Posted by
Chaplain Dr. Kevin J.T. Santucci
at
Apr 22, 2019
The celebration of Easter has come and gone for
another year. But what is its celebration all about. Should Christians participate
in it? Is Easter named after a pagan goddess? What about the celebration of the
resurrection day of Jesus form the tomb, should Christians commemorate it?
To help us understand this subject better. I would
like to draw your attention to the 1986 writings of Baptized Paganism by Dennis
Crews. He is known for his Bible based teachings of Scripture with history.
"So new to the world, so unaware of the danger,
the tiny newborn is secure, nestled in the warm cradle of his mother’s arms.
Yet now he senses a strange tenseness in her body. Tightly, ever so tightly she
clasps him to her breast as they approach the sacred grounds. He has never
heard the rumble of so many voices or the mystical sounds of the chants. His
mother’s arms have begun trembling and drops of tears mixed with sweat are
dampening the swaddling cloth that covers him. Wild sounds of flutes and timbrels
begin to echo down the mountain into the valley below. His mother’s grasp
weakens and suddenly the large, strong hands of a man garbed in white lift him
into the night air and lay him high upon a hard, metallic surface. Insecure,
the baby whimpers, seeking the comfort of his mother’s arms. His eyes are not
yet strong enough to focus upon the large, bronze calf’s head above him. His
whimpers turn into cries as smoke stings his eyes and the sculpted bronze hands
supporting him become unbearably hot. His mother’s cries join his but are soon
muffled by thundering of drums and the rhythmic shuffling of ten thousand feet.
Suddenly he is pushed, and slides down the sloping arms into the fire below. He
gives a painful shriek. His mother’s hysterical cries only add to the
discordant shrillness of the flute and timbrels as the dance becomes more
frenzied. When only the crackling of the fire and the mournful, lonely cries of
the mother can be heard, the priest announces that the sun-god is pleased.
Throughout history the practice and horrors of sun
worship have reached every region of the world. The Babylonians called the
sun-god Shamash; the Egyptians, Ra; the Assyrians, Baal; the Canaanites,
Moloch; the Persians, Mithras; the Greeks, Helios; the Druids, Hu; and the Romans,
Sol Invictus – the Unconquerable Sun. The list continues down through history
and encompasses cultures as diverse as the Hindus, the Japanese, and the Aztecs
and comes as close to home as virtually every Indian tribe in North America.
Most scholars trace the beginnings of sun worship to Babylon.
Babylon, the first metropolis, was founded by Nimrod
soon after the flood (Genesis 10:8-10). There were giants walking the earth in
those days, ancient men of renown from the earlier world; but as they slowly
died, the new race seemed markedly inferior. Nimrod, however, retained all the
physical and intellectual earmarks of his ancestors. At first Nimrod had been
only a hunter but in the passing of time his escapades became the stuff of
legend among his followers. Countless recitations of his mighty exploits
elevated his status to superhuman proportions, and the rapidly expanding
society at his feet finally began not only to honor him as their king, but to
worship him as their god.
Nimrod’s arrogance was ultimately surpassed only by
that of his wife, Semiramis. Notoriously beautiful and cunning beyond
imagination, she wielded her own power with an iron hand. Like Nimrod,
Semiramis was deified by the common people. To the superstitious minds of a
race that had separated itself from worship of the one true God, Nimrod and
Semiramis in their terrible strength and beauty were exalted as the sun and
moon in human form.
Though historical accounts of Nimrod’s actual death
are vague, it is certain that he left Semiramis with a large dominion and an
equally large dilemma. How was she to maintain her hold on the empire he had
built? There was but one solution, and she pursued it with diabolical zeal.
Nimrod’s spirit had ascended into the sun itself, she claimed. With breathtaking
eloquence she described to the people his new and elevated role as their
benefactor and protector. Each morning he would rise, bringing light and life
to the land as he traveled across the sky. In the evening he would plunge below
the edge of the earth to battle the subterranean evil spirits and demons that
would otherwise crawl over and annihilate mankind. At times the battle would be
bloody, and the red-streaked sky bore witness to the fray. Each morning the
people were to lay their offerings before the rising sun and worship it as
their departed leader and victorious protector. The plan was only too
successful. In their self-imposed isolation from the worship of the living God,
Nimrod’s followers had also forfeited the only living link with the knowledge
of their ancestors. Left with nothing but their physical senses to inform them,
they readily accepted the preposterous fabrications of Semiramis. Unbeknownst
to them, they had become pawns in the sinister plan of Satan, the archdeceiver,
as he laid the common foundation for every heresy of paganism.
