Four Thousand Years Of Easter

Believe it or not, Easter was being observed 4000 years ago! It was still observed when Jesus Christ was born and during His ministry, when He built His Church. Yet Christ didn’t institute it, Christ never observed it, the apostles never observed it, the Church Jesus built never observed it. Here are the amazing facts that have been hidden for centuries. Here are the shocking revelations of authentic history and your Bible.

Easter was observed 4000 years ago among the pagans! But you can’t find one word in the entire Bible that Jesus Christ or the apostles ever observed it!

Where did you ever find in your Bible that Peter and Paul held Easter sunrise services? That the early Christian women in apostolic days dressed up for an Easter parade? That Christians baked hot cross buns? That the children of Christians dyed Easter eggs and ate chocolate rabbits in honor of Christ’s resurrection?

You never found these practices taught by the inspired apostolic Church, yet these very customs were being celebrated in pagan lands long before apostolic days!

Then when did the celebration of Easter Sunday enter the Church calendar? Here is what Kurtz’ Church History states about Easter: “The Saxon name Easter is derived from the old German festival of Ostara, the goddess of spring, which was celebrated at the same season” (Vol. 1, p. 346).

“The English Easter, Anglo-Saxon Oster, German Ostern, are all events connected with the East and sunrise” says the Protestant historian Schaff, who continued to write “the transfer of the celebration of Ostara to the Christian Easter festival” took place years after the death of Paul (from a footnote in Schaff’s History of the Church, vol. 1, p. 373).

Easter came from pagan sun worship, not from Jesus Christ or the apostles. About 600 years before Christ, the Prophet Ezekiel saw, in vision, an Easter celebration. Notice it, in Ezekiel, chapter 8, verses 14-17: “Then he (God) brought me to the door of the gate of the Lord’s house which was toward the north; and, behold, there sat the women weeping for Tammuz.”

What Ezekiel saw here in vision is a prophecy for today! A prophecy for the House of Israel – Great Britain and America. And our professing Christian people are practicing this very abomination today as our ancestors did centuries before Jesus Christ.

Do you know why those women were weeping for Tammuz? Here is the answer:

Tammuz was the heathen messiah, the false Christ of the pagans who was said to have risen on Sunday morning. They observed Lent just as many churches observe it today, with weeping on “Good Friday” and rejoicing on Easter Sunday morning! God calls this an abomination!

“Among the pagans this Lent seems to have been an indispensable preliminary to the great annual festival in commemoration of the death and resurrection of Tammuz which was celebrated by alternate weeping and rejoicing” (Hislop’s The Two Babylons p. 105).

But notice further: “Then said he unto me (God is speaking to Ezekiel), Hast thou seen this, O son of man? Turn thee yet again, and thou shalt see greater abominations than these. And he brought me into the inner court of the Lord’s house, and behold, at the door of the temple of the Lord, between the porch and altar, were about five and twenty men, with their backs toward the temple of the Lord, and their faces toward the east; and they worshipped the sun toward the east” (Ezk. 8:15-16).

Notice this abomination which Ezekiel saw – the Easter sunrise service. This is what professing Christians are doing today, celebrating pagan customs on Easter Sunday supposedly in honor of Christ, who did not rise from the dead on Sunday at all!

Surely the people today are sincere, but so were the pagans! – they didn’t know better.

Observe what God says He will do to those who refuse to repent of this abomination: “Is it a light thing that they commit the abominations which they commit here? Therefore will I also deal in fury: mine eye shall not spare, neither will I have pity: and though they cry in mine ears with a loud voice (of course they pray to God) yet will I not hear them” (Ezk. 8:17-18).

But what if Easter is an ancient pagan festival? Isn’t it all right, if we use it to honor Christ? That’s the way people reason today. Let God answer that question: Jesus Christ – the Word of God spoke to Moses to warn the people not to follow the customs of the heathen. Here is what Christ said: “Take heed that you inquire not after their gods, saying: How did these nations serve their gods? Even so will I do likewise. You shalt not do so unto the Eternal thy God: for every abomination to the Eternal, which he hates, have they done unto their gods” (Deut. 12:30-31).

Here is what God says – it doesn’t matter what we think, but it does matter what God thinks. He calls these pagan Easter customs abominations. No wonder the apostles didn’t teach the early spirit-filled New Testament Church of God to observe these traditions of men!

