week of Passover / Feast of Unleaven Bread beginning on the 14th
of Nisan. Since Jesus died on the 14th of Nisan, then the resurrection
happened on the 16th of Nisan.
Ever notice how your birthday falls
on different days of the week, from one year to the next? One year it
might be on a Monday and the next on a Wednesday. Such is the case with
Passover. That being true, then why is the resurrection day always
celebrated on a Sunday? Each year, if you were to follow the Bible, it
should fall on a different day of the week and only occasionally on a
Sunday. In the early church this issue caused quite a controversy-
Easter not appointed by the
Apostles
[p. 130] The aim of the apostles
was not to appoint festival days, but to teach a righteous life and piety.
And it seems to me that just as many other customs have been established
in individual localities according to usage. So also the feast of Easter
came to be observed in each place according to the individual
peculiarities of the peoples inasmuch as none of the apostles legislated
on the matter. And that the observance originated not by legislation, but
as a custom the facts themselves indicate. In Asia Minor most people kept
the fourteenth day of the moon, disregarding the sabbath: yet they never
separated from those who did otherwise, until Victor, bishop of Rome,
influenced by too ardent a zeal, fulminated a sentence of ex-communication
against the Quartodecimans in Asia… [p. 131] The Quartodecimans affirm
that the observance of the fourteenth day was delivered to them by the
apostle John: while the Romans and those in the Western parts assure us
that their usage originated with the apostles Peter and Paul. Neither of
these parties however can produce any written testimony in confirmation of
what they assert.
Source: Socrates Scholasticus, Ecclesiastical
History, bk. 5, chap. 22, trans. in NPNF, 2d series, Vol. 2, pp. 130,
131.
The Quartodecimans
excommunicated
[p. 211] It is probable that the
primitive Christians kept the Pasch on the [p. 212] 14th of Nisan as
determined by the Jewish authorities, and regarded it as the anniversary
of the crucifixion. But they also observed the first of every seven days,
the Jewish week, as a holy day in commemoration of the resurrection. It
would seem that gradually a shifting of emphasis took place until in the
second century it was generally accepted that the great annual solemnity
of the Pasch was the commemoration not of the crucifixion but of the
resurrection. Accordingly the majority of Christians celebrated the Pasch
not on the 14th of Nisan but on the Sunday which fell on, or first after,
that date. The churches of the Roman province of Asia, however, followed
the older custom, keeping the Pasch on the 14th of Nisan, whatever the day
of the week. The controversy became acute towards the end of the second
century, and the observants of the 14th of Nisan, hence called
Quartodecimans [Fourteenthers], were finally excommunicated.
Source: James F. Kenney, The
Sources for the Early History of Ireland, Vol. 1, pp. 211, 212.
Copyright 1929 by Columbia University Press, New York.
Emperor
Constantine I: On the Keeping of Easter online
at the Medieval Source Book.
So the church of Rome, which was
keeping Sunday, excommunicated those who observed the 14th of Nisan. To
try and settle the issue, the Council of Nicaea in 325 decreed that the
resurrection should be observed, and that on the first Sunday after the
first full moon following the vernal equinox (March 21). This places the
earliest possible date as March 22, and the latest at April 25th. This
formula is completely unbiblical! Following the Jewish lunar calendar, as
specified in the Bible and previously mentioned, the date would fall on a
different day of the week every year, that would coincide precisely with a
full moon every single time (14 Nisan being the middle of the lunar
month). The date that Christianity observes however, as one of the most
holiest of the year, is not even recognized by God in scripture! It has
its origin in nothing more than paganism and the decrees or Tradition of
the Roman Catholic Church! In fact, should the Jewish Passover and Easter
just happen to coincide on the same Sunday, the Council of Nicaea decreed
that the church of Rome would observe Easter on the following
Sunday, so as to distance themselves from the practice of the Jews as much
as possible.
The Tomb empty at sunrise
One might respond, oh, but the Lord
was risen on a Sunday and that is why we keep it so. That sounds
fine, but where does the Bible anywhere proclaim Sunday as a day to be
observed for its holiness? And what of the sunrise service on this
unbiblical day of Easter Sunday? -
John 20:1 The first day of the week
cometh Mary Magdalene early, when it was yet dark, unto the sepulchre, and
seeth the stone taken away from the sepulchre.
The Bible tells us the tomb was
empty before sunrise! The resurrection had already occurred,
perhaps hours before. Yet thousands of people gather each year,
facing East, to the rising of the Sun, as an integral part of their
resurrection service, as a pagan sunworshipper would. Now clearly these
people are not consciously worshipping the Sun, yet their actions would be
indistinguishable from a pagan, were one present at the same time. They
both would be rejoicing at the moment of the rising of the Sun.
The Vernal Equinox
The pagan at this time of year
would be celebrating the increasing of the Sun following the spring
(vernal) equinox. That is the day on which the amount of darkness and
daylight are the same in duration. Following that day the amount of
daylight would steadily increase, a little each day. This increase of
daylight in the spring brings about summer and makes crops thrive, thus
the association with fertility (eggs, rabbits, chickens). Hence the
association always to Sunday, to celebrate the increasing of the God of
the Sun on the Sun Day.