It was decided that the first day of the week would
thenceforth be dedicated to the worship of the sun-god, and in like manner the
rest of the weekdays would be dedicated to worship of the lesser heavenly
bodies. Remarkable enough, though Mithraism later reshuffled the order of
several, our own weekdays today retain the Teutonic names of these same
planetary deities. The first day of the week remains Sunday; Monday
commemorates the moon; Tuesday, the planet Mars (Tiu); Wednesday, Mercury
(Woden); Thursday, Jupiter (Thor); Friday, Venus (Frigg or Freya); and Saturday
is obviously named for Saturn.
As generations passed, religious leaders began to
add doctrines and ceremonies to sun worship. They declared that if the sun gave
life, it must require life in order to strengthen it in its journey across the
sky. In response, hundreds of thousands of men, women, and children were
sacrificed to the sun-god. Of such worship. God declared through Moses, “Every
abomination to the Lord, which he hateth, have they done unto their gods: for
even their sons and daughters they have burnt in the fire to their gods.”
Deuteronomy 12:31. Deceived by self- serving leaders and knowing no other
religion than their own, the people blindly adhered to the doctrines of devils.
One spring not many years following Nimrod’s death,
the voluptuous Semiramis was found to be with child. Calling the scribes of
Babylon together, she issued a most remarkable press release. Nimrod had
impregnated her, she claimed, through the lively rays of the sun. As the
offspring of the sun-god, the anticipated child would itself lay claim to
deity, and by proxy, she, Semiramis, would henceforth be the “mother of god.”
Such blasphemy seems transparent in our day, but to a nation that had departed
from the living God the absurd became commonplace. The superstition of the
masses was fertile ground for Satan’s deceptive schemes and like noxious weeds,
they flourished.
On December 25 Tammuz, the child of the sun-god, was
born. His birth was hailed as a great miracle. Falling as it did during the
slowly lengthening days immediately after the winter solstice, it was also seen
as an omen of the sun’s rebirth and was heralded by tumultuous rejoicing.
December 25 was thereafter observed as the birthday of the son of the sun-god,
and became a yearly feast day throughout the kingdom.
Like his supposed father Nimrod, Tammuz was reputed
to have been a great hunter. Perhaps his greatest conquest of all, however, was
his mythical union with Ishtar, the mother goddess who embodied all the
reproductive energies of nature. Also variously regarded as the moon goddess
and the queen of heaven, Ishtar was the principal female deity of the
Assyrians. This same goddess, with certain variations, can be identified in
other cultures as Ashtoreth (Phoenecian), Astarte (Greek and Roman), Eostre
(Teutonic), and Eastre (Saxon). Her counterpart in Egypt was Isis, wife and
sister of Osiris and mother of Horus. Rabbits and eggs were both symbols of life
and fecundity that early came to be identified with Ishtar. The yearly
celebration honoring her took place around the first full moon after the spring
equinox, when all of nature seemed to be bursting with reproductive vitality.
Unfortunately, the youthful Tammuz (also known as
Adonis, meaning “lord,” in classical mythology) met an untimely death at the
tusk of a wild boar. Here legend overtakes history altogether. Some accounts
say that after three days Tammuz miraculously resurrected himself; others say
that the grief-stricken Ishtar journeyed far into the netherworld to find him.
After many days she succeeded, but during her absence the passion of love
ceased to operate and all of life on earth languished in mourning. By all
accounts, when the lamenting was over, Tammuz was firmly ensconced as the new
god of the sun, and his renown eventually exceeded even Nimrod’s.
Every year following Tammuz’ tragic death and
presumed ascension to the sun, the forty days preceding Ishtar’s festival were
set aside for fasting and self-affliction to commemorate his suffering and
death. (It was this practice, “weeping for Tammuz,” that God called an
abomination in Ezekiel 8:13, 14.) At the end of this period of mourning the
people would waken early on the first day of the week and travel to the highest
hills near their homes. There they would present their offerings of wine, meat,
and incense and prostrate themselves before the rising sun, exclaiming “Our
lord is risen!” Then would commence the festivities of Ishtar, queen of heaven
and goddess of fertility. In preparation for this high celebration, the people
would make small cakes, inscribing them with a cross (a pagan fertility
symbol), for baking in the sun and eating as part of their ritual. The day
would conclude in orgiastic revelry of a most debasing sort, and often included
human sacrifices.
The practice of these ancient perversions was so
widespread that even the nation of Israel, a people sanctified by worship of
the one true God, did not escape their baleful influence. Ever compromising
with their pagan neighbors, the Jews allowed their own pure worship to be
adulterated with one heathen custom after another until at a last it was almost
wholly corrupt. In Jeremiah 7:17-19, the prophet revealed God’s clear displeasure
at the idolatry of His people. “Seest thou not what they do in the cities of
Judah and in the streets of Jerusalem? 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 their gods, that they may
provoke me to anger. Do they provoke me to anger? saith the Lord: do they not
provoke themselves to the confusion of their own faces?”
Indeed, confusion was the inevitable result of every
compromise by God’s people with the ways of the unsanctified world. And
confusion was the legacy left to the generations who came after.