No wonder the prophet Jeremiah was inspired to write: “Learn not the ways of the heathen, for the customs of the people are vain” (Jer. 10:2-3). Christ left us an example of what we ought to do, and that example is not keeping Easter!

The Catholic scholar Hefele writes concerning Easter: “All the churches of the West, the South, and the North, had adopted this practice (celebrating Easter), particularly Rome, the whole of Italy, Africa, Egypt, Spain, Gaul (France), Britain, Lybia, Achaia (Greece); it has even been adopted in the dioceses of Asia, Pontus and Cilicia” (History of the Councils, vol. I, pp. 306-307).

Notice that Easter celebrations were adopted, not from the Bible, but from the heathen, long after the death of Jesus Christ!

But from what sources did the scholar Hefele obtain this information? He obtained it from ancient church history written shortly after the time Easter was adopted! Here is what Socrates Scholasticus wrote in his Ecclesiastical History not long after Emperor Constantine, in the 4th century:

“Neither the apostles, therefore nor the Gospels, have anywhere imposed Easter. Wherefore, inasmuch as men love festivals, because they afford them cessation from labor: each individual in every place, according to this own pleasure, has by prevalent customs celebrated (Easter). The Saviour and his apostles have enjoined us by no law to keep this feast, just as many other customs have been established in individual localities according to usage, so also the feast of Easter came to be observed in each place according to the individual peculiarities of the peoples inasmuch as none of the apostles legislated on the matter. And that the observance originated not by legislation, but as a custom the facts themselves indicate” (Chapter 22). So says the ancient church historian of the 4th century.

He continues to show that the Lenten fasts prior to Easter, celebrated among the pagans, were also observed by differing customs among the professing Christians. These divergent customs surrounding Easter originated through “ignorance,” says Hefele – ignorance of the Bible!

“And this diversity among the observers (of Lent and Easter) had not its origin in our time,” wrote Irenaeus at the close of the 2nd century, “but long before in that our predecessors, some of whom probably, being not very accurate in the observance of it, handed down to posterity the customs as it had, through simplicity or private fancy been {introduced among them} (Ante-Nicene Fathers, vol. I, p. 568). Now let us understand exactly how Easter was introduced.

The early Church of God in New Testament times was taught that Jesus was in the grave three days and three nights and that He arose at the close of the third day after His death. Jesus’ death occurred upon a Wednesday, April 25, A.D. 31. The practice of the New Testament Church of God was to observe an annual memorial of the death of Christ. This memorial was called the Passover, commonly known as the “Lord’s Supper.” The Passover was observed annually, on the eve of Christ’s death, on Nisan 14 of God’s Sacred Calendar. You can find this information in the Encyclopedia Britannica or even in the World Almanac in your town library. This New Testament practice was followed in the West universally until shortly after the death of the Apostle John. In the Eastern Roman Empire the true practice continued even longer.

Here is what happened in the East! A calendar change regulating the insertion of the intercalary month occurred in A.D. 142, after which new ideas began to be introduced into the professing Christian world. The true Christians who fled Jerusalem “continued to use the Jewish cycle (God’s method of reckoning the Passover in the Sacred Calendar) till the bishops of Jerusalem who were of the circumcision were succeeded by other who were not of the circumcision (unconverted Gentiles, and) they began to invent other cycles” (Bingham’s Antiquities of the Christian Church, p. 1152).

This same author continues: “We see, at this time (beginning about A.D. 142, that) the Jewish calculation (determined by God’s Calendar which the Jews had accurately preserved) was generally rejected by the church. This is how the Passover, sometimes called Lord’s Supper or Eucharist was gradually rejected.

Remember that up to this point the Churches of God universally understood that Christ rose after three days, on Saturday shortly before sunset. With the rejection of God’s Sacred Calendar by many in the professing Christian world, the many now began to do what seemed right to them. Not only did they begin to miscalculate the annual occurrence of the Passover, but in the East they began to observe the Passover weekly on Saturday, the Sabbath, believe it or not! Here is the proof:

For over 200 years this custom was a universal practice of the Eastern churches. The church historian Socrates wrote: “While therefore some in Asia Minor observed the day above mentioned (he means that some continued to observe the Passover on the 14th of Nisan as the apostles did) others in the East kept this feast on the Sabbath indeed.” By “Sabbath” all early writers meant Saturday!

So universal was the custom of observing the “Lord’s Supper” on Saturday he continued to write: “For although almost all churches throughout the world celebrate the sacred mysteries on the Sabbath of every week, yet the Christians of Alexandria and at Rome, on account of some ancient tradition, have ceased to do this.” You may find this amazing testimony in Vol. 2 of the Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, pp. 1313-132, from the Ecclesiastical History of Socrates, bk. V, chapter 22.

