An
Easter Remembrance
Ancient
man's pagan,
religious urges
found expression in a variety of beliefs, ideas and practices centering
around a sense of a supernatural other world. This world, though
invisible, was believed by pagan man to have power over his everyday
life.
Since the dawn of their religious consciousness, pagan men and women regarded this supernatural world with a mixture of awe, fear, and hope. They sought to bring their lives into harmony with it. Life was a struggle for survival and a preparation for death.
Men and women offered up
sacrifices and
prayers to the mysterious forces of this mystery
religion,
which they believed controlled the workings of nature on their behalf.
Their hope in offering these sacrifices and prayers was to ward off
catastrophe, to ensure fine hunting, to obtain bountiful harvests, and
to live again beyond the grave. Primitive pagan man sought to
understand the elements of nature as powers to be worshiped, since they
affected his life so directly.
The Cycle Of Primitive Worship
In the spring of the year, pagan man sought fertility for himself and for his land. Bountiful crops would assure food for himself and his household. It was during this season of the year, at the vernal equinox, that the Goddess he worshiped was fertilized by the god he worshiped.
In the following summer, the hot, arid land he lived upon became brown and barren. At this season, directly on the summer solstice, the Goddess that pagan man worshiped in some way lost the companionship of the God he worshiped.
During the autumn, the sun started dying. The days grew shorter as the nights grew longer. In this season, directly on the autumn equinox, the Goddess that pagan man worshiped began weeping for the missing God he worshiped.
During the winter, the sun began to come back to life. The days grew longer and the nights shorter. Life was assured for another year, because the Goddess he worshiped, who had been fertilized at the previous vernal equinox, gave birth to a son at the winter solstice. The God was reborn! Write for our booklet, True Stories About Christmas, for more information.
At the Februa—Purification, forty days after the birth of the son: on February 15th in ancient times, but celebrated on February 14th today, and now known as Valentine's Day—this ancient Mother Goddess was ritually cleansed of childbirth. Write for our booklet, The Real Meaning Behind Valentine's Day, for more information.
The pagan religious year had come to a full circle. Again, at the vernal equinox in the spring of the year, the Goddess he worshiped married her son/husband, by whom she was fertilized in order to refertilize the earth.
The worship of this ancient pagan trinity—the mother, the husband, and the son—would continue in a cycle of worship enacted in pagan man's religious year, perpetually.
Through these rituals performed on the exact dates of the vernal equinox, the summer solstice, the autumn equinox, and the winter solstice, pagan men and women were warding off catastrophe, ensuring fine hunting, obtaining bountiful harvests, and giving themselves the hope of living again beyond the grave.
These mystery religions dramatized the annual decay of vegetation as the death of a divine youth over whom a Goddess mourned. Later, the celebrations were with ecstatic joy as the reborn youth returned.
Participation in each of these rites at the appointed time of the sun was believed by pagan man to cleanse the devotees of their sins and mystically unite them with the gods. The pagan ceremonies generated powerful emotions; thus, this worship of the pagan Gods has flourished since the beginning of time. Due to these same powerful emotions generated during these rites, this pagan worship of mystery is still flourishing today.
Every year, just after the
harsh winter
months are over and the earth is turning green with the fresh
new growth of Spring, there is a pagan ceremony which is celebrated
even today. This day is the most important day in Christian worship.
This day was set apart by the ancient pagans as the special day for the
worship of the Goddess of the dawn. This pagan rite, still set today
according to the vernal equinox, is more familiarly known to this
deceived world as Easter.
The Christian Celebration Of Easter
The New International Dictionary Of The Christian Church, by J.D. Douglas, Zondervan Publishing, Grand Rapids, MI, 1974, page 322, gives the following information about the Christian celebration called Easter:
EASTER. The celebration of Christ's resurrection. Although the Scriptures make no provision for the observance of Easter as the day of resurrection, all the evidence suggests that the celebration of the death and resurrection of Christ began at a very early date in the history of the church, probably as early as the apostolic age. It would seem also that the Christians of the first century consciously sought to create a Christian parallel to the Jewish Passover, since the close relationship between the significance of that event in the O.T. and the crucifixion in the N.T. made a transformation of that Jewish feast into Easter both logical and easy.
After a.d. 100, Easter, Pentecost, and Epiphany became the final parts of the church year.
Easter does not come from the Scriptures. This pagan custom has another source. As we have read, there was a transformation of the Jewish Feast (Passover) into Easter. Remember though, this was done by man and not by Yahweh. The following definitions of transform and transformation are from The Reader's Digest Encyclopedic Dictionary, page 1422.
trans·form (v. trans·fôrm'; n. trans'fôrm) v.t. 1. To give a different form or appearance to. 2. To change the character, nature, condition, etc., of.
trans·for·ma·tion (trans'fer·ma' shen) n. 1. Any change.
2. The act of transforming, or the state of being transformed.
We will then let the New International Dictionary Of The Christian Church, by J.D. Douglas, page 322, tell us how this transformation was accomplished in the religion called Christianity.
CHRISTIAN YEAR, THE. The early Christians who were mainly Jews were used not only to keeping one day in the week as separate but also to marking the year with certain religious festivals, notably Passover, Tabernacles, and Pentecost. From early times Christians kept a commemoration of Christ's resurrection. This was held at Passover time and was finally fixed on the Sunday following Passover. Pentecost was then celebrated at the appropriate time; the fifty days between the two were days of joy and rejoicing. The choice of 25 December (in the East, 6 January) for the birth of Christ is almost certainly because that day was the great pagan day of honor to the sun, and in Rome in the fourth century it was transformed into a Christian festival.
From the fourth century the Christian calendar became more historical in character, and the Holy Week and Ascension Day appeared. Pentecost became the day of giving of the Holy Spirit. Lent arose out of the custom of preparing catechumens for baptism at Easter. Saints' days came into the calendar either through the commemoration of a martyrdom or through the date of a dedication of a church in honor or a particular saint.
Why doesn't this whole Christian world simply celebrate the Feasts which Yahweh ordained in His Holy Scriptures—clearly written in Leviticus 23?
Why would there have to be any transformation of these Feasts in the first place?
The answer to these questions lies in the early history of Christianity; specifically, at the Council of Nicea in 325 c.e. when Constantine the Great helped to formulate Christian doctrine.
When Constantine the Great—the only man in history who was extolled both as a Christian Saint and a pagan God—presided over the Council of Nicea in 325 c.e., his main objective was political: how to merge religion and politics efficiently. Since there were more politically powerful pagans than there were politically powerful believers, the celebrations that the pagans were accustomed to observing were the celebrations which were accepted; and at the same time, the celebrations of the Jews were rejected. Reading from Funk and Wagnall's Standard Reference Encyclopedia, Volume 8, we find the following.
An important historic result of the difference was that the Christian churches in the East, which were closer to the birthplace of the new religion, and in which old traditions were strong, observed Easter according to the date of the Passover festival, while the churches of the West, whose communicants were descendants of Græco-Roman civilization, celebrated Easter on a Sunday.
Settlement of this difference was one of the objects of the Roman emperor Constantine in convoking, in 325 a.d. the Council of Nicæa (see nicÆa, councils of).
At the Council of Nicea, it was
decided
that Easter should be celebrated in accordance with the Alexandrine
Computation. Collier's
Encyclopedia,
Volume 17, page 520, gives
us the following information:
NICAEA,
COUNCILS OF
[naisi' ],
were two in number. (1) The first (First Ecumenical), in a.d. 325,
convoked by Constantine, condemned Arianism, which was essentially a
denial of the divine nature of the Word, and so of the Son of God,
Christ. The traditional number of bishops present was 318 (see Genesis
14:14); the real number was probably about 270. The council defined the
doctrine that the Son is consubstantial with
the Father. In the drawing up of the formula leading parts were taken
by St. Athanasius and Hosius, bishop of Cordoba; the latter probably
presided. The council promulgated the famous Nicene Creed in its
original form. It
also decided
that Easter should thenceforth be
celebrated everywhere at the same time in accordance with the
Alexandrine computation.
The pagan Alexandrine
Computation for
the setting of Easter, is written in Collier's Encyclopedia,
Volume 8, page 492, which says:
EASTER,
the church feast which
commemorates the resurrection of Jesus Christ, is considered the most
ancient and most important festival of the Christian year.
Prior to the time of Pope Victor I (189-c. 198), the Western churches as a rule kept Easter on the first day of the week, while many of the Eastern churches, conforming to the Jewish rule, observed it on the fourteenth of the month of Nisan. Through the energetic efforts of Pope Victor, the latter practice gradually disappeared. But another problem came to the fore: granted that Easter was to be kept on Sunday, how was that Sunday to be determined? The Council of Nicaea (325) paved the way for a final settlement by ruling that Easter is to be observed by all on the same Sunday, that this must be the Sunday following the fourteenth day of the paschal moon, and that that moon was to be accounted as the paschal moon whose fourteenth day followed the vernal equinox. Because of differences in the systems of chronology followed in various places, however, the decrees of Nicaea did not immediately remove all difficulties nor win universal acceptance. The Gregorian correction of the calendar in 1582, moreover, introduced still further discrepancies. Throughout Western Christendom the corrected calendar is now universally accepted, and Easter is solemnized on the first Sunday after the full moon following the vernal equinox, with the result that the earliest possible date is March 22, the latest, April 25.