It may be unsettling to learn that virtually every religious holiday now
observed throughout Christendom originated in paganism, many hundreds of years
before Christ, but ancient history proves it beyond a doubt. The birthday of
the sun’s child, Tammuz, became the alleged birthday of the Christ child. The
season of mourning for Tammuz became Lent, and the resurrection legend of Tammuz
conveniently lived on as the resurrection story of Christ. The cakes to the
queen of heaven became hot cross buns, and the disgraceful fertility rites of
Ishtar evolved into the celebration of Easter, (Incidentally, Easter is still a
movable festival that finds its date each year from the cycles of the moon. It
is always celebrated on the first Sunday after the first full moon following
the spring equinox.)
Even the lesser pagan holy days, or “holidays,” were
absorbed into Christian culture. During autumn, the season of decay, spirits of
the dead were believed to be hovering nearby. If they were not prayed for and
provided with adequate food and shelter, the people feared they would remain
and haunt them with misfortune. In other words, trick or treat. Today we are
left with All Soul’s Day; the evening before is called Eve of All Hallows, or
more commonly known as Halloween.
St. Valentine’s Day is what remains of Lupercalia,
an early spring purification rite in which the priests would run through the
streets with whips made from strips of goatskin. With these whips they would
strike women, insuring them of fertility for the coming year. Matchmaking
between young people would occur later in the day by random selection of names.
The goatskin whips evolved into little arrows shot by Cupid, and matchmaking
today occurs through the more purposeful exchange of Valentine cards.
Many other examples might be given, but suffice it
to say that our religious and secular culture today is littered with pagan
traditions, large and small. How did it happen? After all, we are a Christian
nation in an enlightened age, aren’t we? The first question is probably easier
to answer than the second.
Life was difficult at best during the early years of
the Christian church. The pagan world was ruthless and powerful, and it sought
to stamp out the little sect of worshipers who revered Jesus Christ as their
Lord and Saviour. But the blood of the martyrs proved to be the seed of the
church, and as time passed it became clear that Christianity would prevail.
When Satan failed to destroy the church by violence,
he resorted to a new strategy – he would join the church himself, and corrupt
it from within. This prove to be a far more successful plan. By the fourth
century A.D. the Roman Empire had invested the growing church with its own
wealth and a large degree of political power, thinking to extend its own
domain. Unfortunately for the world, this blend of religious and temporal power
was an intoxicating mix that forever changed those who tasted it. No longer the
meek and harmless body of Christ, the church devoured the hand that fed her,
and in 538 A.D. Emperor Justinian decreed that the Roman Church now ruled the
world. Henceforth, its reign would be known as the “Holy Roman Empire.”
The world staggered under the oppression of the
Roman Church during the dark ages that followed. In her thirst for ever greater
power and domination, she absorbed all other religions into herself and
adulterated the pure doctrine of Christ with an amalgam of superstitions and
heresies. This characteristic itself was typical of all the pagan nations,
which by conquest perpetually added to their list of deities. Says Durant
in The Story of Civilization: “There were gods who presided over
every moment of a man’s life, gods of the house and garden, of food and drink,
of health and sickness.”
The Roman Church gathered these gods into her bosom
and gave them saints’ names. Prayers for the dead, instead of ascending to
Cybele were now offered up to the Virgin Mary. The use of idols and amulets was
preserved, as were offerings of appeasement (penance and indulgences). The
pagan kings were believed to be incarnations of the sun-god, and the Roman
Church had its counterpart in the pope as the vicar of Christ.
The earliest Christians had denied all compromise
with false doctrine and had gladly suffered horrible martyrdoms for refusing
even to place a pinch of incense at the feet of pagan altars. Yet in just a few
generations of time, a curtain of moral blackness shrouded the church. Ever
anxious to assimilate and conquer, she integrated virtually every feature of
sun worship into her own rites. To spite the Jews whom they hated and to
accommodate the legions of sun worshipers that were entering the “faith”
through conquest, church leaders very early presumed to transfer the sanctity
of the Sabbath to the first day of the week.
Sunday was proclaimed a holiday in
honor of Jesus’ resurrection, a cunning perversion that eventually brought
scorn upon God’s great moral law, the Ten Commandments. In time this master
stroke also effectively obliterated the worship of God as the literal Creator
of the universe, which in turn prepared a wide path for the emergence of
evolutionary philosophy, centuries later.
Today evolution is only the tip of a massive,
many-headed iceberg. From the words we use down to the way we wear our clothes,
our culture is thoroughly steeped in pagan traditions. Stripped of their
original significance, however, many of these customs appear to be relatively
harmless and some, updated with their Christian dressings, seem actually
wholesome. But how should the Christian of today relate to Christmas, or
Easter, or Sunday keeping? Not many people are really aware of the history of
these things, so should we even be concerned?
