Redeeming Holy Days from Pagan Lies-Easter 1
Easter
is the English/Germanic name for the Festival of the Resurrection of Jesus
Christ. This particular Feast Day is the heart and center of the whole
liturgical practice of the Christian Church Year.
Because
it is at the center it is under great attack by those seeking to discredit this
liturgical festival. If these people can maintain that Easter is really
originally pagan, then they undermine Christ, His Passion, death and
Resurrection.
In
this article we will look at:
Passover
as the historical Biblical origin of the Christian liturgical Church Year; The
historical development of the date of Easter/Resurrection/Passover; Claims of
Pagan Origin or Influence, including:
The origins of the pagan goddess Eostre;
The
historical Lenten Fast that lead to the use of Eggs in association with Easter;
And the particularly Christian use of the hare/rabbit as a symbol for the
Trinity and the Resurrection.
Passover as The Origin of the Christian Church
Year
The
three High Festivals of the Christian Church Year are Christmas, Easter, and
Pentecost. All of these days are were established in the early Church on the
basis of the biblical dating of Passover. Any festivals that are tied to the
dates of these Holy Days are de- rived from their relationship to Passover.
This
means that, contrary to claims from many different sources, the choice of dates
for these Festivals and those tied to them have nothing to do with pagan
origins.
Let
us say that again and more clearly: The dates for Christmas, Easter, Pentecost,
and all those church holy days that are directly tied to the dates of those
holy days are all based originally on Passover. None of these days were chosen
due to pagan influences. None! The actual choice for the date was based on what
God declared to Moses in about 1,440 B.C. on Mt. Sinai.
There
are Christian festivals that are not directly tied to these dates, those are
dates such as the commemoration of Saints. Those days were chosen for their own
reasons: usually to commemorate the calendar day on which a person was born or
died.
But
the relationship between the Passover, Easter, Pentecost, and Christmas is an
historically demonstrable fact through the writings of the Church Fathers.
And
this relationship to Passover is essential to understanding the theology of the
Promise and Fulfillment in Christ as well as the establishing of the First
Covenant and its fulfillment in the New Covenant.
About
1,470 years before the Son of God instituted His Holy Supper, that same Son of
God commanded Moses and the Congregation of Israel saying:
12
Now the Lord spoke to Moses and Aaron in the land of Egypt, saying, 2 “This month shall
be your beginning of months; it shall be the first month of
the
year to you. 3 Speak
to all the congregation of Israel, saying: ‘On the tenth of this month every
man shall take for himself a lamb, according to the house
of
his father, a lamb for a household. 4 And if the household is too small for
the lamb, let him and his neighbor next to his house take it according
to the number of the persons; according to each man’s need you shall make your
count
for the lamb. 5
Your lamb shall be without blemish, a male of the first
year.
You may take it from the sheep or from the goats. 6 Now you shall
keep it until the fourteenth day of the same month. Then the whole assembly of
the congregation of Israel shall kill it at twilight.
The
ordinance for this festival and the Festival of Unleavened Bread is that the
month of Abib become the first month of the religious calendar. The Passover
and the Feast of Unleavened Bread are the basis in the Books of Moses for
calculating the two other major festivals of the liturgical year:
the
Feast of Weeks (Pentecost) 7 weeks and one day, which marks remembering God’s
revealing of the Covenant at Mt. Sinai at the end of those weeks (Exodus 19).
The remembrance is tied together with the harvest of the Firstfruits and the requirement
to offer the best of the first fruits to God.
the
Feast of Tabernacles is calculated being the full moon seventh month (a Sabbath
month) from the first month. All the congregation was required to gather before
the tabernacle each year on these three festivals.
And
just as the Passover Lamb was selected on the 10th of the First Month, the
scape- goat and the sacrificial goat for the Lord were selected on the 10th of
the Seventh Month–The Day of Atonement.
Everything
in the liturgical year is keyed upon Passover in the Old Testament. This key
event does not get put aside in the New Testament. Rather, the Passover takes
on even greater significance as it is fulfilled in the Passion and Resurrection
of Christ.
While
Clement of Alexandria attests to the fact that there were a handful of
different days of the year that people thought the world was created, the view
expressed by Clement (c.150 – c. 215), Hippolytus (170 – 235), Julius
Africanus (c.160 – c.240) and others at the close of the 2nd century
A.D. were the most widely accepted. That view was that the world was created
March 25th, Christ was conceived March 25th, and Christ was crucified March
25th. March 25th also was the equinox. Which made this date easy to calculate.
Thus
we can see that the choice of this date was also a public confession of the
Hypostatic Union of the Two Natures in Christ. Observing Creation, Incarnation,
and Passion on the same day confessed that it is the Son of God, the Creator,
who became human and so intimately united Himself with humanity by suffering as
a man in humanity’s place.
We
are not evaluating whether March 25th was the actual date that these events
truly happened, we are demonstrating the early rationale for and the early
widespread acceptance of this date in the teaching and practice of the Church.
This
dating was the basis for later the work of Dionysius Exiguus (c. 470 – c. 544)
, and widely enough established in the late 2nd century to be used as proof by
Tertullian (c. 160 – c. 225 AD):
And
the suffering of this “extermination” was perfected within the times of the lxx
hebdomads, under Tiberius Caesar, in the consulate of Rubellius Geminus and
Fufius Geminus, in the month of March, at the times of the Passover, on the
eighth day before the calends of April [March 25th], on the first day of
unleavened bread, on which they slew the lamb at even, just as had been
enjoined by Moses. (An Answer to the Jews, 8.18,
emphasis added)
This
view formed the basis for the Alexandrian Era and
held in the ancient Church up to the 7th century A.D.