The Catholic Church's
justification
for
using the Vernal Equinox to set their date for Easter
Sunday—which the
Protestant Churches have accepted completely, comes from the words of
Constantine the Great himself, at the Council of Nicea in the year 325
of this Common Era, saying:
And
truly, in
the first place, it seems to
everyone a most unworthy thing that we should follow the customs of
the Jews in the
celebration of this most holy solemnity, who,
polluted wretches! having stained their hands with a nefarious crime,
are justly blinded in their minds. It is fit, therefore, that rejecting
the practice of this people, we should
perpetuate to all future
ages
the celebration of this rite, in a more
legitimate order,
which we have kept from the first day of our "Lord's" passion even to
the present times. Let us then
have nothing in common with the most
hostile rabble of the Jews. (Council
of Nicea, pg. 52.)
The Council of Nicea, page 23,
then
says:
Easter
day
was fixed on the Sunday
immediately following the full moon which was nearest after the Vernal
Equinox, because
it is certain that our Saviour rose from the dead
on the Sunday which next succeeded the Passover of the Jews.
According
to the calculations adopted
at the Council of Nicea, which are still in effect in every Christian
Church and Assembly in this world, we read:
If
the
Passover fell on a Sunday, Easter
was to be the following Sunday, so as to have nothing in common with
the Jews.
It was not the Jews who were being rejected. Constantine and his followers were rejecting the Laws that these people obeyed— Yahweh's Laws which established each of the Feasts that He had ordained. Effectually, because Christianity wanted nothing in common with the Jews, they also have nothing in common with the ordinances—Laws of Yahweh. Therefore, because Christianity has nothing in common with Yahweh and His Feasts, it has everything in common with paganism and its holidays. This fact is documented from The Interpreter's Dictionary Of The Bible, Volume 4, page 894.
11. The church week and year. The development of the church calendar was a remarkably slow process in Christianity, and equally striking is the fact that so little of the Jewish year finally found a place in Christian celebrations. Where we should have expected a Christian transformation of Rosh Hashanah, Yom Kippur, Succoth, Chanukah, Purim, etc., we find only the retention of the paschal festival. This is due to the fact that the church year was largely the creation of the Gentile church, and the background of such notable days as Christmas, Epiphany, Ember, etc., is pagan, not Jewish.
We must, however, suppose that the earliest Christians continued to observe the Jewish year and week, until the break with the synagogue was complete. Of definitely Christian days, distinct from those of Judaism, the N.T. affords us only one certain example, that of Sunday. This was observed as the day of the Lord's resurrection.
Reading from Compton's Pictured Encyclopedia, Volume 4, page 140, we find that Easter is the greatest festival of the Christian Church, which commemorates the resurrection of Jesus Christ—which festival was named after the ancient Anglo Saxon Goddess of Spring.
EASTER. The greatest festival of the Christian church commemorates the Resurrection of Jesus Christ. It is a movable feast, that is, it is not always held on the same date. The church council of Nicea (a.d. 325) decided that Easter should be celebrated on the first Sunday after the first full moon on or after the vernal equinox (March 21). Easter can come as early as March 22 or as late as April 25.
The name Easter comes from the ancient Anglo-Saxon goddess of spring, Eostre or Ostara, in whose honor an annual spring festival was held. Some of our Easter customs have come from this and other pre-Christian spring festivals. Others come from the Passover feast of the Jews, observed in memory of their deliverance from Egypt (see Passover). The word "paschal,'' meaning "pertaining to Easter,'' like the French word for Easter, Pâques, comes through the Latin from the Hebrew name of the Passover.
Unger's Bible Dictionary, by Merrill F. Unger, page 283, goes on to corroborate this fact.
Easter (Gr. pascha, from Heb. pesah), the Passover, and so translated in every passage excepting "intending after Easter to bring him forth to the people" (Acts 12:4). In the earlier English versions Easter had been frequently used as the translation of pascha. At the last revision Passover was substituted in all passages but this. See Passover.
The word Easter is of Saxon origin, Eastra, the goddess of spring, in whose honor sacrifices were offered about Passover time each year. By the 8th century Anglo-Saxons had adopted the name to designate the celebration of Christ's resurrection.
It is a fully documented historical fact that the day which was chosen by the Christian Church to celebrate this resurrection, was a day which had been celebrated by pagans from antiquity. Yes, the only difference between these two celebrations, is the fact that its name was changed to veneer it with Christian respectability.
It is simply no secret that Easter originated with the worship of a pagan Goddess. This fact is presented almost every time one researches the word Easter.
Compton's
Encyclopedia,
Volume 4, says the following about Easter:
"Many Easter
customs come from the Old
World...colored eggs and rabbits have come from pagan antiquity as
symbols of new life...our
name "Easter" comes from "Eostre", an
ancient Anglo Saxon goddess, originally of the dawn. In pagan times
an annual spring festival was held in her honor. Some Easter customs
have come
from this and other pre-christian spring festivals.''
Reading about this pre-Christian
spring
festival from Funk
& Wagnall's
Standard Reference Encyclopedia,
Volume 8, page 2940, we learn:
Although
Easter is a Christian festival, it
embodies traditions of an ancient time antedating the rise of
Christianity. The origin of its name is lost in the dim past; some
scholars believe it probably is derived from Eastre,
Anglo-Saxon name of a Teutonic goddess of spring and fertility, to
whom was dedicated Eastre
monath,
corresponding to April. Her
festival was celebrated on the day of the vernal equinox, and
traditions associated with the festival survive in the familiar Easter
bunny, symbol of the fertile rabbit, and in the equally familiar
colored Easter eggs originally painted with gay hues to represent the
sunlight of spring.
Such festivals, and the myths and legends which explain their origin, abounded in ancient religions. The Greek myth of the return of the earth-goddess Demeter from the underworld to the light of day, symbolizing the resurrection of life in the spring after the long hibernation of winter, had its counterpart, among many others, in the Latin legend of Ceres and Persephone. The Phrygians believed that their all-powerful deity went to sleep at the time of the winter solstice, and they performed ceremonies at the spring equinox to awaken him with music and dancing. The universality of such festivals and myths among ancient peoples has led some scholars to interpret the resurrection of Christ as a mystical and exalted variant of fertility myths.
The Dictionary of Mythology, Folklore, and Symbols, Part 1, page 487 tells us more about this Spring Festival.
It incorporates some of the ancient Spring Equinox ceremonies of sun worship in which there were phallic rites and spring fires, and in which the deity or offering to the deity was eaten...The festival is symbolized by an ascension Lily...a chick breaking its shell, the colors white and green, the egg, spring flowers, and the Rabbit. The name is related to Astarte, Ashtoreth, Eostre and Ishtar, goddess who visited and rose from the underworld. Easter yields "Enduring Eos"... "Enduring Dawn".
Part of this spring festival centered around phallic rites. Collier's Encyclopedia, 1980, Volume 9, page 622, tells us of the Babylonian Ishtar Festival phallic rites.
The Ishtar Festivals were symbolical of Ishtar as the goddess of love or generation. As the daughter of Sin, the moon god, she was the Mother Goddess who presided over child birth; and women, in her honor, sacrificed their virginity on the feast day or became temple prostitutes, their earnings being a source of revenue for the temple priests and servants.
We learn about these temple
prostitutes
from The
Interpreter's Dictionary of The
Bible, Volume
3, pages
933-934:
a.
The role of the
sacred
prostitute in the
fertility cult. The
prostitute who was an official of
the
cult in
ancient Palestine and nearby lands of biblical times exercised an
important function. This religion was predicated upon the belief that
the processes of nature were controlled by the relations between gods
and goddesses. Projecting
their understanding of their own sexual
activities, the worshipers of these deities, through the use of
imitative magic, engaged in sexual intercourse with devotees of the
shrine, in the belief that this would encourage the gods and goddesses
to do likewise. Only by sexual relations among the deities could man's
desire for increase in herds and fields, as well as in his own family,
be realized. In
Palestine the gods Baal and Asherah were especially
prominent (see BAAL; ASHERAH; FERTILITY CULTS). These competed with
Yahweh the God of Israel and, in some cases, may have produced hybrid
Yahweh-Baal cults. Attached to the shrines of these cults were priests
as well as prostitutes, both male and female. Their chief service was
sexual in nature - the offering of their bodies for ritual
purposes.
Sexual relations for ritual
purposes
was the ceremony for the fertility cults. The
Interpreter's
Dictionary, Volume 2, page
265 says:
FERTILITY
CULTS. The oldest
common
feature of the religions of the ancient Near East was the worship of a
great mother-goddess, the personification of fertility. Associated with
her, usually as a consort, was a young god who died and came to life
again,
like the vegetation which quickly withers but blooms again.
