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The Truth About Easter

Lewis

Member
The Truth About Easter
by Timothy A. & Kimberly B. Southall
Revised January 9, 2001

Exodus 20:1-5

Many Christians are unaware of the origins of Easter, which is actually a pagan festival held in honor of idols. In fact, Easter was celebrated hundreds of years before the birth of Jesus Christ. It wasn't until at least 300 years after the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ and the establishment of his church that the celebration of his resurrection began to be intermingled with the pagan practices of Easter. You should know the truth.

Origins of the Word "Easter" and the Goddess it Represents. "Easter" is derived from "Eostre," the pagan Anglo-Saxon goddess, and/or "Eostare," the Norse pagan festival of spring. When God gave the law to the Israelites in the Old Testament, he clearly instructed them not to even utter the name of other gods (Exodus 23:13). Aphrodite, Asherah, Ashtoreth, Astarte, Diana, Eostre, Ianna, Ishtar, Isis, Ostara, Semiramis, Venus . . . call her what you will, but she is one and the same--a false goddess, an idol, worshiped by pagans. And God declares that she is detestable. Asherah is mentioned in the Old Testament quite frequently (Exodus 34:13; Deuteronomy 7:5; Deuteronomy 12:2-4; Deuteronomy 16:21; Judges 6:25-30; 1 Kings 14:15-23; 1 Kings 15:13; 1 Kings 16:33; 1 Kings 18:19; 2 Kings 13:6; 2 Kings 17:7-16; 2 Kings 18:4; 2 Kings 21:3-7; 2 Kings 23:4-15; 2 Chronicles 14:3; 2 Chronicles 15:16; 2 Chronicles 17:6; 2 Chronicles 19:3; 2 Chronicles 24:18; 2 Chronicles 31:1; 2 Chronicles 34:3-7; Isaiah 17:8; Isaiah 27:9; Jeremiah 17:2; Micah 5:14). Ashtoreth (the Babylonian goddess of the woods and nature) is also mentioned by name in the Bible (Judges 2:11-13; 1 Samuel 7:3; 1 Kings 11:5, 33). In every instance, she is an idol which greatly angers God. Inanna, the Sumerian patron of the temple prostitutes (also considered the merciful mother who intercedes with the gods on behalf of her worshipers), is represented with a star inscribed in a circle. There are several scriptures which clearly show that worship of any of the celestial elements (sun, moon or stars) is forbidden by God (Deuteronomy 17:2-5; 2 Kings 21:3-7; 2 Kings 23:4-15; Ezekiel 8:15-16). Ishtar [pronounced "Aes-tar"] (the Babylonian/Chaldean goddess of love and war) and Semiramis (an Assyrian goddess) were both known as the "Queen of Heaven." And the "Queen of Heaven" is specifically mentioned in the Bible (Jeremiah 7:18; Jeremiah 44:19, 25).

What, other than the obvious connection of the words "Easter" and "Eostre" does this goddess have to do with the modern celebration of Easter? Plenty.

Easter's connection with spring and nature. Diana (the Ephesian goddess of sex, fertility, virginity and motherhood) was said to be the source of nature. Eostre (an Anglo-Saxon/Teutonic goddess) was the goddess of the sunrise and spring. Ostara (a Norse/Saxon goddess) was the maiden goddess of spring.

Origins of Hares (Bunnies) and Eggs. According to Teutonic myth, the hare was once a bird whom Eostre changed into a four-footed creature. Thus, it can also lay eggs. The hare is also the sacred companion and sacrificial victim of Eostre. Astarte (a Phoenician/Syrian goddess), on the other hand, was believed to have been hatched from a huge egg which fell into the Euphrates.

Origins of Good Friday. Did you ever wonder why Good Friday is recognized as the day Jesus died and Sunday as the day he arose but yet had trouble explaining how he could thus be buried for three days and three nights? (Matthew 12:40; Matthew 27:63; Mark 8:31; Mark 9:31; Mark 10:34) The answer is simple: He didn't actually die on "Good Friday." The Chaldeans offered cakes to Ishtar on the equivalent of the day we know as Good Friday. When the established church wanted to appease the paganistic people in order to "convert" them to Christianity, they moved the dates accordingly. Jesus actually died on the day of Preparation of Passover Week, which that year occurred on Wednesday (John 19:14, 31-42). Thursday was the Sabbath of the Passover. Friday, Christ was still in the tomb. Saturday was the "regular" Sabbath. Jesus arose after the Saturday Sabbath was concluded, which was the first day of the week, the day we know as Sunday (Mark 16:9; John 20:1). For further clarification of the days concerning Jesus' death, burial, and resurrection, see Matthew 27:50-28:7; Mark 15:25-16:6; Luke 23:44-24:8; John 19:14-20:17. An in-depth study from another author which addresses the timing of Christ's death, burial, and resurrection is also currently available on the Internet at http://www.thevictor.org/bowen/bowenpp.htm.