These questions are reasonable, and they deserve
thoughtful consideration. The best place to begin looking for answers is in the
Bible itself. God strictly commanded Israel, Saying “Take heed to thyself . . .
that thou enquire not after their gods, saying. How did these nations serve
their gods? even so will I do likewise. Thou shalt not do so unto the Lord thy
God.” Deuteronomy 12:30, 31.
Why were God’s words so strong? Because He was
utterly unlike the heathen deities, whom the people regarded as capricious and
in need of continual appeasement. God Himself was just, loving, and above all,
holy. He required a different, higher kind of worship, based on a holy
relationship with His people. The very forms of sun worship and idolatry
precluded any kind of relationship between God and His people, and degraded
their conceptions of Him. Moreover, these forms encompassed the most debasing
practices, including human sacrifices.
We must ask then, is there anything wrong with
commemorating the birth and resurrection of Jesus? Of course not. These events
are filled with deep meaning for every true Christian. The only problem is that
neither the Bible nor history has preserved the dates of these events for us.
Consequently, there is no biblical command to observe them on any particular
day of the year. God in His wisdom left us free to remember them any and every
day of the year, including December 25 and Easter Sunday.
At this point it should be evident that Heaven
places no religious significance on Christmas or Easter. The selection of these
days was based solely on pagan considerations; men later contrived the means by
which to incorporate them into the Christian religion. It is impossible simply
to ignore the holidays that have become such a staple in our own culture, yet
we should not invest them with a sacredness that they do not deserve. At least
we may be thankful that these days to not seek to displace or nullify any part
of God’s holy law.
But now how about Sunday keeping – isn’t that a
legitimate commemoration of Christ’s resurrection? Ah – here is where Satan’s
plot has been leading all along, Sunday observance is the fox that slipped into
the chicken coop along with the pigeons. The pigeons may not be real chickens,
but it’s the fox who will destroy the whole brood if he stays.
What in the world does this mean? In Romans 6, the
Bible gives us the symbol of Christ’s death and resurrection for the Christian,
and it isn’t Sunday keeping. It is baptism and a subsequent “walk in newness of
life.” Verse 4. But most importantly, Sunday keeping is the one remnant of
paganism that is placed in direct opposition to God’s authority. We have not
been told merely to pick one day out of seven for worship. Rather, we are told
that God specifically blessed the seventh day and made it holy –
a fact we dare not disregard.
The Sabbath is a sacred memorial of the creative
power which distinguishes God from all false deities. God has always required
His people to put a difference between the sacred and the profane, between the
holy and the common. Satan has unceasingly sought to blur this distinction. His
final goal is to make sin appear righteous, and righteousness to appear
profane. Has he succeeded? Look at modern Christianity and decide for yourself.
Nowhere in the Scriptures is any mention made of
transferring the Sabbath’s sanctity to another day. Nowhere does the gospel of
Christ nullify any portion of God’s law, though the gates of hell have raged
against it. It was only by hiding the change within a mass of pagan ritual and
“baptizing” the whole lot, that Satan succeeded in causing the entire Christian
world to break God’s holy law while thinking to honor Him. Dr. Edward T.
Hiscox, author of “The Baptist Manual,” made this candid
admission before a group of ministers:
There
was and is a commandment to keep holy the Sabbath day, but that Sabbath
day was not Sunday. Earnestly desiring information on this subject, which
I have studied for many years, I ask, where can the record of such a
transaction
[change of the Sabbath] be found? Not in the New
Testament, absolutely not. There is no scriptural evidence of the change of the
Sabbath institution from the seventh to the first day of the week. Of course I
know quite well that Sunday did come into use in early Christian history. … But
what a pity that it comes branded with the mark of paganism, and christened
with the name of the sun god, when adopted and sanctioned by papal
apostasy and bequeathed as a sacred legacy to Protestantism! (In a paper read
before a New York Ministers’ Conference, November 13, 1893.)
There is a serpent hidden in the bundle of colorful
customs handed to us from paganism. Satan well knows that sin is the only thing
that can separate us from the joys of eternity with Christ, and thus he has
laid his snare. Will we be taken in the net of our adversary? Or will our
prayer, like David’s, be “Give me understanding and I shall keep thy law; yea,
I shall observe it with my whole heart. Make me to go in the path of thy
commandments, for therein do I delight”? Psalm 119:34, 35.”
A prayerful moment: Dear
Lord, forgive me of our misunderstanding of your word, and lead me from this
day to the truth in all things. Amen
Song of the day:Casey
J - If God
For more information on this massage, to Paganism in
the Church by the late founder of the Amazing Facts Program Joe Crews.
Click on:
History of Easter and it's Traditions in 10 Minutes
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Garden Ministry Devotionals
are written by Chaplain Kevin J.T. Santucci
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