The manner of the young god's demise was variously conceived in the
myths: he was slain by another god, by wild animals, by reapers, by
self-emasculation, by burning, by drowning. In some variations of the
theme, he simply absconded. His absence
produced infertility of the
earth, of man, and of beast. His consort mourned and searched for him.
His return brought renewed fertility and rejoicing.
In Mesopotamia the divine couple appear as Ishtar and Tammuz, in Egypt as Isis and Osiris. Later in Asia Minor, the Magna Mater is Cybele and her young lover is Attis. In Syria in the second millennium b.c., as seen in the Ugaritic myths, the dying and rising god is Baal-Hadad, who is slain by Mot (Death) and mourned and avenged by his sister/consort, the violent virgin Anath. In the Ugaritic myths there is some confusion in the roles of the goddesses. The great mother-goddess Asherah, the wife of the senescent chief god El, seems on the way to becoming the consort of the rising young god Baal, with whom we find her associated in the O.T. Ashtarte also appears in the Ugaritic myths, but she has a minor and undistinguished role.
The O.T. furnishes abundant evidence as to the character of the religion of the land into which the Israelites came. Fertility rites were practiced at the numerous shrines which dotted the land, as well as at the major sanctuaries. The Israelites absorbed the Canaanite ways and learned to identify their god with Baal, whose rains brought fertility to the land. A characteristic feature of the fertility cult was sacral sexual intercourse by priests and priestesses and other specially consecrated persons, sacred prostitutes of both sexes, intended to emulate and stimulate the deities who bestowed fertility. The agricultural cult stressed the sacrifice or common meal in which the gods, priests, and people partook. Wine was consumed in great quantity in thanksgiving to Baal for the fertility of the vineyards. The wine also helped induce ecstatic frenzy, which was climaxed by self-laceration, and sometimes even by self-emasculation. Child-sacrifice was also a feature of the rites. It was not simply a cult of wine, women, and song, but a matter of life and death in which the dearest things of life, and life itself, were offered to ensure the ongoing of life.
Reading on page 103 of The Two Babylons, by Alexander Hislop, we find that Easter and Ishtar are the same.
Then look at Easter. What means the term Easter itself? It bears its 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 Nineveh, was evidently identical with that now in common use in this country. That 'name', as found by Layard on the Assyrian monuments, is "Ishtar".
The Two Babylons by Alexander Hislop tells us of the doctrines of Semiramis.
She
(Semiramis) taught that he (Nimrod the
Babe) was a god-child; that he was Nimrod, their
leader reborn;
that she and her child were divine. This story was widely known in ancient
Babylon and
developed into a well established worship__The
Worship of The Mother and Child!
Numerous monuments of Babylon show the Goddess Mother Semiramis with her child Tammuz in her arms.
Ishtar, pronounced Easter, of Assyria was worshiped in pagan antiquity during her spring festival. Collier's Encyclopedia, Volume 15, page 748, gives us the following information.
Ishtar, goddess of love and war, the most important goddess of the Sumero-Akkadian pantheon. Her name in Sumerian is Inanna (lady of heaven). She was sister of the sun god Shamash and daughter of the moon god Sin. Ishtar was equated with the planet Venus. Her symbol was a star inscribed in a circle. As goddess of war, she was often represented sitting upon a lion. As goddess of physical love, she was patron of the temple prostitutes. She was also considered the merciful mother who intercedes with the gods on behalf of her worshipers. Throughout Mesopotamian history she was worshiped under various names in many cities; one of the chief centers of her cult was Uruk.
Astarte
of Phoenicia was the offshoot of
Ishtar
of Assyria. To the Hebrews, this abomination was known
as Ashtoreth—Ashtoroth. From Collier's
Encyclopedia, Volume 3,
page 13, we read:
ASHTAROTH =
the
plural of the Hebrew
`Ashtoreth,
the Phoenician-Canaanite
goddess Astarte, deity
of fertility, reproduction,
and war. The
use of the
plural form probably
indicates a
general designation for the collective female deities of the
Canaanites, just as the plural Baalim refer to the male deities.
Watson's Biblical and Archaeological Dictionary, 1833, tells us more about this mother Goddess, Ashtaroth.
ASHTAROTH,
or
ASTARTE, a goddess of the
Zidonians. The word Ashtaroth properly signifies flocks of sheep, or
goats; and sometimes the grove, or woods, because she was goddess of
woods, and groves were her temples. In groves consecrated to her, such
lasciviousness was committed as rendered her worship infamous. She
was also called the queen of heaven; and sometimes her worship is said
to be that of "the host of heaven". She was certainly represented
in the same manner as Isis,
with cow's horns on her head, to denote
the increase and decrease of the moon. Cicero calls her the fourth
Venus of the Syrians. She is almost always joined with Baal, and is
called a god, the scriptures having no particular word to express a
goddess. It is believed that the moon was adored in
this idol. Her temples generally accompanied those of the sun; and
while bloody sacrifices or human victims were offered to Baal, bread,
liquors, and perfumes were presented to Astarte. For her, tables were
prepared upon the flat terrace-roofs of houses, near gates, in porches,
and at crossways, on the first day of every month; and this was called
by the Greeks, Hecate's supper.
Solomon,
seduced by his foreign wives, introduced
the
worship of
Ashtaroth into
Israel; but Jezebel, daughter of the king of Tyre, and wife to Ahab,
principally established her worship. She caused altars to be erected to
this idol in every part of Israel; and at one time four hundred priests
attended the worship of Ashtaroth, I Kings xviii. 7.
The
Interpreter's Dictionary,
Volume 3, page 975, tells us of Ishtar's role as The Queen of Heaven:
Ishtar,
the goddess of love and fertility,
who was identified with the Venus Star and is actually entitled "Mistress
of Heaven" in the Amarna tablets. The difficulty is
that the Venus
Star was regarded in Palestine as a male deity (see
DAY STAR),
though the cult of the goddess Ishtar may have been introduced from
Mesopotamia under Manasseh. It is possible that Astarte, or ASHTORETH,
the Canaanite fertility-goddess, whose cult was well established in
Palestine, had preserved more traces of her astral character as the
female counterpart of Athtar than the evidence of the O.T. or the Ras
Shamra texts indicates. The title "Queen of Heaven" is applied in an
Egyptian inscription from the Nineteenth Dynasty at Beth-shan to
"Antit", the Canaanite fertility-goddess Anat, who is termed "Queen
of Heaven and Mistress of the Gods". This is the most active
goddess in the Ras Shamra Texts, but in Palestine her functions seem to
have been taken over largely by Ashtoreth.
We find the following information about Ashtoreth from The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, Volume 1, pages 319-320.
ASHTORETH ash'te-reth [Heb. `astoret. pl. `astarôt; Gk. Astarte]. A goddess of Canaan and Phoenicia whose name and cult were derived from Babylonia, where Ishtar represented the evening and morning stars and was accordingly androgynous in origin. Under Semitic influence, however, she became solely female, although retaining a trace of her original character by standing on equal footing with the male divinities. From Babylonia the worship of the goddess was carried to the Semites of the West, and in most instances the feminine suffix was attached to her name; where this was not the case the deity was regarded as a male. On the Moabite Stone, for example, "Ashtar" is identified with "Chemosh", and in the inscriptions of southern Arabia "Athtar" is a god. On the other hand, in the name Atargatis (2 Macc. 12:26), "Atar", without the feminine suffix, is identified with the goddess "Athah" or "Athi" (Gk. Gatis). The cult of the Greek Aphrodite in Cyprus was borrowed from that of Ashtoreth; that the Greek name also is a modification of Ashtoreth is doubtful. It is maintained, however, that the vowels of Heb. `astoret were borrowed from boset ("shame") in order to indicate the abhorrence the Hebrew scribes felt toward paganism and idolatry.
In Babylonia and Assyria Ishtar was the goddess of love and war. An old Babylonian legend relates how the descent of Ishtar into Hades in search of her dead husband Tammuz was followed by the cessation of marriage and birth in both earth and heaven; and the temples of the goddess at Nineveh and Arbela, around which the two cities afterward grew, were dedicated to her as the goddess of war. As such she appeared to one of Ashurbanipal's seers and encouraged the Assyrian king to march against Elam. The other goddesses of Babylonia, who were little more than reflections of a god, tended to merge into Ishtar, who thus became a type of the female divinity, a personification of the productive principle in nature, and more especially the mother and creatress of mankind.
In Babylonia Ishtar was identified with Venus. Like Venus, Ishtar was the goddess of erotic love and fertility. Her chief seat of worship was Uruk (Erech), where prostitution was practiced in her name and she was served with immoral rites by bands of men and women. In Assyria, where the warlike side of the goddess was predominant, no such rites seem to have been practiced, and instead prophetesses to whom she delivered oracles were attached to her temples.
From various Egyptian sources it appears that Astarte or Ashtoreth was highly regarded in the Late Bronze Age.
Reading on pages 412-413 of Unger's Bible Dictionary, we find the following information about Ashtoreth-Astarte.