Origins of Hot Cross Buns and Fires. Cakes bearing a cross-like symbol representing the pair of cow-horns on the moon goddess, Isis, were offered by ancient Egyptians. The cakes which Greeks offered to Astarte and other divinities were called bous or boun, from which the word "bun" is derived. The Babylonians/Chaldeans offered similar cakes to the "Queen of Heaven." Fires were lit on top of mountains and had to be kindled from new fire, drawn from wood by friction. The fire was then used to bake cakes in sacrifice to Semiramis, the "Queen of Heaven." This practice, along with burning incense, was used in conjunction with baking the cakes and is mentioned specifically in the Bible (1 Kings 11:8; 2 Kings 17:7-16; 2 Kings 18:4; 2 Kings 23:4-15; Isaiah 17:8; Isaiah 27:9; Ezekiel 8:7-12; Jeremiah 7:16-19; Jeremiah 44:19, 25). In addition to the cross imprinted on these cakes representing the horns of the goddess, it also sometimes represented the four seasons or four phases of the moon. Cakes were also offered to or eaten in honor of Apollo, Diana, Hecate, and the moon (also Diana's symbol).

Origins of Lent. The word "lent" is of Anglo-Saxon origin meaning "spring." Lent developed from the pagan celebration of weeping, fasting, and mourning for 40 days over the death of Tammuz (one day for each year of his life). Tammuz (the son/husband of the Babylonian idol Ishtar) was killed by a wild boar and then allegedly resurrected. This mourning of Tammuz is specifically prophesied by Ezekiel in the Bible and is characterized by God Himself as being detestable (Ezekiel 8:13-15).

Origins of the use of the lily. Asherah (a Sidonian goddess) was frequently represented as a nude woman bestride a lion with a lily (symbolizing grace and sex appeal) in one hand and a serpent (symbolizing fecundity) in the other.

Origins of wearing new clothing for Easter. The tradition of wearing new clothing for Easter comes from the superstition that a new garment worn at Easter means good luck throughout the year.

Origins of the timing. The timing of the festival of "Eostar" (the festival of spring) predates the birth of Jesus Christ, and the festival was always celebrated in conjunction with pagan idol worship. In 325 A.D. it was conveniently linked to the full moon on or following the spring or vernal equinox, March 21, when nature is in resurrection after winter. This is also when Easter is celebrated in modern times. The timing of Jesus' resurrection is linked to the Passover rather than to the vernal equinox.

Who celebrates Easter? Witches, who base their celebrations (including Halloween) on the phases of the moon, celebrate Easter. Christians, however, are clearly forbidden from observing this pagan celebration (Deuteronomy 12:30-31; Luke 4:8; 1 Corinthians 10:20-22; Ephesians 5:11). There is a good reason why the early church never spoke of Easter and why there is absolutely no indication of the observance of the Easter festival in the New Testament. (The only exception is a mistranslation in the King James version of Acts 12:4, where it gives the word "Easter" instead of the correction translation "Passover.") It was not an oversight on God's part; Christians simply are not to celebrate Easter, a pagan festival.

Honoring Christ. While there isn't anything wrong with spring, nature, rabbits, eggs, pastries, fires, lilies, or wearing new clothing, doing or observing such things only for "Easter" is either knowingly or unknowingly participating in pagan practices. Christians who do not yet see anything wrong with such practices should prayerfully read and study 1 Corinthians 10:18-11:1.

The intent of most Christians who celebrate "Easter" is actually to remember and honor Jesus Christ. Rather than celebrate His resurrection with worldly traditions, there are biblical ways for Christians.

First, we should call biblical things by Bible names. Rather than using the name of a false goddess, "Easter," Christians should use words which do not dishonor God. Some acceptable terms are "Resurrection Day" and "Resurrection Sunday."

The death, burial and resurrection of Jesus can still be remembered through observance of the Lord's Supper (Matthew 26:26-29; Mark 14:22-25; Luke 22:14-20; 1 Corinthians 11:23-26) and other Christian worship.

Christians should always remember that the focus of the resurrection is Jesus Christ. Surely His sacrifice is enough. Easter eggs, Easter bunnies, and other pagan activities which add worldliness and traditions of men are unnecessary in our observation of Resurrection Day.

A decision to make. You now have a decision to make concerning Easter. In the oft-quoted words of Joshua: "Now fear the Lord and serve him with all faithfulness. Throw away the gods your forefathers worshiped beyond the River and in Egypt, and serve the Lord. But if serving the Lord seems undesirable to you, then choose for yourselves this day whom you will serve, whether the gods your forefathers served beyond the River, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you are living. But as for me and my household, we will serve the Lord." (Joshua 24:14-15 NIV)
http://www.bright.net/~1wayonly/easter.html
 
origins

I think most Christians are well aware of the origins of Easter You would have to be living in a box not too. They either choose not to believe it, have found biblical verses to ignore it, or know it and don't care.
 
