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Shocking
Facts about EASTER
Should Christians Observe Easter?
To millions of professing, churchgoing
Christians, Easter" is one of the chief religious festivals. But what
do eggs, rabbits, new clothing, sunrise services, and hot cross buns have
to do with Jesus Christ?
When was the last time you went to your
public library, obtained one of the leading encyclopedias or histories,
and studied an article on the subject of Easter?
If you're like the average person, the
answer is probably "never." Millions of sincere, churchgoing,
professing Christians excitedly arise in the pitch-black hours well before
dawn on Easter Sunday morning, hustle the kids out of bed, enjoy a quick
breakfast, and bundle into the car for a drive to a nearby mountaintop,
outdoor bowl, huge cathedral, or small countryside church. They are going
to an "Easter sunrise service."
At the precise moment of sunrise, the
priest or minister may likely turn toward the east, extending both hands
in a supplicatory gesture, heralding the dawn of "Easter
Sunday," and ask all of the audience to pray as they face the rising
sun in the east.
While many of the less devout do not
bother to arise early enough to go to an actual sunrise service, it is a
well-known celebration, attended by millions in nations around the world.
Why?
These many professing Christians
suppose they are gathering together to commemorate the anniversary of the
precise moment Jesus Christ rose from the dead!
They believe they are celebrating the
resurrection.
Of course, it is doubtful that even one
of these sincere people has read what you are about to read in this
article. Yet the information is readily available in any reasonably large
public library.
Have you ever researched the question
for yourself? Have you ever asked yourself why you do some of the things
you do?
Have you ever looked up
"Lent" in the history books or encyclopedias? Have you ever
wondered why fasts, drunken ribaldry, drug-induced chaos, vandalism, and
crime punctuate such pre-Easter celebrations as "Mardi Gras"?
Have you ever heard friends joke about
their "Lenten fast," giving up chewing gum or asparagus?
Surely you remember the gaiety of
Easter time; the projects you were given in the first elementary years of
school, fashioning little gaily decorated baskets of paper and decorating
them with paper "straw," and jelly beans shaped like Easter
eggs.
Probably, as a child, you dyed Easter
eggs, engaged in Easter egg hunts, ate little chocolate bunnies, and
perhaps even gathered around a bonfire, singing and dancing in the
streets.
Certainly you recall seeing old motion
picture news reports or television coverage of the famous "Easter
Parade" in New York City.
It's custom. And is custom to be
questioned?
What Does Easter Mean?
What is Easter"? Is it the
opposite of "Wester"? Does it have something to do with one of
the points of the compass, or the Far East?
Let's see what some of the historians
tell us:
Easter: The English term, according to
the Van. Bede, relates to Eostre, a Teutonic goddess of the rising light
of day and spring, which deity, however, is otherwise unknown....
"That the apostolic fathers do not
mention it and that we first hear of it principally through the
controversy of the Quartodecimans are purely accidental" (The
Catholic Encyclopedia, article "Easter," emphasis added).
In a sense, we are dealing with a
"hostile witness" in this quotation, for the Catholic Church
fully supports Easter. Therefore, it is doubly important to note that The
Catholic Encyclopedia admits the "apostolic fathers" (including
James, Peter, John, and the early apostles) do not mention Easter.
As we will see later, it is equally
important that they admit we first hear of it during a controversy of the
"Quartodecimans."
Now notice another important historical
authority:
"Easter: The annual festival
observed throughout Christendom in commemoration of the resurrection of
Jesus Christ. The name Easter (Ger. Ostern), like the names of the days of
the week, is a survival from the old Teutonic mythology [and] is derived
from Eostre, or Ostara, the Anglo Saxon goddess of spring, to whom the
month answering to our April, and called the 'Eostur-monath,' was
dedicated. This month, Bede says, was the same as the Mensis Paschalis
[which meant "Passover" month], 'when the old festival was
observed with the gladness of a new solemnity.'
"There is no indication of the
observance of the Easter festival in the New Testament, or in the writings
of the apostolic fathers.
"The first Christians continued to
observe the Jewish festivals, though in a new spirit, as commemorations of
events which those festivals had foreshadowed. Thus the Passover, with a
new conception added to it of Christ as the true paschal lamb and the
first fruits from the dead, continued to be observed, and became the
'Christian Easter'" (The Encyclopedia Britannica, eleventh edition,
emphasis added).