Ash'toreth (ash'to-reth), Astarte, a Canaanite goddess. In south Arabic the name is found as `Athtar (apparently from `athara, to be fertile, to irrigate), a god identified with the planet Venus. The name is cognate with Babylonian Ishtar, the goddess of sensual love, maternity and fertility. Licentious worship was conducted in honor of her. As Asherah and Anat of Ras Shamra she was the patroness of war as well as sex and is sometimes identified with these goddesses. The Amarna Letters present Ashtoreth as Ashtartu. In the Ras Shamra Tablets are found both the masculine form `Athtar and the feminine `Athtart. Ashtoreth worship was early entrenched at Sidon (I Kings 11:5, 33; II Kings 23:13). Her polluting cult even presented a danger to early Israel (Judg. 2:13; 10:6). Solomon succumbed to her voluptuous worship (I Kings 11:5; II Kings 23:13). The peculiar vocalization Ashtoreth instead of the more primitive Ashtaroth is evidently a deliberate alteration by the Hebrews to express their abhorrence for her cult by giving her the vowels of their word for ``shame'' (bosheth). M. F. U.
The
Interpreter's
Dictionary,
Volume 1, page 252 says:
The
antipathy toward the
Asherah on
the part of the Hebrew leaders was due to the fact that the goddess
and the cult object of the same name were associated with the fertility
religion of a foreign people and as such involved a mythology and a
cultus which were obnoxious to the champions of Yahweh.
Unger's Bible
Dictionary,
page 412 gives us
this information about 'Asherah'.
Asherah
(a-she' ra), plural, Asherim, a pagan goddess, who is found in the Ras
Shamra epic religious texts discovered at Ugarit in North Syria
(1929-1937), as Asherat, "Lady of the Sea" and consort of El. She was
the chief goddess of Tyre in nthe 15th century B.C. with the appelation
Qudshu, "holiness". In
the Old
Testament Asherah appears as a goddess by the side of Baal, whose
consort she evidently came to be, at least among the Canaanites of the
South. However, most Biblical references to the name point clearly to
some cult object of wood, which might be worshipped or cut down and
burned, and which was certainly the goddess' image (I Kings 15:13, II
Kings 21:7) Her prophets are mentioned (I Kings 18:19) and the vessels
used in her service referred to (II Kings 23:4). Her cult object,
whatever it was, was uttrly detestable to
faithful
worshipers of Yahweh (I Kings
15:13) and was set up on the high places beside the "altars of
incense'' (hammanim) and the stone pillars (masseboth).
Indeed,
the stone pillars seem to have represented the male god Baal (cf. Judg.
6:28), while the cult object of Ashera, probably a tree or pole,
constituted a symbol of this goddess (See
W. L. Reed's
The
Asherah in the Old Testament, Texas
Christian
University Press).
But Asherah was only one manifestation of a chief goddess of Western
Asia, regarded now as
the wife,
now as the sister of the principal
Canaanite god El. Other
names of
this deity were Ashtoreth
(Astarte) and Anath. Frequently represented as a nude
woman
bestride a lion with a lily in one hand and a serpent in the other,
and styled Qudshu "the
Holiness,''
that is, "the Holy One''
in a perverted moral sense, she was a divine courtesan. In the same
sense the male prostitutes consecrated to the cult of the Qudshu
and prostituting themselves to her honor were styled qedishim,
"sodomites'' (Deut. 23:18; 1 Kings 14:24; 15:12; 22:46). Characteristically
Canaanite the lily symbolizes grace and sex appeal and the serpent
fecundity
(W. F. Albright, Archaeology
and
the Religion of
Israel,
Baltimore, John Hopkins Press, 1942, pages 68-94). At
Byblos (Biblical Gebal) on the Mediterranean, north of Sidon, a center
dedicated to this goddess has been excavated. She and her colleagues
specialized in sex and war and her shrines were temples of legalized
vice. Her degraded cult offered a perpetual danger of pollution to
Israel and must have sunk to sordid depths as lust and murder were
glamorized in Canaanite religion.
On page 413 of Unger's Bible Dictionary, we have found that Astarte is the Greek name for the Hebrew Ashtoreth. From Collier's Encyclopedia, Volume 3, page 97, we find that Astarte-Ashtaroth is merely the Semitic Ishtar—which we have already learned is pronounced Easter.
ASTARTE [æsta'rti], the Phoenician goddess of fertility and erotic love. The Greek name, "Astarte" was derived from Semitic, "Ishtar", "Ashtoreth". Astarte was regarded in Classical antiquity as a moon goddess, perhaps in confusion with some other Semitic deity. In accordance with the literary traditions of the Greco-Romans, Astarte was identified with Selene and Artemis, and more often with Aphrodite. Among the Canaanites, Astarte, like her peer Anath, performed a major function as goddess of fertility.
Egyptian iconography, however, portrayed Astarte in her role as a warlike goddess massacring mankind, young and old. She is represented on plaques (dated 1700-1100 b.c.) as naked, in striking contrast to the modestly garbed Egyptian goddesses. Edward J. Jurji
In Ephesus from primitive times, this Mother Goddess had been called Diana, who was worshiped as the Goddess of Virginity and Motherhood. She was said to represent the generative powers of nature, and so was pictured with many breasts. A tower shaped crown, symbolizing the Tower of Babylon, adorned her head:
Reading from Bible Manners And Customs, by James M. Freeman, 1972, Logos International Printing, Plainfield, N.J., page 451, we learn the following facts about the mother of all things.
The
circle round her head denotes the nimbus
(sin circle) of her glory, the griffins inside of which express its
brilliancy. In her breasts are the twelve signs of
the zodiac,
of which those seen in front are the ram, bull, twins, crab, and lion;
they are divided by the hours. Her necklace is composed of acorns, the
primeval food of man. Lions are on her arms to
denote her power,
and her hands are stretched out to show that she is ready to receive
all who come to her. Her body is covered with various breasts
and
monsters, as sirens, sphinxes, and griffins, to show that she
is
the source of nature, the mother of all things. Her
head,
hands, and feet are of bronze while the rest of the statue is of
alabaster to denote the ever-varying light and shade of the moon's
figure... Like Rhea, she was crowned with turrets, to denote
her
dominion over terrestrial objects.
The worship of Ishtar-Easter spread throughout the ancient pagan world, where she was venerated in almost every segment of society. The original of this Goddess, however, loomed upon the historical scene in Babylone. From The Two Babylons by Hislop, pages 20-22, we find this information about the original of this Great Mother Goddess—Semiramis.
The Babylonians in their popular religion, supremely worshiped a Goddess Mother, and a Son, who was represented in pictures and in images as an infant or child in his mother's arms (Figs. 5 and 6). From Babylon, this worship of the Mother and the Child spread to the ends of the earth. In Egypt, the Mother and the Child were worshiped under the names of Isis and Osiris.* In India, even to this day, as Isi and Iswara; * in Asia, as Cybele and Deoius;§ in Pagan Rome, as Fortuna and Jupiter-puer, or Jupiter, the boy in Greece, as Ceres, the Great Mother, with the babe at her breast,¶ or as Irene, the goddess of Peace, with the boy Plutus in her arms; ** and even in Thibet, in China, and Japan, the Jesuit missionaries were astonished to find the counterpart of Madonna ** and her child as devoutly worshiped as in Papal Rome itself; Shing Moo, the Holy Mother in China, being represented with a child in her arms, and a glory around her, exactly as if a Roman Catholic artist had been employed to set her up.*
The original of that mother, so widely worshiped, there is reason to believe, was Semiramis, * already referred to, who, it is well known, was worshiped by the Babylonians, * and other eastern nations, § and that under the name of Rhea, ||the great goddess "Mother."
It was from the son, however, that she derived all her glory and her claims to deification. That son, though represented as a child in his mother's arms, was a person of great stature and immense bodily powers, as well as most fascinating manners. In Scripture he is referred to (Ezek. viii. 14) under the name of Tammuz, but he is commonly known among classical writers under the name of Bacchus, that is, "The Lamented One". ¶ To the ordinary reader the name of Bacchus suggests nothing more than revelry and drunkenness, but it is now well known, that amid all the abominations that attended his orgies, their grand design was professedly "the purification of souls", * and that from the guilt and defilement of sin. This lamented one, exhibited and adored as a little child in his mother's arms, seems, in point of fact, to have been the husband of Semiramis, whose name, Ninus, by which he is commonly known in classical history, literally signified "The Son",* As Semiramis, the wife, was worshiped as Rhea, whose grand distinguishing character was that of the great goddess "Mother,"* the conjunction with her of her husband, under the name of Ninus, or "The Son," was sufficient to originate the peculiar worship of the "Mother and Son," so extensively diffused among the nations of antiquity; and this, no doubt, is the explanation of the fact which has so much puzzled the inquirers into ancient history, that Ninus is sometimes called the husband, and sometimes the son of Semiramis.§ This also accounts for the origin of the very same confusion of relationship between Isis and Osiris, the mother and child of the Egyptians; for as Bunsen shows, Osiris was represented in Egypt as at once the son and husband of his mother; and actually bore, as one of his titles of dignity and honour, the name "Husband of the Mother."||
The Babylonian worship of the Great Mother spread throughout the known world. This Mother Goddess was known by different names, but the form of her religion has not transformedsince antiquity. The Layman's Bible Encyclopedia, William C. Martin, The Southwestern Company, Nashville, TN, 1964, page 209, gives the following facts about Easter.