Did you catch the real significance of this quotation? The Passover was transformed by false teachers from an annual memorial in memory of the death of Jesus Christ into a weekly memorial in honor of His resurrection, which occurred on Saturday. These weekly “passovers” were called the “sacred mysteries.” What did Paul say about the sacred mysteries?

“Let no man deceive you by any means: for that day shall not come (the day of Jesus’ return) except there come a falling away first (an apostasy, a falling into error).For the mystery of iniquity doth already work” (II Thess. 2:3, 7). The practices of the pagan sacred mysteries were already creeping into the world in Paul’s day. A part of those ancient mysteries was later the festival of Easter.

But Easter did not enter suddenly. It entered slowly, under the pretext of being a Christian custom. Many faithful were still observing the practices of the original true Church. Others began to hold the “sacred mysteries” every Saturday to honor, as they thought, the resurrection of Jesus Christ. But how were the false teachers going to alter the knowledge that Christ was three days and three nights in the tomb?

From the Syriac Didascalia composed shortly before the time of Constantine, we have a record of what happened in those early days. False teachers began to interpret the three days and three nights in the following clever fashion: They claimed Jesus Christ suffered on the cross, supposedly on Friday, for about six hours. The daylight hours from nine in the morning to noon they counted as one day. The hours from noon to three o’clock, when the land was darkened they reckoned as the first night. Then the time from three o’clock to sunset was reckoned as the second day. Friday night to Saturday morning became the second night; the daylight of Saturday, the third day; and Saturday night to Sunday morning the third night.

A very clever argument, and it deceived a great many people! Those false ministers twisted the truth that Jesus was in the grave three days and three nights. For the first time the idea of a Sunday resurrection was injected into the churches. Now observe what happened.

In commenting on those who did not observe the Passover in accordance with the practice of the apostles, Irenaeus, who lived toward the close of the second century, wrote to Bishop Victor of Rome, “We mean Anicetus, and Pius, and Hyginus, and Telesphorus, and Xystus. They neither observed it (the true Passover on the 14th of Nisan) nor did they permit those after them to do so.”

Who were these men? Bishops of the church at Rome! Here is the first record by a Catholic, of the fact that the Roman bishops no longer observed the Passover at the current God-given time, but on a Sunday!

It was Bishop Xystus (his name is also spelled Sixtus) who was the first recorded individual to prevent the proper observance of the Passover, and to celebrate the sacred mysteries annually on a Sunday. Irenaeus speaks further of him, declaring that his doctrine was a direct “opposition” to the practice of the remainder of the churches. Bishop Sixtus was living at the beginning of the 2nd century, just after the apostle John died.

Notice, too, that Easter Sunday did not begin with Peter and Paul in the 60’s A.D., but with Sixtus in the second century!

Here you have the astounding origin of Easter Sunday in the Western churches. Together with this practice, the “sacred mysteries” were also observed every Sunday!

The introduction of this custom naturally divided the Christians at Rome. The Catholic historian Abbe Duchesne wrote: “There were many Christians of Asia in Rome at the time (remember that the Church of God at Rome was founded by those who came from Asia Minor where Paul preached) and the very early Popes, Xystus and Telesphorus, saw them every year keep their Pasch (Passover) the same day as did the Jews. They maintained that was correct. It was allowed to pass, though the rest of Rome observed a different use” (The Early History of the Church, vol. I, p. 210).

These are startling facts, but they are true! It is time you knew about them!

Irenaeus wrote even more regarding the observance of Easter at Rome and elsewhere as follows: “But Polycarp also was not only instructed by the apostles, and conversed with many who had seen Christ, but was also, by apostles in Asia, appointed bishop of the Church at Smyrna. It was he who, coming to Rome in the time of Anicetus (bishop of Rome around 154 A.D.), caused many to turn away from the heretics to the Church of God, proclaiming that he had received this one and sole truth from the apostles.” While at Rome, Polycarp discussed the matter of Easter with the Roman bishop.

Irenaeus continued: “For neither could Anicetus persuade Polycarp not to observe it (the Passover) because he had always observed it with John the disciple of our Lord, and the rest of the apostles, with whom he associated; and neither did Polycarp persuade Anicetus to observe it, who said that he was bound to follow the customs of the presbyters before him” (Eusebius’ Eccl. History, bk. V. chapter 24, Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers, vol. I).