Note well that this eminent history
(the eleventh edition was the last edition of the Britannica to include
theological history) admits that the celebration of Easter is not
mentioned in the New Testament; that it was not observed by the early
apostles, and was clearly a later addition to what has been called the
"Christian church."
This later addition is reflected in
Acts 12:4 of the King James Version, where the term pascha is erroneously
translated "Easter." The term means Passover, not
"Easter," and is so rendered by all modern English translations.
Just how Easter was adopted into the
visible church, and how it became called "Christian," we shall
see.
Now, notice what an American high
school level encyclopedia has to say:
"Easter is a Christian festival
that celebrates the resurrection of Jesus Christ. It is the most important
holy day of the Christian religion. People attend churches and take part
in religious ceremonies.
"In most countries, Easter comes
in early spring, at a time when green grass and warm sunshine begin to
push aside the ice and snow of winter. Its name may have come from Eostre,
a Teutonic goddess of spring, or from the Teutonic festival of spring,
Eostar [pronounced "Easter"].
"Christians everywhere celebrate
Easter with great rejoicing. In many areas, children collect candy and
chocolate bunnies, and hunt colorful Easter eggs. Many persons wear new
spring clothes to church on Easter" (World Book encyclopedia, article
"Easter," emphasis added).
The Encyclopedia Americana says:
"Easter is a convergence of three traditions, (1) Pagan. According to
the Ven. Bede, English historian of the early eighth century, the word is
derived from the Norse Ostara or Eostare, meaning the festival of spring,
at the vernal equinox, March 21, when nature is in resurrection after
winter. Hence, the rabbits, notable for their fecundity, and the eggs
colored like rays of the returning sun, and the northern lights, or aurora
borealis. The Greek myth, Demeter and Persephone, with its Latin
counterpart, Ceres and Persephone, conveys the idea of a goddess returning
seasonally from the nether regions of the light of day."
Very early after being rescued from
slavery and established as a new nation under God's own laws, the
Israelites turned to the idolatrous customs and practices of neighboring
nations.
"And the children of Israel did
evil in the sight of the Eternal, and served Baalim [which means
"many gods"; the term baal merely meant "lord"]: And
they forsook the Lord God of their fathers, which brought them out of the
land of Egypt, and followed other gods, of the gods of the people that
were round about them, and bowed themselves unto them, and provoked the
Lord to anger. And they forsook the Eternal and served Baal and Ashtaroth"
(Judges 2:1113).
The pagan Zidonians, the Philistines,
Moabites, Edomites, and other surrounding tribes served the same gods and
goddesses sometimes manifested in different ways.
One of the prominent features (also
adopted by sinning Israelites) was the worship of the goddess "Ishtar"
in groves, called "asherim." This is merely the plural word for
"Asherah," which meant an upright pale, or the trunk of a tree,
stripped of its branches and leaves, and worshiped in the setting of a
grove of trees, usually on a hilltop, representing life. (It was a phallic
symbol.)
Notice: "The children of Israel
sinned against the Lord their God...and walked in the statutes of the
heathen, whom the Lord cast out from before the children of Israel, and of
the kings of Israel, which they had made. And the children of Israel did
secretly those things that were not right against the Lord their God...and
they set them up images [Hebrew, asherah] and groves [Hebrew, asherim] in
every high hill, and under every green tree: And there they burnt incense
in all the high places, as did the heathen whom the Lord carried away
before them; and wrought wicked things to provoke the Lord to anger: For
they served idols, whereof the Lord had said unto them, ye shall not do
this thing" (2 Kings 17:711).
The worship of the upright pales, or
phallic symbols, was closely associated with the worship of other forms of
the procreation of life.
The whole festival at springtime, in
the minds of the ancient pagans, was closely allied to the midwinter
festivals when pagans implored their sun god to begin his northern journey
once again, bringing back the warming rays of the sun and hastening
spring, when new life would once again spring forth.
When this was an accomplished fact, the
heathens used the symbols of eggs, which they worshiped as a miraculous
source of life; rabbits, as the most rapidly procreating domestic animal;
and lit fires in order to bake cakes in sacrifice to the "queen of
heaven" (Semiramis), the "Diana of the Ephesians," who was
viewed as the goddess of sex and fertility.
Almighty God said He hated this imagery
and idolatry, and called all such ceremonies of the pagans great
abominations!