EASTER, an annual
celebration observed
by much of the Christian church, commemorating Christ's resurrection. Modern
observance of Easter represents a convergence of three traditions:
(1) The Hebrew Passover, celebrated during Nisan, the first month of
the Hebrew lunar calendar; (2) The Christian commemoration of the
`crucifixion' and resurrection of `Jesus', which took place at the
feast of the Passover; and (3) The Norse
Ostara or
Eostra (from which the name, "Easter" is derived), a pagan
festival of spring which fell at the vernal equinox, March 21.
Prominent symbols in this celebration of the resurrection of nature
after the winter were rabbits, signifying fecundity, and eggs, colored
like the rays of the "returning sun" and the northern lights, or
aurora borealis."
The Ishtar Egg
Eggs have absolutely nothing to do with the resurrection of the Messiah (three days and three nights after He was placed in the grave), but the egg was a sacred symbol to the Babylonians. An egg of wondrous size fell from heaven into the Euphrates River; from this marvelous egg the Goddess Astarte (Easter) was hatched. From the land of Babylon, humanity was scattered to the various parts of the earth. These religious people took with them the symbol of the mystic sacred egg. Each pagan nation had its own representation of this wonder. The Greeks had their sacred egg of Heliopolis, and the Typhon's Egg.
From The
Two Babylons, by
Hislop on page 109, we learn about the Mystic Egg of Astarte:
From
Egypt these sacred eggs can be distinctly
traced to the banks of the Euphrates. The classic poets are full of the
fable of the mystic egg of the Babylonians; and thus its tale is told
by Hyginus, the Egyptian, the learned keeper of the Palatine library at
Rome, in the time of Augustus, who was skilled in all the wisdom of his
native country: "An egg of wondrous size is said to have fallen from
heaven into the river Euphrates. The fishes rolled it to the bank,
where the doves having settled upon it, hatched it, and out came Venus,
who afterwards was called the Syrian Goddess"* that is, Astarte.
Hence the egg became one of the symbols of Astarte or Easter;
and accordingly, in Cyprus, one of the chosen seats of the worship of
Venus, or Astarte, the egg of wondrous size was represented on a grand
scale. (See Fig. 32)
§
The
Roman Catholic Church now has their own
Official Representation of Ishtar—the Virgin Mother,
who stands
upon the top of this Sacred
Egg
of Heliopolis, with the Serpent Typhon
at her feet.
This official pagan representation is
now modernly known as: THE VIRGIN MARY!
The
Ishtar
Fertility Hare
The Easter Bunny
From The
Encyclopedia Britannica,
we find the following information about Easter:
Like
the Easter Egg, the Easter Hare came
to Christianity from antiquity. The hare
is associated with the
moon in the legends of ancient Egypt and other peoples... Through the
fact that the
Egyptian word for hare "um", means also
open and period. The hare
came to be associated with the idea
of periodicity both lunar and human, and with
the beginning of new
life in both the young man and young woman, and so a symbol of
fertility and of the renewal of life.
Easter eggs and rabbits are the symbols of sexual fertility in the ancient, pagan religions. The Reader's Digest Book of Facts, page 122, gives the following information.
EASTER AND THE BUNNY Children's stories in many countries tell how Easter eggs are brought not by a chicken but by hares and rabbits. These long eared hopping mammals have represented fertility in many cultures because they breed so quickly. In traditional Christian art the hare represents lust, and paintings sometimes show a hare at the Virgin Mary's feet to signify her triumph over temptations of the flesh. Yet as a symbol of life reawakening in the spring often portrayed as the innocent and cuddly Easter bunny - the rabbit coexists in many places with the solemn Christian rites of Easter.
Hot Cross Buns
Another
custom closely associated with
Easter is the baking and eating of Hot Cross Buns. There is, of course,
no Scriptural justification for this custom, but there is great pagan
justification involved. The cross is the original sign of the God
Tammuz. The cross is the letter "T".
The Two Babylons, by Alexander Hislop on pages 197-200, tells us the following about the sign of the cross.
The
magic virtues attributed
to the so-called
"sign of the cross", the worship bestowed on it, never came from
(Yahshua or His Apostles). The same sign
of the "cross"
that Rome now worships was used in the Babylonian Mysteries, and was
applied by paganism to the same magic purposes (signing
oneself,
kissing the cross, holding the cross, wearing it as a charm), was
honored with the same honors. That which is
now called the
"Christian Cross" was originally no Christian emblem at all, but was
the Mystic Tau of the Chaldeans and Egyptians - the true
original form of the letter "T" - the initial of the name
of Tammuz...that
mystic "Tau" was marked in baptism on the
foreheads of those initiated in the Mysteries...The mystic "Tau'',
as the symbol of the great divinity, was called "the Sign of Life'';
it was used as an amulet ("good luck charm'') over the heart; it was
marked on the official garments of the (Ancient Pagan) priests, as
(now) on the official garments of the Priests of Rome (today)...The
Vestal Virgins of Pagan Rome wore (the cross) suspended from their
necklaces, as the Nuns do today...men as well as women wore earrings
and they frequently had a small cross suspended to a necklace or to the
collar of their dress...(the cross) was also appended to the robes of
the "Rot-N-No'' (Pagan Priests); and traces of it may be seen in the
fancy ornaments of the "Rebo'' (Pagan Priests), showing that it was
already
in use as
early as the Fifteenth Century before the Christian
Era.*
There
is hardly a pagan tribe where the
cross has not been found. The cross was worshiped by the pagan Celts
long before the "incarnation" and death of Christ... The
Druids
in their groves were accustomed to select the most stately and
beautiful tree as an emblem of the deity (god) they adored,
and
having cut the side branches, they affixed two of the largest of them
to the highest part of the trunk, in such a manner that those branches
extended on each side like the arms of a man, and, together with the
body, presented the appearance of a huge cross, and on the bark, in
several places, was also inscribed the letter "Thau". It was
worshiped in Mexico for ages before the Roman Catholic missionaries set
foot there, large stone crosses b
eing
erected, probably to
the
"god of rain"'. The cross thus widely worshiped, or regarded as a
sacred emblem, was the unequivocal symbol of "Bacchus", the
Babylonian Messiah, for he was represented with a head-band covered
with crosses.
Tammuz, according to Collier's Encyclopedia, Volume 15, page 749, was the Sumero-Akkadian God of vegetation, who was known as Adoni—my Lord.
Tammuz,
the
Sumero-Akkadian god of
vegetation. His name
in Sumerian is Dumu-zi-abzu (true son of
Apsu), or simply Dumu-zi, from which the Hebrew form Tammuz is derived.
The
cult of Tammuz, under the west-Semitic name of Adoni (my
lord) and the Greek equivalent Adonis, was
widespread throughout
the Mediterranean world. According to still extant mythology, Tammuz
died, descended to the lower world, was resurrected, and ascended again
to earth and then to heaven. During his
absence the earth remained
sterile and the flocks were plundered. Because
of his close
association with the realm of nature, the fields and animals, he was
called "the shepherd".
The International Standard Bible Encyclopedia, Volume 4, page 725, shows that the original of the name Tammuz, which is dumuzi, means invigorator of the child. Tammuz was the same Sumerian and Babylonian God of fertility, who married Easter-Ishtar at the vernal equinox.
TAMMUZ tam'uz, tä'mooz [Heb. tammûz; Akk. tammuz; Sum. dumuzi__"`invigorator of the child (?)'']. A Sumerian and Babylonian god of fertility mentioned once in the O.T. (Eze. 8:14). The prophet in a vision during his Babylonian exile saw an abomination: women in the north gate of the Jerusalem temple wailing for Tammuz.
S.N. Kramer may have found literary antecedents to Canticles in Sumerian love poetry celebrating the marriage of Dumuzi and the goddess Inanna (Akk. Ishtar).
As this source reference has stated, Tammuz was mentioned once in Yechetzqyah.
Yechetzqyah 8:13-14—
13 He also said to me: Turn yet again, and you will see greater abominations that they are doing.
14 Then he brought me to the door of the gate of Yahweh's House, which was toward the north; and behold, there sat women weeping for Tammuz.
This weeping for Tammuz was an abomination which was being practiced even by the people of Yerusalem at the time that Yechetzqyah was prophesying. This weeping was a fertility rite. One of the ceremonies of Ishtar-Easter worship, was that of weeping for the dead vegetation God, because fertility had ceased from the land. In the people's minds, unless this God was resurrected, there would be no renewing of fertility with the great Mother Goddess. So, through sympathetic magic—through the weeping of his mother (Easter-Ishtar), Tammuz was mystically resurrected. Each year these people grieved with Ishtar-Easter over the death of Tammuz; and at each vernal equinox they were rewarded as this resurrected God was reunited with his great Mother Goddess, in order to ensure the success of the crops and the fertility of animals and people.