There are many people, who have not a clue, as to what the true meaning of Easter is. And the number is millions and millions. Why because they were never told.
 
Who celebrates Easter? Witches, who base their celebrations (including Halloween) on the phases of the moon, celebrate Easter.
Yes and no. Halloween (Samhain) and the Spring Equinox (Ostara) are solar festivals, not lunar. They are otherwise known as Sabbats. Witches also have lunar celebrations, called Esbats, which are celebrations of the Full or New Moons.

Witches do not celebrate Ostara on the same day as Easter, nor does Ostara have anything to do with the moon, as the article implied. Easter is solely a Christian holiday. Still, there are certainly some similarities between Ostara and Easter. Ostara is a celebration of Spring, rebirth, and the return of the Sun, while Easter is similarly associated with the themes of rebirth and the return of the Son.

I personally don't see anything wrong with Christians celebrating Easter with symbols of new life. There is an innocence in the chicks, bunnies, and Easter egg hunts, and I can't see how anyone would think them evil. They are signs of hope and life. If your hearts and minds are focused on Christ's triumph over sin and death, rather than the pagan Gods, I don't think you're betraying your faith in the least. That's just my opinion.

Besides, not all pagan influences are necessarily bad. Everything from marriage rites, to birthday celebrations, to the names of the days of the week, etc all have origins in the pagan past. It doesn't make them evil. These were simply the ways of our ancestors, our past.
 
It is clear, that Easter eggs and bunnies and and much more of this stuff came from the pagans. The early church did not get into this stuff.
 
By using this kind of reasoning, what would it mean that Jesus in the Gospels refers to heaven by the name of pagan Greek God?
 
Lewis W said:

The Bible was not written by the authors in English.

In the original language of the Gospels, the word which Jesus uses to refer to heaven is the word OURANOS, the name of a Greek pagan god.
 
understand

TruthMiner said:
By using this kind of reasoning, what would it mean that Jesus in the Gospels refers to heaven by the name of pagan Greek God?
I think you are starting to get it. Do some more research.
 
Half of the customs of Mosern Day Christianity stem from paganism.

Christmas
Christmas trees

Even the Resurrection can be found in previous religious ideologies but that is another topic.
 
Re: understand

reznwerks said:
TruthMiner said:
By using this kind of reasoning, what would it mean that Jesus in the Gospels refers to heaven by the name of pagan Greek God?
I think you are starting to get it. Do some more research.

The point is that these kinds of things don't mean anything.

Anyone who has heard of the "guilt by association" fallacy would know that.
 
Re: understand

reznwerks said:
TruthMiner said:
By using this kind of reasoning, what would it mean that Jesus in the Gospels refers to heaven by the name of pagan Greek God?
I think you are starting to get it. Do some more research.

The point is that these kinds of things don't mean anything.

Anyone who has heard of the "guilt by association" fallacy would know that.

Else, we should stop referring to yesterday as Thor's day.
 
Good post Lewis. Thanks for your offering. Amazing how few actually care to discover the history behind the traditions taught by the churches. And funny that the churches themselves don't teach the 'true' history behind many of their traditional celebrations.

Rez,

NO, 'MOST' Christians don't even CARE to learn of the history behind ANY of their 'religion'. They simply listen to and accept whatever their 'church of choice' chooses to tell them. Sad but true.

All one need do is simply observe the pagan symbols and symbolism involved with easter to quickly see that MOST of it's tradition is based on something 'OTHER THAN' anything to do with Christ.

Mine is NOT to judge ANYONE on the days which they choose to celebrate; this is between them and their God/gods, but mine is certainly to understand what the days 'I' celebrate stand for. Scary thought when these days are often based on pagan ritual. We were 'specifically' warned against practicing or taking part in the practice of pagan ritual, so I will choose to obey this command since it is such an 'easy one' to obey. Why would I want to allow these kinds of things potentially interfere with my relationship or walk when they are so 'easy' to avoid?

Thanks again Lewis and good job.
 
Re: understand

TruthMiner said:
reznwerks said:
TruthMiner said:
By using this kind of reasoning, what would it mean that Jesus in the Gospels refers to heaven by the name of pagan Greek God?
I think you are starting to get it. Do some more research.

The point is that these kinds of things don't mean anything.

Anyone who has heard of the "guilt by association" fallacy would know that.

Else, we should stop referring to yesterday as Thor's day.
Do the research anyway. There were about 18 previous saviors in mans history before Jesus and several of them were born of virgins as well. There is much more but that is for you to discover. You and I are a lot alike. You don't accept them as real and I accept just one less than you.
 