Read Ezekiel 8! In this shocking
chapter of the Bible, Ezekiel, in spirit, is shown the horrifying
abominations of the sinning Israelites who had made an "image of
jealousy" which "provoked to jealousy" the Eternal God
(verses 3,4)!
Showing Ezekiel, in spirit, even
"greater abominations" (verse 6), Ezekiel said he "went in
and saw; and behold every form of creeping things [the pagans always used
snakes, lizards, crabs, frogs, flies, and so on, in their imagery], and
abominable beasts, and all the idols of the house of Israel, portrayed
upon the wall round about. And there stood before them seventy men of the
ancients of the house of Israel, and in the midst of them stood Jaazaniah
the son of Shaphan, with every man his censer in his hand; and a thick
cloud of incense went up. Then said he unto me, son of man, hast thou seen
what the ancients of the house of Israel do in the dark, every man in the
chambers of his imagery? for they say, The Lord seeth us not; the Lord
hath forsaken the earth" (verses 1012).
And is that not precisely what millions
of churchgoing Christians believe today?
A day-by-day, close awareness of the
immediate presence of God; the fact that He watches and clearly sees every
human act and deed; that He is immediately available through prayer; that
He is not only our God, but our Judge, and our Ruler—this concept of a
living, ruling, Creator God is lost to the minds of millions! They do not
know the living God!
Rather, they think of God in vague,
unreal terms. It is as if He has truly "gone way off somewhere"
into the blackness of the "other side of the universe." Few
really believe that Almighty God does see through the rooftops, sees in
the dark, and literally beholds the deeds (good or evil) of humankind.
Later Ezekiel was shown "women
weeping for Tammuz" (verse 14). Tammuz was their name for Nimrod, who
made himself into "a mighty hunter before [in place of] the Lord
" (Genesis 10:9)!
Next, read on in Ezekiel 8 as he was
shown even greater abominations: "And he brought me into the inner
court of the Lord's house, and behold, at the door of the temple of the
Lord between the porch and the altar, were about five and twenty men, with
their backs toward the temple of the Lord, and their faces were toward the
east: and they worshiped the sun toward the east" (verses 15,16).
The sun is in the east at its rising!
This is a sunrise service, a pagan,
idolatrous worshiping of the rising sun, in connection with pagan idols of
"creeping things and abominable beasts," with women wailing and
weeping for Tammuz!
"But, so what?" some will
ask. "What's the big deal?" some may complain. Are we to take
away such innocent-appearing things as cute little chicks, chocolate
bunnies, jelly beans, and dyed eggs; the excited, happy looks on the faces
of our children as they search about the lawn for hidden Easter eggs?
"We're not doing it with all of
these pagan things in mind," some might reason. "We're doing it
as a Christian ceremony and it is only something to get the children to
look forward to Easter!"
Consider what God told Ezekiel
concerning ancient Israel's practices: "Then He said unto me, hast
thou seen this, O son of man? Is it a light thing to the house of Judah
that they commit the abominations which they commit here? For they have
filled the land with violence, and have returned to provoke me to anger;
and, lo, they put the branch to their nose. Therefore will I also deal in
fury: mine eyes shall not spare, neither will I have pity: and though they
cry in mine ears with a loud voice, yet will I not hear them" (verses
17,18).
The Annual Holy Days of God
When God first called His nation Israel
out of captivity in Egypt, He had to reveal unto them the months of the
year; reveal to them once again the weekly Sabbath, and wean them away
from the pagan, idolatrous customs of the ancient Egyptians, who worshiped
Isis and Osiris.
Prior to the exodus, God began
revealing to the Israelites the Passover (see Exodus 12).
Directly connected with the Passover
were the Days of Unleavened Bread. Later, in the land of Sinai, before the
giving of the Ten Commandments, God revealed to them His weekly Sabbath,
and enforced the observance of God's holy Sabbath day by showing the
Israelites that sin required the death penalty (Exodus 16:430).
Later God revealed to them the
remainder of His annual holy days (Leviticus 23), consisting of the Feast
of Firstfruits (Pentecost), the Feast of Trumpets, the Day of Atonement,
the Feast of Tabernacles, and the Last Great Day, coming right at the end
of the Feast of Tabernacles.
God revealed to them the beginning of
months, or the "sacred year," which commenced in the spring with
the month of Nissan (also called Abib).