This ancient fertility worship was exactly scheduled according to the shadows of the sun. It is very easy to learn how this was done. Obtain our book, Deceptions Concerning Yahweh's Calendar Of Events.
Hot Cross Buns are in reality Tammuz cakes. These little magic Tammuz cakes were made and used in the worship of Ishtar-Easter: the Queen of Heaven—for it was she who brought the God back to ensure their fertility. So, when the God returned to fertilize the mother, on the exact day of the vernal equinox, the people mystically held him in their hands and ate the God, mystically uniting with him and his mother in worship.
During the time that the Prophet Yeremyah was proclaiming Yahweh's Laws to the people, Yahweh inspired him to rebuke His people for this pagan practice.
Yeremyah 7:17-20—
17 Do you not see what they do in the cities of Yahdah and in the streets of Yerusalem?
18 How the children gather wood, and the fathers kindle the fire, while the women knead dough to make cakes for the Queen of Heaven, and how they pour out drink offerings to the hinder gods (elohim), so they may provoke Me to anger!
19 Is it I Whom they provoke to anger? says Yahweh: Or is it not themselves, whom they harm to their own shame?
20 Therefore this is what Yahweh says: Behold, My anger and My fury will be poured out on this place on man and on beast, on the trees of the field and on the fruit of the ground and it will burn and not be quenched.
The very things that the people were seeking to reproduce in this fertility worship—man, animals, fruits, and produce—were the very things that Yahweh would not bless because of their apostasy and God worship.
The
Interpreter's
Dictionary of The
Bible, Volume
3, page 975, tells us of Ishtar's role as The
Queen of Heaven:
QUEEN
OF HEAVEN. The object of worship,
particularly by women, in Judah in the time of Jeremiah; cakes (konim),
possibly shaped as figurines, were offered to her with libations (Jer.
7:18; 44:17-19, 25). Jeremiah censures the Jewish refugees in Egypt
after the fall of Jerusalem for burning incense and offering libation
to the Queen of heaven. From the second reference this cult
seems
to have been designed to secure material welfare. From these two
isolated references, however, it is not possible to determine with
certainty the object of worship, the more so because of variant
readings.
The MT (melekat) is an unusual form of melekah, the normal word for "queen" and certain MSS read melakat ("handiwork"), meaning presumably the stars; this was understood by the LXX translators in Jer. 7:18, where "the heavenly host" (th stratia tou ouranou) is read, supported by the Targ., which reads "the star(s) of heaven" (shemia kukbat). If "the queen of heaven" is to be read - which seems more probable - the reference might be to Ishtar, the goddess of love and fertility, who was identified with the Venus Star and is actually entitled "Mistress of Heaven" in the Amarna tablets. The difficulty is that the Venus Star was regarded in Palestine as a male deity (see day star), though the cult of the goddess Ishtar may have been introduced from Mesopotamia under Manasseh. It is possible that Astarte, or Ashtoreth, the Canaanite fertility-goddess, whose cult was well established in Palestine, had preserved more traces of her astral character as the female counterpart of Athtar than the evidence of the O.T. or the Ras Shamra Texts indicates. The title "Queen of Heaven" is applied in an Egyptian inscription from the Nineteenth Dynasty at Beth-shan to "Antit", the Canaanite fertility-goddess Anat, who is termed "Queen of Heaven and Mistress of the Gods". This is the most active goddess in the Ras Shamra Texts, but in Palestine her functions seem to have been taken over largely by Ashtoreth.
We have had the opportunity to read more than once throughout this booklet that the name and the festival of Easter have their origins in the worship of a pagan Goddess of spring, but Easter is now the most important of Christian festivals. From The Last Two Million Years by The Reader's Digest Association, page 215, we learn how the worship of a pagan Goddess became the most important Christian festival.
Pagan
rites absorbed
By a stroke of
tactical genius the Church,
while intolerant of pagan beliefs, was able to harness the powerful
emotions generated by pagan worship. Often, churches were
sited
where temples had stood before, and many heathen festivals
were
added to the Christian calendar. Easter, for instance, a time
of
sacrifice and rebirth in the Christian year, takes its name
from
the Norse goddess Eostre, in whose honour rites were held
every
spring. She in turn was simply a northern version of the Phoenician earth-mother
Astarte, goddess of fertility. Easter eggs continue an
age-old
tradition in which the egg is a symbol of birth;
and cakes
which were eaten to mark the festivals of Astarte and Eostre
were
the direct ancestors of our hot-cross buns.
Why were the pagan rites absorbed, rather than being completely abolished? The answer to this question is that many people had been drawn to the religion called Christianity, but so strong in their minds was their adoration for the Mother Goddess, that they would not forsake her worship. Due to the fact that Christianity could readily transform its beliefs, compromising church leaders saw their opportunity. They found similarities in Christian customs with those of the Mother Goddess—and brought people by the droves into their fold.
Who did these compromising church leaders find to worship, instead of the Great Mother Ishtar-Easter? They found Miryam, the mother of Yahshua Messiah. Through Mary worship, the pagans could continue their customary prayers and devotion to the mediating Goddess—just change her name to Mary. This would give the pagan worship of the Mother the appearance of respectability—the same respectability that it still holds today. Slowly but methodically, the religion of pagan Rome, which was a synthesis of everything that was abominable to Yahweh from the beginning, became established with its new name: Christianity.
During the first centuries of this religion, no emphasis was placed upon Mary whatsoever. But, thanks to Constantine the Great, the savior of Christianity, in the early part of the Fourth Century of this Common Era, the worship of Mary as a Goddess was encouraged. Since Rome had long been a center for the worship of the Mother Goddess of paganism, we need not be surprised that Rome was one of the first places where Mary worship, and many other renamed, but very familiar customs became firmly rooted.
From Grolier's Encyclopedia, Grolier Corporation, N.Y., 1966, Volume 17, we find the following information.
Easter:
A Day of Joy
Though
not all Protestants observe Lent and
Holy Week, all Christians celebrate Easter Day, commemorating the
Resurrection. Easter Day invariably falls on a Sunday, the
first
Sunday after the full moon following the spring equinox, usually late
in March.
The name of this holiday and the time it is celebrated have led people to believe that an earlier holiday existed on this day before the Christian observance. For many ancient nations joyously celebrated the end of winter and the "resurrection of the sun'' at this season of the year; and some devoted this festival to Eostre, Germanic goddess of spring.
The Church Fathers turned this heathen holiday into the Christian celebration of the Resurrection. And Christians the world over observe this day with great rejoicing. Some greet each other with: "Christ is risen! Christ is risen!'' And all think of Jesus, who conquered death so that those who follow him may gain everlasting life.
On Easter people go to church services and delight in the sight of the great masses of Easter lilies that decorate the altars. For the Chinese the peony is the king of flowers and symbol of spring. But to the people in church on Easter Day, the fragrant lily with its trumpet shaped blossoms is the symbol of purity and the welcome harbinger of spring.
The churchgoers enjoy the flowers and the music and the sermon of the day. And from time to time they look about them to observe the gay clothes that people wear, since it has long been the custom for people to put on their newest clothes on Easter Day.
The
Eastern Orthodox Easter Parade
In
countries where the Eastern Orthodox Church
dominates, a quite different parade is put on during Easter. The
worshipers gather early on Saturday night in an elaborate ritual. And
at midnight, led by their priests in richly embroidered vestments,
carrying images and lighted candles in their hands, they go out into
the night in search of Jesus.
It is almost dawn when the people return home to eat the Easter bread with white cheese and honey and the richly colored hard boiled eggs.
Many
Encyclopedias will make the
statement that Easter is the worship of a pagan Goddess and
at the same time will state this celebration is one of the most
important Christian celebrations today. In each of these reference
works a statement is made, in one form or another, that Easter is the
day on which the Christian Church commemorates our Savior's
resurrection.
The Sunday Resurrection Lie!
Christendom teaches that the Messiah rose from His grave on Sunday morning and because of this, they say, they are worshiping on the day of His resurrection. There is, however, no Scriptural proof for this Good Friday-Easter Sunday tradition. As we have seen throughout this booklet, the foundation for this tradition is in pagan antiquity, although this tradition is taught to deceived Christianity as Scripture. Was Yahshua, our true Savior resurrected on Easter Sunday morning? The answer is, NO!
There is a reason this world is confused as to when our Messiah was placed in His grave. The reason being that this whole world has rejected Yahweh and His Laws. Yahweh's Laws include Yahweh's Feast Days; Yahweh's Weekly Sabbath Day__the Seventh Day, plus the Seven Sabbath Days (Holy Convocations) which are shown in Leviticus Chapter 23.