One might respond with- well, yes
this is all true, but we have "baptized" this admittedly pagan
day and made it holy to God, so there is really no problem. Please note
the following-
Exo 32:4 And he received them at
their hand, and fashioned it with a graving tool, after he had made it a
molten calf: and they said, These be thy gods, O Israel, which brought
thee up out of the land of Egypt. Exo 32:5 And when Aaron saw it, he built an altar before it; and Aaron
made proclamation, and said, To morrow is a feast to the LORD. Exo 32:6 And they rose up early on the morrow, and offered burnt
offerings, and brought peace offerings; and the people sat down to eat and
to drink, and rose up to play.
Aaron made a pagan golden calf, and
then declared a festival to the Lord! The people brought offerings, had
plenty to eat and drink, and made merry in celebration. Was God pleased by
all this? Better yet, was God pleased by any of this? NO! Their
feast was an abomination before the Lord. (Moses ground up the golden idol
to powder and made the people drink it, Exo 32:20.) Today many of God's
professed people turn themselves East to the rising Sun, on a Pagan Sun
Day that has no biblical foundation what-so-ever, have Easter egg hunts,
baskets full of candy, and sumptuous meals (usually including a ham, a
biblically unclean and forbidden food) and call it a festival to the risen
Lord. Just what do you think Moses would have to say to us today about all
of this? Can you picture Moses joining in the fun and festivities? Aaron
maybe, Moses... I think not.
So in conclusion, it should now be
quite plain that the day of the year celebrated by Christianity as
"Easter" is based only on nothing more than Sun worshipping
paganism and unbiblical decrees of the Roman Catholic Church. Why then,
does the "Bible Only" Protestant Christian observe it at all? Is
this not a contradiction between profession and practice of truly
monumental, ... nay, stupifying proportions? Indeed, I believe it is.
Despite their good intentions, and mostly in ignorance, they are in fact
celebrating the risen Sun, not the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
The Blessing of the New Fire
Easter Vigil, called by St.
Augustine the "Mother of All Vigils, " [occurs] the night before
Easter. Ceremonies: blessing of new fire, procession with the Easter
Candle, ...
Source: A Concise Guide to the
Catholic Church, by Felician A. Foy, O.F.M. and Rose M. Avato,
Copyright 1984 and published by Our Sunday Visitor, Inc., 200 Noll Plaza,
Huntington, Indiana, 46750.
1. The Service of Light
No lights are on in the church; a
fire is prepared outside the church or, if not possible, inside the
vestibule. After greeting the congregation the priest blesses the new
fire, symbolic of Christ's Resurrection, coming forth from the tomb and
giving light to the world. On the Paschal Candle the priest traces a cross
and the numerals of the current year. Finally the priest lights the candle
from the new fire and the deacon or, if there is no deacon, the priest
lifts the Paschal candle and sings Christ is our Light.
After walking halfway into the
church, he sings the same acclamation, after which the people light their
candles from the Easter Candle. Upon arriving at the altar, the
acclamation is sung the third time and the lights in the church are put
on. Immediately thereafter follows the Exsultet, the Easter
Proclamation, sung while all stand and hold lighted candles. It honors the
night on which Christ redeemed us.
Source: The Dictionary of the
Liturgy, by Rev. Jovian P. Lang, OFM, published by Catholic Book
Publishing Co., New York, copyright 1989, page 173.
The
Ceremony of the Holy Light in Jerusalem.
So what exactly, is the real
relationship between lighting a "new fire" on the evening before
Easter Sunday, and then using it to light candles?
SECTION V. --- LAMPS AND
WAX-CANDLES.
Another peculiarity of the Papal
worship is the use of lamps and wax-candles. If the Madonna and child are
set up in a niche, they must have a lamp to burn before them; if mass is
to be celebrated, though in broad daylight, there must be wax-candles
lighted on the altar; if a grand procession is to be formed, it cannot be
thorough and complete without without lighted tapers to grace the goodly
show. The use of these lamps and tapers comes from the same source as all
the rest of the Papal superstition. That which caused the
"Heart," when it became an emblem of the incarnate Son [Bel /
Tammuz], to be represented as a heart on fire, required also that
burning lamps and lighted candles should form a part of the worship of
that Son; for so, according to the established rites of Zoroaster, was the
sun-god worshipped. When every Egyptian on the same night was required to
light a lamp before his house in the open air, this was an act of homage
to the sun, that had veiled its glory by enshrouding itself in a human
form. When the Yezidis of Koordistan, at this day, once a year celebrate
their festival of "burning lamps," that, too, is to the honor of
Sheikh Shems, or the Sun. Now, what on these high occasions was done on a
grand scale was also done on a smaller scale, in the individual acts of
worship to their god, by the lighting of lamps and tapers before the
favorite divinity. In Babylon, this practice had been exceedingly
prevalent, as we learn from the Apocryphal writer of the Book of Baruch
[Chapter 6, verse 18]. "They (the Babylonians)," says he,
"light up lamps to their gods, and that in greater numbers, too, than
they do for themselves, although the gods cannot see one of them, and are
senseless as the beams in their houses." In Pagan Rome, the same
practice was observed.