The Israelites were commanded to take
an unblemished lamb from their flocks on the tenth of Nissan; to keep it
unto the evening of the fourteenth, and then to slay it as the
"Lord's Passover."
By striking the blood of the slain,
unblemished lamb on the doorposts and lintels of their houses in Goshen,
they would be under the sign of "the blood of the lamb," and the
death angel, who was to kill the firstborn of the Egyptians in the final
and greatest plague, would "pass over" the homes of the
Israelites.
That ceremony was to be conducted
"with their staff in their hand," and by a meal of roast lamb
and the "bread of affliction" (unleavened bread), signifying the
great haste with which God was going to deliver them out of the land of
Egypt, out of slavery.
The spiritual types are set forth very
clearly by Jesus Christ in the New Testament, and by the apostle Paul (1
Corinthians 11).
The paschal lamb was symbolic of Jesus
Christ; the blood on the doorposts and lintels of the houses is symbolic
of the blood of Jesus Christ to atone for our sins; the escape from Egypt
is symbolic of our escape from the clutches of Satan the devil and sin;
the passage through the Red Sea was symbolic of baptism (1 Corinthians
10:14); the land of Sinai, and the forty-years wandering prior to entering
the promised land, are symbolic of the trials, testing, and tribulation
which come upon every Christian; and the entrance into the promised land,
across the River Jordan, is symbolic of finally leaving this human,
physical life and entering the very Kingdom of God.
There are many other biblical types
which come clear in one's thorough study of the deep symbolism of the
Passover and the Days of Unleavened Bread.
Pharaoh is a type of Satan the devil;
his two magicians, Janes and Jambres, are symbolic of the beast and false
prophet; Moses and Aaron, who continually say, "Let my people
go," are symbolic of the prophesied "two witnesses"
(Revelation 11), who will warn the beast and the false prophet just prior
to Christ's second coming.
Leaven is used as a type of sin; the
eating of "unleavened bread" for seven days signifies taking
Jesus Christ into our lives, and overcoming our carnal human nature by the
power of God's Holy Spirit.
Thus, in this first important holy day
season of the sacred year, God revealed to the ancient Israelites rich
symbolism which has great meaning to the very purpose of human life and
which reveals, in large measure, what is our final, glorious destiny!
But, instead of remaining faithful to
these deeply significant annual holy days of God, the Israelites quickly
descended back into idolatry.
Idolatry, condemned of God in the first
two of the Ten Commandments, is evil and a horrible abomination in God's
sight for several reasons.
First, it puts inanimate, nonexistent,
pagan "gods" (which are nothing more than the figment of the
imagination of demented, ignorant, savage peoples) in place of God!
Such imagery blots out from
superstitious minds the truth of God!
It is a substitute, a counterfeit,
which God calls the "image of jealousy."
As the Creator, as well as our
Protector and Provider, like a husband to the church (described as His
bride), God is "very jealous" over His people.
The reason our English words idolatry
and adultery are so similar is because they stem from the same original
word.
God terms idolatry "spiritual
adultery." In many analogies in the Bible, imagery and worship are
directly spoken of as "adultery."
Read Revelation 17 and 18, where the
great fallen woman (symbolizing a great, universal false church) is said
to be "committing fornication" with the kings and rulers of the
world!
The Pagan Holidays
Today, millions upon millions of
professing Christians gaily go about the business of observing so-called
Christian holidays, not realizing they are nothing but modern versions of
ancient, pagan idolatries!
As the millions celebrate these days,
they do so in abysmal ignorance of their origin, their true symbolism, and
ignorant of the fact that such days obscure God's annual holy days.
How Was Easter Substituted for the
Passover?
Believe it or not, it was many
centuries before the apostate church was finally able to stamp out the
celebration of the Passover and the Days of Unleavened Bread!
Actually, they never succeeded in
stamping it out entirely, and history proves there were scattered remnants
of God's true church observing the Passover, the Days of Unleavened Bread,
and the other annual days all down through the centuries just as there are
latter-day remnants of God's true church observing those days today!
Do you remember our earlier quotation
from The Catholic Encyclopedia, in which they mentioned the
"controversy of the Quartodecimans"?
The Quartodeciman controversy raged
throughout the Mediterranean world for literally centuries.