Leviticus 23:2
Speak to the children of Israyl, and say to them; Concerning the Feasts of Yahweh, which you shall proclaim to be Holy Convocations; these are My Feasts.
The world has rejected not only Yahweh's weekly seventh day Sabbath, but they have also rejected all of Yahweh's Feast Days (Holy Convocations) by replacing them with their own feast days which are condemned in the Holy Scriptures.
These Feasts are the Feasts of Yahweh; they are not feasts of the Jews, as many would say. Yahweh's Feasts are not done away with either, as many would like you to think. Yahweh tells us His Feasts are a Statute forever. This world, therefore, is not led by Yahweh's Holy Spirit, because they have rejected Yahweh, Who inspired the Prophet Hosheyah to say; ...Because you have forgotten the Law of Yahweh, I will also forget your children.
For more facts concerning
Yahweh's Sabbath
Days, please write for information about how you may obtain our book, The
Sabbath...Every Question Answered! also request our free
booklet,
Which Day Is The Sabbath Of
The New
Testament? Our free
booklet, What Yahweh's
Feasts Mean To You, will explain
the significance of Yahweh's Feasts for His House—The House
of Yahweh.
Don't Be Deceived!
In order for you to see through this great deception, it is vital that you understand the difference between Yahweh's Feast day Sabbaths and the weekly Sabbaths—the weekly
Sabbaths always fall on the Seventh Day, Saturday, whereas the Feast day Sabbaths can fall on any day of the week.
Most people today are deceived into believing that the Messiah was resurrected on Easter Sunday morning. They believe they are honoring His resurrection by celebrating an Easter sunrise service. This belief is based on the following Scripture from The King James Version which says:
Matthew 28:1 KJV—
In the end of the Sabbath, as it began to dawn toward the first day of the week, came Mary Magdalene and the other Mary to see the sepulchre
False preachers will tell you this dawning toward the first of the week is at the time of day called sunrise. This is a false conclusion. This dawning toward the First Day of the week was actually at a time of day called sunset.
To know what time of day this Scripture is referring to, we must first know the time sequence in a day. Yahweh our Heavenly Father, the Creator of the day, tells us the time sequence of a day.
Genesis 1:5—
And Yahweh called the light day, and the darkness He called night. And the evening and then the morning were the First Day
Yahweh created a day to be an evening (darkness) first, and then the morning (light). Genesis 1:4-13 gives the story of the creation of the first three days in a week; each day was one night, then one day—which is one day, Yahweh's way. The first three days of creation were a time sequence of seventy-two hours, spanning one night, one day; one night, one day; one night, one day. This same principle applies to the time span in which Yahshua was in the grave.
The words coming from Yahshua's own mouth about His resurrection, were that He would be in the grave three days and three nights.
Mattithyah 12:40—
For as Yahnah was THREE days and THREE nights in the belly of the great fish, so will the Son of Man be three days and three nights in the heart of the earth.Yahnah 1:17—
Now Yahweh had prepared a great fish to swallow up Yahnah. And Yahnah was in the belly of the fish three days AND three nights.
Even the critics admit that this means a period of seventy-two hours. They admit there were three twelve hour days, and three twelve hour nights in which Yahnah was in the belly of the fish. And just as distinctly, Yahshua Messiah said that He would be in the grave for the same length of time. Not only this, but Yahshua Himself gives us the length of time in a day.
Yahchanan 11:8-9—
8 His disciples said to Him; Teacher, the Yahdaim just recently tried to stone You, and You go there again?
9 Yahshua answered: Are there not TWELVE HOURS IN THE DAY? If any man walks in the day, he does not stumble, because he sees the light of this world.
The teaching of the majority of Sunday keeping Christianity is that the Messiah was put in the grave on Good Friday at sunset, and was resurrected at sunrise on Easter Sunday morning. But our Messiah said that the only sign He would give that He was the true Messiah, was the sign of the Prophet Yahnah—the sign that He would be in the grave three days and three nights. Can you get three days and three nights from Christianity's Time Sequence?
Friday Night__One Night
Saturday Day__One Day
Saturday Night__One Night
Resurrected Sunday at Dawn__No Day
There are two nights and one day in this time sequence. It should not be too difficult for anyone to understand that this was a period of about thirty-six hours—not seventy-two hours. Even a child can figure that there are not three days and three nights from Friday sunset to Sunday sunrise__yet Satan has caused the majority of people in this world to accept this lie.
If Yahshua had been placed in the grave on Good Friday evening at sunset, then His resurrection should not have taken place until Monday evening at sunset.
Was our Messiah confused, or is this whole world deceived as the Holy Scriptures say in Revelation 12:9? Satan has deceived this whole world. Could this lie of a Sunday sunrise resurrection be one of the ways by which Satan has so subtly deceived this world?
Yahshua knew how long He would be in the grave. There was no guessing or speculation. It was absolutely necessary that Yahshua Messiah fulfill this prophecy, or otherwise He would not prove to be the true Messiah. The true Messiah sent by Yahweh must have remained in the grave three days and three nights.
Yahshua did remain in the grave three days and three nights, proving that He was the true Messiah sent by Yahweh. Read Mattithyah 28:1 again for affirmation that the two Miryams came at the end of the Sabbath. Just after sunset, while it was still twilight, the two Miryams went to the sepulcher, and found it empty. The malak told them Yahshua had already risen and departed.
Other vital facts you must have in your mind are the facts about the sacrifice of our Messiah.
FACT #1 Our Savior was to be killed (sacrificed) at the time of the Passover.
Mattithyah 26:2—
You know that after two days the PASSOVERis celebrated as a Feast, but the Son of Man is betrayed before; prior to this Feast, to be sacrificed.
FACT #2: Our Messiah died as our sacrifice. He paid the death penalty for us that we may live (Romans 6:23). As our sacrifice, our Messiah is enabling us to keep Yahweh's Passover according to His ordinance.
FACT #3: The Messiah is our Passover Lamb.
I Kepha 1:18-19—
18 Knowing that you were not redeemed with corruptible things, such as silver or gold, from your idolatrous way of life handed down to you by tradition from your forefathers;
19 But with the precious blood of Messiah, as of a LAMB without blemish and without spot.Yahchanan 1:29—
The next day Yahchanan saw YAHSHUA coming toward him, and said; Behold! The Lamb of Yahweh Who takes away the sin of the world!I Corinthians 5:7—
Therefore, purge out the old leaven, that you may be a new batch, since you are unleavened. For truly Yahshua our Passover was sacrificed for us.
FACT #4: Our Savior was sacrificed for us on the exact same day, at the exact same time the Passover lambs were being slaughtered on the temple mount. If this were not so, He could not be our Passover sacrifice.
This is a provable fact. Letting Scripture interpret Scripture we can understand the ordinance of the Passover Lamb, and the exact day it was to be kept up to.
Exodus 12:6—
And you must keep it until the Fourteenth Day of the same Moon: then the whole multitude of the congregation of Israyl shall kill it between the two evenings.
This lamb had to be alive on the fourteenth day, and then it was killed between the two evenings.
The Pentateuch and Haftorahs, edited by J.H. Hertz, page 254, explains the meaning of between the two evenings.
6. at dusk. Better, towards even (M. Friedlander); lit. `between' the-two evenings'. According to the Talmud, the `first evening' is the time in the afternoon when the heat of the sun begins to decrease, about 3 o'clock; and the `second evening' commences with sunset. Josephus relates that the Passover sacrifice `was offered from the ninth to the eleventh hour', i.e. between 3 and 5 p.m.
Leviticus 23:5—
On the Fourteenth of the First Moon, between the two evenings, Yahweh's Passover Sacrifice is to be killed.
The Pentateuch and Haftorahs, by Hertz, page 520, gives a clearer meaning of the Passover in this Scripture.
at dusk is the LORD'S Passover. Better, towards even is a Passover unto the Lord (Friedlander) i.e. a paschal offering in honor of the Lord.
The
Passover lambs were
slaughtered
on
the temple mount on the fourteenth day in the afternoon. The man of the
household had the responsibility of killing this lamb for his family.
The woman of the household then had the responsibility of roasting, not
boiling, this lamb until it would be thoroughly done. This roasting
process would take at least three to four, or more hours.
Which Day Did He Rise?
Our
Messiah fulfilled the
Passover
Lamb
requirement. Yahshua did not abrogate Yahweh's Laws in any way. Yahshua
was offered on the fourteenth
day of the First Moon between
the two
evenings.

Immediately after that sunset would begin the fifteenth day. Remember, Yahweh created days to begin and end at sunset. Sundown on the fourteenth would be the beginning of the first Sabbath of the Feast of Unleavened Bread, on the fifteenth day.
Leviticus 23:6-7—
6 And on the fifteenth day of the same moon is the Feast of Unleavened Bread to Yahweh; seven days you must eat unleavened bread.
7 On the First Day you shall have a Holy Convocation; you shall do no regular work on it.
The world does not know the facts about the Feast day Sabbaths—one of which is that these Feast day Sabbaths can fall on any day of the week. With this fact firmly in mind we can then understand what is being said in Yahchanan Mark.