Shortly after Polycarp left, there appeared an amazing letter, said by many scholars to have been a deliberate forgery. This letter states: “Pope Pius, who lived about 147 AD, had made a decree, that the annual solemnity of the Pasch (Pasch is the Greek word for Passover) should be kept on the Lord’s day (Sunday) and in confirmation of this he pretended, that Hermes, his brother, who was then an eminent teacher among them, had received instruction from an angel, who commanded that all men should keep the Pasch on the Lord’s day” (Bingham’s Antiquities of the Christian Church, pp. 1148-1149).

Of this same hoax, we read in Apostolical Fathers, by Donaldson, p. 324, “One of the letters forged in the name of Pius, where one Hermas is mentioned as the author; and it is stated that in his book a commandment was given through an angel to observe the Passover on a Sunday.”

If this letter was a deliberate forgery, it was invented after Polycarp’s time in an effort to lend weight to the custom of Anicetus, bishop of Rome, who maintained the Sunday observance of the Eucharist or Passover. If it was not a forgery, then Pius himself was the author of this deceptive letter. (Pius died just prior to the visit of Polycarp to Rome.)

But the Easter controversy did not end here! Within 35 years it broke out vehemently between Polycrates of Asia Minor and Victor of Rome, who attempted to “cut off whole churches of God, who observed the tradition of an ancient custom” – the true Passover.

Here is a part of the forthright answer given by Polycrates to Victor, vindicating the truth of God:

“As for us, then, we scrupulously observe the exact day, neither adding nor taking away. For in Asia great luminaries have gone to their rest, who shall rise again in the day of the coming of the Lord. I speak of Philip, one of the twelve apostles, John moreover, who reclined on the Lord’s bosom. Then there is Polycarp these all kept the Passover on the fourteenth day of the month in accordance with the gospel, without ever deviating from it, but keeping to the rule of faith.”

This remarkable letter is preserved in Vol. 8 of the Ante-Nicene Fathers, pp. 772-773.

Polycrates came from that area in which Paul spent most of his time, in Asia Minor, near Ephesus. This is also where John spent his last days. Here there were many Christians still remaining true to the faith!

Here is proof that both the apostles to the circumcision and Paul, the special apostle to the Gentiles, taught the observance of the Passover on the 14th of the first month of God’s Sacred Calendar. Chrysostom, who wrote several centuries after the apostles, admitted that “formerly it (the Passover) prevailed also at Antioch” from where Paul began many of his apostolic journeys.

Now, what happened to stamp out the true observance of the Passover from the popular churches?

Constantine then convoked the first general council of the Christian-professing world. The Council of Nicaea decided, under his authority, that Easter must be celebrated on Sunday and that the Passover must be forbidden! Without regard to these decisions, many continued faithful. For this reason Constantine issued an edict declaring: “We have directed, accordingly, that you be deprived of all houses in which you are accustomed to hold your assemblies, public or private” (Life of Constantine, bk. III).

Though everyone was not forced to observe Easter or flee the urban areas of the Roman Empire, the churches were still divided over the exact Sunday for Easter. Here is how confusing matters became:

“But notwithstanding any endeavors that could be used then, or afterwards, there remained great differences in the church about it for many ages. For the churches of Great Britain and Ireland did not accord with the Roman Church in keeping Easter on the same Sunday, till about the year 800. Nor was the Roman way fully received in France, till it was settled there by the authority of Charles the Great” (ibid, p. 1151).

These are startling facts, but they ought to make you wake up to the truth! It is high time we learned exactly what has happened to the Gospel of Jesus Christ and to the practices of the New Testament church of God these past 1900 years.

If you are still keeping Easter, you had better wake up, your eternity is at stake. Here are the authentic facts of history. This article reveals from church history the almost unbelievable, startling, yet authentic facts. You can verify them for yourself at a public library. You are soon going to stand before the judgment seat of Jesus Christ! Don’t say carelessly: “Well, here’s the way I look at it,” or, “I don’t think it makes any difference.” God says it does make a difference! God says there is way that seems right to a man, to anyone, to you, but that seemingly right way ends in death! (Prov. 14:12, 16:25). You will be judged by what God says, not by what you think! God says this whole world today is deceived! Now heed what history says, heed what God says! Learn not the way of the heathen.

 
The Church of God, New World Ministries P.O. Box 5536 Sevierville, TN 37864