"Quartodeciman" is merely
another word for "fourteenth"! The controversy stemmed from the
insistence that the early New Testament Church of God ought to follow the
custom of Jesus Christ of Nazareth in observing the Passover on the
fourteenth of nisan, the first month of the year, according to God's
sacred calendar.
The "universal church"
gradually began adopting pagan customs and traditions, and began insisting
upon standardizing the date for the observance for the spring festival.
The masses of pagans who were being
"converted" into this new religion brought with them their
ancient customs of the celebration of life, sexual reproduction, fertility
and worship of the sun. Their gods and goddesses were Isis, Osiris,
Astarte, Ashtaroth, Ishtar, Tammuz, and others. Apostate church leaders
reasoned these pagans had to be accommodated.
History absolutely proves that pagan
customs and ceremonies were allowed and merely given Christian names.
Finally, those who insisted on
continuing to observe God's annual holy days were put out of the apostate
church!
Notice! "The first council of
Nicea (325) decreed that the Roman practice should be observed throughout
the church. But even at Rome the Easter term was changed repeatedly. Those
who continued to keep Easter with the Jews were called Quartodecimans (14
Nisan) and were excluded from the church" (The Catholic Encyclopedia,
article "Easter," emphasis added).
Interestingly, The Catholic
Encyclopedia subtly inserts the word Easter in its article under that
term, even though the writer of the article knew no one would keep
"Easter with the Jews," for the Jews never recognized this pagan
custom. The Catholic Encyclopedia continually refers to the Passover as
"Easter." Note some further quotes from the same source:
"Easter eggs: The symbolic meaning
of a new creation of mankind by Jesus risen from the dead was probably an
invention of later times. The custom may have its origins in paganism, for
a great many pagan customs, celebrating the return of spring, gravitated
to Easter. The egg is the emblem of the germinating life of early
spring....
"The Easter rabbit lays the eggs,
for which reason they are hidden in a nest or in the garden. The rabbit is
a pagan symbol and has always been an emblem of fertility (Simrock,
Mythologie, 551).
"The Easter fire is lit on the top
of mountains (Easter mountain, Osterberg) and must be kindled 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. The Church adopted the
observance into the Easter ceremonies, referring it to the fiery column in
the desert and to the Resurrection of Christ; a new fire on Holy Saturday
is drawn from flint, symbolizing the Resurrection by the Light of the
World from the tomb closed by a stone" (ibid).
What a shocking admission! Notice that
even the Catholics admit that the origins of Easter, and even the name
itself, are totally pagan! The rabbit is a pagan symbol! It is an emblem
of fertility!
Easter fires, lit on the top of
mountains, are "customs of pagan origin"!
"The church adopted the observance
into the Easter ceremonies"! Could anything be plainer? Let's
continue with the same source:
First phase [of the Easter
Controversy]: The dioceses of all Asia, as from an older tradition, held
that the fourteenth day of the moon, on which day the Jews were commanded
to sacrifice the lamb, should always be observed as the feast of the
life-giving pasch [Passover], contending that the fast ought to end on
that day, whatever day of the week it might happen to be. However, it was
not the custom of the churches in the rest of the world to end it at this
point, as they observed the practice, which from apostolic tradition has
prevailed to the present time, of terminating the fast on no other day
than on that of the resurrection of our Saviour. Synods and assemblies of
bishops were held on this account, and all with one consent through mutual
correspondence drew up an ecclesiastical decree that the mystery of the
resurrection of the Lord should be celebrated on no other day but the
Sunday and that we should observe the close of the paschal fast on that
day only. [No such fast is mentioned in the Bible.]
"A letter of Saint Iræneus is
among the extracts just referred to, and this shows that the diversity of
practice regarding Easter had existed at least from the time of Pope
Sixtus (c. 120). Further, Iræneus states that St. Polycarp, who, like the
other Asiatics, kept Easter on the fourteenth day of the moon, whatever
day of the week that might be, following the tradition which he claimed to
have derived from St. John the apostle, came to Rome (c. 150) about this
very question, but could not be persuaded by Pope Anicetus to relinquish
his Quartodeciman observance. The question thus debated was therefore
primarily whether Easter was to be kept on a Sunday, or whether Christians
should observe the holy day of the Jews, the fourteenth of Nisan, which
might occur on any day of the week. Those who kept Easter with the Jews
were called Quartodecimans" (ibid., emphasis added).