Yahchanan Mark 16:1—
And when THE Passover SABBATH WAS PAST, Miriam Magdalene, and Miriam the mother of Yaaqob, and Salome, bought sweet spices, that they might go and anoint Him.
This Sabbath was not the Weekly Sabbath! This particular Sabbath was the First Holy Day Sabbath of the Feast of Unleavened Bread.
Luke 23:56—
Then they returned. Then they prepared spices and ointments. Then they rested the Sabbath Day according to the Law.
In these two Scriptures, we see that there are two Sabbaths spoken of. One Sabbath had already passed when they bought the spices. Then they prepared the spices they had bought after the Sabbath had already passed. Then they rested on the weekly Saturday Sabbath according to the Law of Yahweh.
By
understanding these
previous
Scriptures
we
know our Savior was not put into
the
grave on
Friday before the Weekly Sabbath. We know Yahshua was placed in His
grave on Wednesday just before sunset—before the Sabbath of
the Feast
of Unleavened Bread.

The diagram above shows the two Sabbaths that came in that one week. Now we know and understand it was before the Sabbath of the Feast of Unleavened Bread that Yahseph of Arimathea demanded the Body of Yahshua and not before the weekly Saturday Sabbath.
Yahchanan Mark 15:42-43—
42 By now, the first evening had come, and because it was the Preparation, that is, the day before the Passover High Holy Day Sabbath,
43 Yahseph of Arimathea, an honorable member of the Sanhedrin, who also waited for the Kingdom of Yahweh, came, and went in boldly to Pilate, and asked for the body of Yahshua.
In Yahchanan Mark 15:46 it is stated that Yahshua's body was wrapped in linen and laid in a sepulcher. A stone was then rolled in front of the door. This burial was taking place on a Wednesday Afternoon, just before sunset, as Scriptures do prove.
Prove this for yourself. Count forward: Wednesday NIGHT, Thursday DAY, Thursday NIGHT, Friday DAY, Friday NIGHT, Sabbath DAY. There are three NIGHTS and three DAYS in this time sequence.
Our Messiah was not resurrected Sunday morning at sunrise. Yahshua rose Saturday Sabbath evening, which makes it exactly three days and three nights that He was in the grave, thereby fulfilling the only signs He gave that He was the true Messiah.
For an even greater indepth study of this most important truth concerning the resurrection of the true Messiah, please request our free booklets, Was The Resurrection On Sunday? and Yahweh's Passover & Yahshua's Memorial. Also write for information about how to obtain our books, Devil Worship...The Shocking Facts!, The Sabbath...Every Question Answered! and Deceptions Concerning Yahweh's Calendar Of Events.
The Easter Tradition Forced Upon The Believers
The early believers knew the difference between Baal-Ashtoreth worship and the worship of Yahweh. They knew the difference, and none of the early believers, directly under the care of the Apostles, celebrated Easter.
After the death of our Savior, severe persecution arose at Yerusalem (Acts 8:1), and the believers were scattered abroad. They were forced into slavery, and even put to death in some of the most horrible ways man could imagine. However, this was only the first, small persecution. Ten great persecutions came thereafter upon the established House of Yahweh. The only people on the face of the earth who worshiped Father Yahweh, was The House of Yahweh established by Yahshua during the time of the Apostles. This first era of the seven eras of The House of Yahweh is called Smyrna. This era and the four following it suffered these religious persecutions. Our book, The Lost Faith of The Apostles and Prophets; History and Prophecy, explains in detail the seven eras of The House of Yahweh, and the facts concerning the ten persecutions.
Baal and Ashtoreth worshipers had pre-eminence. From approximately the year 70 C.E. to the year 312 C.E., Baal and Ashtoreth worshipers openly practiced their religions under the benevolent eyes of man's ruling governments.
When Constantine became the Emperor of Rome, after the tenth, last greatest persecution under Diocletian, Baal and Ashtoreth worshipers then disguised the many pagan customs making them to appear Scriptural.
By the time Constantine came to power, The House of Yahweh as an established organization had died out, just as prophecy said it would. There was no true organization, led by Yahweh's Holy Spirit, to say to the deceived world—
Easter is a pagan celebration. Thus, the pagan celebrations became the Christian celebrations of today.
The
House of Yahweh has
been
re-established in these Last Days according to the prophecies in
Micahyah
4:1 and Isayah 2:2. Praise Yahweh! For our free booklet, The
House of Yahweh Established, write to The House of Yahweh.
Now, in
these Last Days The House of Yahweh is again telling this deceived
world that this
worldly
holiday called Easter is a pagan custom.

Yahweh's Warning!
Throughout the Holy Scriptures we find warnings from our Creator Yahweh and His Son, Yahshua Messiah, to beware of spiritual deception. As far back in time as the Scriptural books of the kings, this Female Goddess was being worshiped. The Holy Scriptures plainly show that the adoption of pagan practices and the worship of Easter is condemned.
I Kings 11:33—
I will do this Because they have forsaken Me, and worshiped Ashtoreth the Goddess of the Phoenicians, (Sidonians), Chemosh the God (El) of the Moabites, and Milcom (Molech) the God (El) of the people of Ammon, and have not walked in My Ways, to do that which is right in My Eyes, and to keep My Statutes and My Judgments, as David his father did.Deuteronomy 12:29-32—
29 When Yahweh your Father cuts off the nations from in front of you, and you displace them and live in their land,
30 Be careful not to be ensnared into following them by asking about their gods (elohim), saying: How did these nations serve their gods (elohim)? I also will do the same.
31 You must not worship Yahweh your Father in their way, for every abomination to Yahweh, which He hates, they have done to their gods (elohim). They even burn their sons and daughters in the fire as sacrifices to their gods (elohim).
32 Whatsoever I command you, be careful to observe and do it, you shall not add to it, nor take away from it.Deuteronomy 8:19—
If you, by any means, ever forget Yahweh your Father, by following hinder Gods (Elohim) to serve and worship them, I testify and witness against you this day that you will surely perish.Revelation 18:3-4—
3 For all nations have drunk of the wine of the wrath of her fornication, and the kings of the earth have committed fornication with her, and the merchants of the earth have grown rich through the abundance of her delicacies.
4 And I heard another voice from heaven, saying: Come out of her, My People, so that you do not partake in her sins, and so that you do not receive of her plagues.
The source reference materials which are available in any library throughout America, are replete with the fact that the worship of Easter-Ishtar is the worship of a pagan Goddess. Mankind's own reference books say the worship of Easter—a pagan Goddess—is the most important Christian practice today. Can our Creator be pleased with this?
Do Not Practice It!
Easter Sunday Morning will be upon us. Almost the entire Christian world will participate in a sunrise service that they believe to be in celebration of the resurrection of our Messiah. Factually, this is a pagan custom celebrated long before our Savior was even born. Yahweh condemns this pagan practice through the pages of your own Bible.
These same Christians reject the wonderful Feasts of Yahweh which are ordained by Yahweh and will be kept forever in the Kingdom of Yahweh. Read of Yahweh's Feasts in Exodus Chapter 12, Leviticus Chapter 23, Yechetzqyah 45:21, Isayah 66:23 and Zecharyah 14:16-21.
The only ones who will be given eternal life in Yahweh's Kingdom are the ones who obey every Word that proceeds from Yahweh's mouth.
Deuteronomy 6:25—
And it will be our righteousness, if we observe to do all these commandments; His Law, before Yahweh our Father, as He has commanded us.Mattithyah 4:4—
But He answered, and said; It is written: Man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds out of the mouth of Yahweh.Deuteronomy 8:2-3—
2 You must remember that Yahweh your Father led you all the way these forty years in the wilderness, in order to humble you, test and prove you, and know what was in your heart; the seat of your intelligence, to see whether you would keep His commandments, or whether you would not.
3 So He humbled you, and allowed you to hunger, and fed you with manna, which you did not know of nor did your fathers know of it; so He might make you to know that man does not live by bread only, but by every word that proceeds out of the mouth of Yahweh, does man live.Revelation 22:14-15—
14 Blessed are those who do His commandments, that they may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in through the gates into the city.
15 For outside are dogs, and sorcerers, and whoremongers, and murderers, and worshipers of gods (elohim) and everyone who professes to love, yet practices breaking the Law.
There is no salvation to the worshipers of Baal and Ashtoreth. When Yahweh's Kingdom is established on earth, all Baal and Ashtoreth worship will stop entirely. Only our Father Yahweh, through His Son Yahshua our Messiah, will be worshiped.
Only those who resist Satan's influence and overcome the pagan worship practiced today, and then turn to Yahweh in complete obedience will be a part of Yahweh's soon coming Kingdom.
It would be much better to
obey
Yahweh
voluntarily now,
thereby
qualifying to reap the joyous reward of
eternal life, rather than to voluntarily disobey Yahweh, thereby
qualifying yourself to be one of those who will be cast into the lake
of fire to be burned up and gotten out of the way. It is time
to come out of pagan worship and start obeying Yahweh.