Source: The Two Babylons, by
the Rev. Alexander Hislop, published 1943 and 1959 in the U.S. by Loizeaux
Brothers, Neptune New Jersey, page 191.
So in a Catholic Bible, if you look
in the 6th Chapter of Baruch, you will find confirmation that the Pagan
Babylonian practice was to light lamps or candles before the idols of
their gods. I would venture to say that if you enter virtually any
Catholic Church, you will find statues of Mary, Jesus or various saints
that have candles lit before them. This practice has no Christian or
Jewish origin, it is strictly pagan, and honors the sun god. Wax candles
are not Christian in origin, they are Pagan, and have no place in true
Christian worship.
And what of the Catholic
"blessing of the new fire" on the evening before Easter Sunday,
from which so many candles are lit? Is it not now obvious that its origin
is not in the celebration of the risen Son of God, but rather idol worship
and the pagan Babylonian god of fire, and sun-god, whose emblem is a flaming
heart, and whose name is Baal or Tammuz? The "blessing of the new
fire" actually honors the new strength of the Sun as evidenced by the
increasing daylight and lessening night after the Spring Equinox. It is
clearly derived from a pagan celebration of the risen Sun, and not the
risen Christ.
"The Easter Fire is lit on the
top of mountains from new fire, drawn from wood by friction; this is a
custom of pagan origin in vogue all over Europe, signifying the
victory of spring over winter. The bishops issued severe edicts against
the sacrilegious Easter fires, but did not succeed in abolishing them
everywhere." So what happened? Notice this carefully. "The
church adopted the observance into the Easter ceremonies,
referring to the fiery column in the desert and to the resurrection of
Christ"! Were pagan customs adopted into the Romish church and given
the appearance of Christianity? This is plainly admitted.
Source: The Catholic
Encyclopedia, Vol.5, page 227, article "Easter" as quoted
in Babylon Mystery Religion, by Ralph Edward Woodrow, Copyright
1966, 1992 printing, page 137.
See also: Consecration to Flaming Hearts
and Pagan light worship in
the Catholic Church.
Fire
and Pagan Zoroastrian Worship
Zoroastrian worship involves
prayers and symbolic ceremonies said before a sacred fire. This fire,
which was a God-symbol even before Zarathushtra, was used by the Prophet
and by his followers ever after as the ideal sign of God, who is light,
warmth, energy. Zoroastrians do NOT worship fire, as some people believe.
They use Fire as a symbol, or an icon, the focus of their worship.
Source:
FAQ
for the alt.religion.zoroastrianism newsgroup.
Hot
Cross Buns
Among people of Western Europe, it
is traditional to eat hot cross buns on Easter Sunday morning. These
small, sweet buns are usually decorated with equal armed, or solar crosses
made of white icing; but the Pagan Greeks also made offerings of cakes
inscribed with the solar cross to several Goddesses. Eos, the Goddess of
the Sunrise, was probably among these. Anglo-Saxons too make offerings of
cakes incised with solar crosses, and they were worn as amulets and hung
in the homes for protection and prosperity.
Source: Ancient Ways -
Reclaiming Pagan Traditions, by Pauline Campanelli, Copyright 1991,
Llewellyn Publications, A Division of Llewellyn Worldwide, Ltd., P.O. Box
64383, St. Paul, MN 55164-0383, page 45.
The hot cross buns of Good Friday,
and the dyed eggs of Pasch or Easter Sunday, figured in the Chaldean
[Babylonian] rites just as they do now. The "buns" known too by
that identical name, were used in the worship of the queen of heaven, the
goddess Easter [Ishtar/Astarte], as early as the days of Cecrops, the
founder of Athens - that is, 1500 years before the Christian era.
"One species of sacred bread," says Byrant, (1) "which used
to be offered to the gods was of great antiquity, and called the Boun."
Diogenes Laerius, speaking of this offering being made by Empedocles,
describes the chief ingredients of which it was composed, saying, "He
offered one of the sacred cakes called Boun, which was made of fine flour
and honey." (2) The prophet Jeremiah takes notice of this kind of
offering when he says, "The children gather wood, the fathers kindle
the fire, and the women kneed their dough, to make cakes to the queen of
heaven." The hot cross buns are not now offered, but eaten,
on the festival of Astarte; but this leaves no doubt as to whence they
have been derived.
(1) Mythology, vol. i, p.
373. (2) LAERTIUS, p. 227, B.
Source: The Two Babylons, by
the Rev. Alexander Hislop, published 1943 and 1959 in the U.S. by Loizeaux
Brothers, Neptune New Jersey, pages 107-108.
Jer 7:18 The children gather wood,
and the fathers kindle the fire, and the women knead their dough, to make
cakes to the queen of heaven, and to pour out drink offerings unto other
gods, that they may provoke me to anger. Jer 7:19 Do they provoke me to anger? saith the LORD: do they not provoke
themselves to the confusion of their own faces?
Jer 44:19
And when we burned incense to the queen of heaven, and poured out drink
offerings unto her, did we make her cakes to worship her, and pour out
drink offerings unto her, without our men?
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