Again, it must be noted in this lengthy
quotation from The Catholic Encyclopedia that they have subtly substituted
"Easter" for the "Passover." What Polycarp observed
"like the other Asiatics" was not Easter! It was the passover,
on the fourteenth of Nissan, as all the apostles had kept it.
That they admit he kept a great event
"on the fourteenth day of the moon, whichever day of that week that
might be, following the tradition which he claimed to have derived from
St. John the apostle" absolutely proves that the festival Polycarp
(who was a student of John) kept was not "Easter," but the
Passover!
In the final paragraph of the
quotation, the distinction is subtly drawn between "Christians"
and "Jews." Another obvious and flagrant misapplication of terms
is the final quote: "Those who kept Easter with the Jews were called
Quartodecimans." Nonsense! They were called Quartodecimans because
they kept the Passover and absolutely shunned the pagan "Ishtar"
(pronounced "Easter") being adopted by an apostate, increasingly
pagan church!
Notice further: Second Phase: The
second stage in the Easter controversy centers round the council of Nicea
(A.D. 325).The emperor himself [Constantine], writing to the churches
after the council of Nicea, exhorts them to adopt its conclusions and says
among other things: 'At this meeting the question concerning the most holy
day of Easter was discussed, and it was resolved by the united judgment of
all present that this feast ought to be kept by all and in every place on
one and the same day and first of all it appeared an unworthy thing that
in the celebration of this most holy feast we should follow the practice
of the Jews, who have impiously defiled their hands with enormous sin for
we have received from our Saviour a different way and I myself have
undertaken that this decision should meet with the approval of your
sagacities in the hope that your wisdoms will gladly admit that practice
which is observed at once in the city of Rome and in Africa, throughout
Italy and Egypt with entire unity of judgment.' From this and other
indications we learn that the dispute now lay between the Christians of
Syria and Mesopotamia and the rest of the world. The important Church of
Antioch was still dependent upon the Jewish calendar for its Easter"
(ibid., emphasis added).
Remember, these lengthy quotations are
from The Catholic Encyclopedia! Constantine was a reformed sun-worshiper!
When he embraced "Christianity" he embraced the so-called
Christianity of the leading bishops who had already gone apostate! He did
not embrace the Christianity practiced by those who were "holding
fast to the faith once delivered to the saints," and who tenaciously
refused to change the observance of one of the most important annual holy
days Jesus Christ ever hallowed, the passover!
Notice, in the quotation above of
Constantine's exhortation to the churches after the Council of Nicea, that
he, too, showed disdainful contempt for "the Jews" (who are
accused of having "impiously defiled their hands with enormous
sin") and repudiates the "practice of the Jews," meaning
the observance of the Passover (the Lord's Supper, as the apostle Paul
began to refer to it) on the fourteenth of Nissan, as it had been observed
for centuries!
At the end of the quotation concerning
the development of keeping Easter in the Catholic Church, the encyclopedia
admits "the important Church of Antioch was still dependent upon the
Jewish calendar for its Easter." Again, a confusion of terms may be
misleading to readers.
By no stretch of the imagination were
the converted brethren in Antioch, in Syria, who were dependent upon
"the Jewish calendar" (meaning Abib, or Nissan, 14), keeping
"Easter." By tenaciously adhering to the fourteenth of Nissan,
it is clear they were observing the Passover!
Notice now the next quotation:
"Third Phase: It was to the divergent cycles which Rome had
successively adopted and rejected in its attempt to determine Easter more
accurately that the third stage in the paschal controversy was mainly due.
The Roman missionaries coming to England in the time of St. Gregory the
Great found the British Christians, the representatives of that
Christianity which had been introduced into Britain during the period of
the Roman occupation, still adhering to an ancient system of
Easter-computation which Rome itself had laid aside" (ibid., emphasis
added).
What a fantastic admission!
Here we read of "Roman
missionaries" arriving in the British Isles from Rome, yet
discovering Christians in the British Isles adhering to the very same
system of determining the date for the Passover as had always been
observed by the early New Testament church!
Few have stopped to speculate on where
all the other apostles mentioned in the Gospels went. Most disappear from
sight, and the Bible quickly begins concerning itself with the ministries
of, first, the apostle Paul, and then to some extent Peter and John. But
what ever happened to Thomas, Simon the Canaanite, Mathias (who replaced
Judah Iscariot), Andrew (Peter's brother), James the son of Alphæus (not
the son of Zebedee), Bartholomew, and others?