Re: understand

reznwerks said:
TruthMiner said:
reznwerks said:
TruthMiner said:
By using this kind of reasoning, what would it mean that Jesus in the Gospels refers to heaven by the name of pagan Greek God?
I think you are starting to get it. Do some more research.

The point is that these kinds of things don't mean anything.

Anyone who has heard of the "guilt by association" fallacy would know that.

Else, we should stop referring to yesterday as Thor's day.
Do the research anyway. There were about 18 previous saviors in mans history before Jesus and several of them were born of virgins as well. There is much more but that is for you to discover. You and I are a lot alike. You don't accept them as real and I accept just one less than you.

Same thing.
 
Imagican said:
Good post Lewis. Thanks for your offering. Amazing how few actually care to discover the history behind the traditions taught by the churches. And funny that the churches themselves don't teach the 'true' history behind many of their traditional celebrations.

Rez,

NO, 'MOST' Christians don't even CARE to learn of the history behind ANY of their 'religion'. They simply listen to and accept whatever their 'church of choice' chooses to tell them. Sad but true.

All one need do is simply observe the pagan symbols and symbolism involved with easter to quickly see that MOST of it's tradition is based on something 'OTHER THAN' anything to do with Christ.

Mine is NOT to judge ANYONE on the days which they choose to celebrate; this is between them and their God/gods, but mine is certainly to understand what the days 'I' celebrate stand for. Scary thought when these days are often based on pagan ritual. We were 'specifically' warned against practicing or taking part in the practice of pagan ritual, so I will choose to obey this command since it is such an 'easy one' to obey. Why would I want to allow these kinds of things potentially interfere with my relationship or walk when they are so 'easy' to avoid?

Thanks again Lewis and good job.
Thank you.
 
If your point is for Christians not to celebrate the resurection of our Savior, I don't think you're going to talk many people here out of it.

If you think colored eggs, candy and fluffy bunnies are evil, then I suggest you stay away from them.
 
deeper

ttg said:
If your point is for Christians not to celebrate the resurection of our Savior, I don't think you're going to talk many people here out of it.

If you think colored eggs, candy and fluffy bunnies are evil, then I suggest you stay away from them.
The deeper question is if you use colored eggs , candy and fluffy bunnies on Easter are you really celebrating the resurection of your Savior? Secondly the bible no where commands you to celebrate Easter. Now that you know that and you know of Easters pagan traditions what will you be doing on Sunday?
 
Re: deeper

reznwerks said:
ttg said:
If your point is for Christians not to celebrate the resurection of our Savior, I don't think you're going to talk many people here out of it.

If you think colored eggs, candy and fluffy bunnies are evil, then I suggest you stay away from them.
The deeper question is if you use colored eggs , candy and fluffy bunnies on Easter are you really celebrating the resurection of your Savior? Secondly the bible no where commands you to celebrate Easter. Now that you know that and you know of Easters pagan traditions what will you be doing on Sunday?

Colored eggs are a sign of rebirth and renewal. Frankly I don't what pagans used them for, don't care and am not worried in the least. If they copyrighted them and said they could only be used in pagan services, well I never got the memo.

As a Deputy Sheriff I'll be working a 12 hr shift Easter Sunday protecting people's rights to say things like Easter eggs are bad.
 
I didn't realize how closely this thread tied into the "Easter can't be on a Sunday 'cause the days don't add up" thread until I did some research on it. Turns out a lot of preachers tie these two subjects together. And unfortunately some people will believe them.


"If Jesus rose from the dead on Saturday night," a preacher will explain, "then he couldn’t have been crucified and died on Friday afternoon, because there aren’t three days in there. There’s only one, so we need to back up his death from Friday afternoon to Wednesday afternoon." This is usually accompanied by the claim that Easter is based on a pagan holiday; the "moving" of Jesus death to Good Friday is explained as the result of some unspecified but undoubtedly pagan cause.

All this is nonsense. Easter is not based on a pagan holiday but on a Jewish one, Passover. Easter originated as the first Sunday following Passover, when Jesus was crucified.

Neither, as some anti-Catholics claim, is the name Easter derived from the pagan goddess Ishtar. As checking the dictionary will reveal, Easter is derived from the Old English word east, which means precisely what it does today. Only a speaker of English or German (where the holiday is called Ostern) could fall for such a claim.

In virtually every other language, the name of Easter is derived from the Jewish word Pesach or "Passover." Thus in Greek the term for Easter is Pascha; in Latin the term is also Pascha. From there it passed into the Romance languages, and so in Spanish it is Pascua, in Italian Pasqua, in French Paques, and in Portugese Pascoa. It also passed into the non-Romance languages, such as the Germanic languages Dutch, where it is Pasen, and Danish, where it is Paaske.

So run in fear of colored eggs if you must, but don't pass on the histeria of paganism, because it's simply not true.
 
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