Jesus plainly said He would "send
them to the lost sheep of the house of Israel"! Is it strange, then,
that peoples in faraway lands had been converted to true Christianity, and
were observing God's annual holy days on precisely the correct dates,
which actually created a controversy with Roman missionaries?
Now, under the article
"Councils" in The Catholic Encyclopedia, notice one of the most
important purposes for the Council of Nicea:
"The First Ecumenical, or Council
of Nicea (325) lasted two months and twelve days. Three hundred and
eighteen bishops were present. Hosius, Bishop of Cordova, assisted as
legate of Pope Sylvester. The Emperor Constantine was also present. To
this council we owe the Creed of Nicea, defining against Arius the true
divinity of the Son of God...and the fixing of the date for keeping Easter
(against the Quartodecimans)."
Hot-Cross Buns Have you ever eaten a
"hot-cross" bun?
At Easter one may go to the local
bakeries, or the bakery counters of supermarkets, and see them by the
dozen. They are served in restaurants and cafeterias.
The little rounded buns, with their
quaint little sugar-coated crosses, evoke memories of childhood; and to
unsuspecting professing Christians the tiny crosses are believed to
represent the "cross of Christ."
How shocking to discover that hot-cross
buns find their origins in paganism!
Notice what history has to say about
the origin of "hot-cross buns":
"It is quite probable that it [the
word bun] has a far older and more interesting origin, as is suggested by
an inquiry into the origin of hot cross buns. These cakes, which are now
solely associated with the Christian Good Friday, are traceable to the
remotest period of pagan history. Cakes were offered by ancient Egyptians
to their moon goddess; and these had imprinted on them a pair of horns,
symbolic of the ox at the sacrifice of which they were offered on the
altar, or of the horned moon goddess, the equivalent of Ishtar of the
Assyro-Babylonians. The Greeks offered such sacred cakes to Astarte
[Easter] and other divinities. This cake they called bous (ox), in
allusion to the ox-symbol marked on it, and from the accusative boun it is
suggested that the word 'bun' is derived. Like the Greeks, the Romans eat
cross-bread at public sacrifices, such bread being usually purchased at
the doors of the temple and taken in with them, a custom alluded to by St.
Paul in I Cor. x.28. At Herculaneum two small loaves about 5 in. in
diameter, and plainly marked with a cross, were found. In the Old
Testament are references made in Jer. vii.18-xliv.19, to such sacred bread
being offered to the moon goddess. The cross-bread was eaten by the pagan
Saxons in honor of Eoster, their goddess of light. The Mexicans and
Peruvians are shown to have had a similar custom. The custom, in fact, was
practically universal, and the early church adroitly adopted the pagan
practice, grafting it on to the Eucharist. The boun with its Greek cross
became akin to the Eucharistic bread or cross-marked wafers mentioned in
St. Chrysostom's liturgy. In the medieval church, buns made from the dough
for the consecrated Host were to be distributed to the communicants after
mass on Easter Sunday. In France and other Catholic countries, such
blessed bread is still given in the churches to communicants who have a
long journey before they can break their fast" (The Encyclopædia
Britannica, eleventh edition, article "bun").
Interesting reading, isn't it? But how
many of your friends and relatives have ever taken the time and trouble to
simply go to a public library and read such shocking admissions!
Remember, this is not someone's
"church doctrine" you are reading; it is not the clever
arguments of someone trying to confuse your mind and "trap" you
into observing some strange customs! Instead, you are reading direct
quotations from historians!
That certain Easter customs have pagan
roots is a matter of authoritative, historical fact!
Almighty God soundly condemns the
entire practice in the Bible!
Of course, if there is no God the
plaintive cries of "I don't see what difference it makes," or
"Why should we take away such joyous occasions from the
children?" seem to make sense.
But, since there is a God, and since
that Eternal Creator God is righteously angry at instilling pagan customs
in the minds of our children it does make a difference!
God says: "To him that knoweth to
do good, and doeth it not, it is a sin." Once you know the truth, you
become responsible for it.
It is knowledge that, while readily
available in any number of historical sources, is not known by the vast
majority of humankind!
Millions of churchgoing professing
Christians are blissfully ignorant of these startling facts!
Now, you know!
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