The Christmas Cycle separates from the Easter
Cycle
While
the early church equated March 25th (the equinox) with the Incarnation of
Christ, all those dates related directly to that date became fixed on the
calendar. However, the Passover changed each year because it was based on the
lunar cycle.
How Did Easter Get Separated from Passover?
So
the problem became, when should Christ’s Passion and Resurrection be
celebrated? Should it be held relative to Passover regardless of which day of
the week it occurred? Or should it be held on the days of the week named in the
Gospel narratives regardless of which day of the week the Passover actually
occurred?
The
debate is called “The Easter Controversy.” It is actually several different
controver- sies through the centuries about the same issue. Records about this
debate and from this debate date back to the early and mid 2nd century. And the
question of when Easter should be celebrated and how it should be calculated
led to many writings of the early chronographers and calendarists.
There
were two main parts to these controversies. First, whether Passover and
Resurrec- tion should be observed on the 14th of Abib or on the Sunday
following. The controver- sies following this had to deal with the best way to
calculate the Passover accurately.
Why Sunday Weekly Worship
Sunday
became the focus of Christian worship because it is the Day of the Resurrection
of Christ (Mt. 28:1; Mk. 16:9; Lk. 24:1; Jn. 20:1, 19).
The
weekly Sunday worship focused on the Passover given and instituted as the New
Covenant fulfilling the Promise (Gal. 4). Paul testifies that the Lord’s Supper
was cele- brated and tithes were gathered at worship on Sunday (Acts 20:7; I Cor. 16:2).
Weekly Sunday worship with the Lord’s Supper is weekly observance of the
Passover in Christ, but not the passover of the Old Covenant. It is the partial
fulfilment of the Passover with the New Covenant. The complete fulfilment of
the original Passover waits until the Re- turn of Christ on Judgement day.
14 When the hour had come,
He sat down, and the twelve apostles with Him.
15 Then He said to them,
“With fervent desire I have desired to eat this
Passover
with you before I suffer; 16 for I say to you, I will no longer eat of it until it is
fulfilled in the kingdom of God.”
(Luke 22:14-16)
Often
moderns will make the same claim made by the Puritans, that Christians cannot
worship on Sunday because that is a pagan day devoted to a pagan God. The
Puritans tried to argue that the early church did not worship on Sunday but
that this gradually came about as Christianity gave into paganism and wordliness.
But
worship on Sunday was considered a vital confessional practice even while the
Apostles were still alive. Ignatius (30 AD – 107 AD) wrote in The Epistle of
Ignatius to the Magnesians, Chapter 9 (ANF
1:62-63):
If,
therefore, those who were brought up in the ancient order of things have come
to the possession of a new hope, no longer observing the Sabbath, but living
in the observance of the Lord’s Day, on which also our life has sprung up again
by Him and by His death—whom some deny, by which mystery we have obtained
faith, and therefore endure, that we may be found the disciples of Jesus
Christ, our only Master—how shall we be able to live apart from Him, whose
disciples the prophets themselves in the Spirit did wait for Him as their
Teacher? And therefore He whom they rightly waited for, being come, raised them
from the dead. (emphasis added)
And
later in the same chapter:
But
let every one of you keep the Sabbath after a spiritual manner, rejoicing in
meditation on the law, not in relaxation of the body, admiring the workman-
ship of God, and not eating things prepared the day before, nor using luke-
warm drinks, and walking within a prescribed space, nor finding delight in
dancing and plaudits which have no sense in them. And after the observance of
the Sabbath, let every friend of Christ keep the Lord’s Day as a festival,
the resurrection-day, the queen and chief of all the days [of the week].
Looking forward to this, the prophet declared, “To the end, for the eighth
day,” on which our life both sprang up again, and the victory over death was
obtained in Christ,(emphasis added)
It
was on a Sunday that the Apostle John received the Revelation of Jesus Christ.(Rev. 1:9-10)
Justin
Martyr (AD 100–ca.165) bears witness to this unity of dates and practices (also
pointing out that the Mithraists copied Christian practice in his time with
regard to the ceremonies and sacraments of the Church) [Apology 1:66 --ANF
1:p. 185]. Justin high- lighted the significance of the day and the liturgical
practice in the following passage:
And
on the day called Sunday, all who live in cities or in the country gather
together to one place, and the memoirs of the apostles or the writings of the
prophets are read, as long as time permits; then, when the reader has ceased,
the president verbally instructs, and exhorts to the imitation of these good
things. Then we all rise together and pray, and, as we before said, when our
prayer is ended, bread and wine and water are brought, and the president in
like manner offers prayers and thanksgivings, according to his ability, and the
people assent, saying Amen; and there is a distribution to each, and a partici-
pation of that over which thanks have been given, and to those who are ab- sent
a portion is sent by the deacons. And they who are well to do, and will- ing,
give what each thinks fit; and what is collected is deposited with the pres- ident, who succours the
orphans and widows and those who, through sick- ness or any other cause, are in
want, and those who are in bonds and the strangers sojourning among us, and in
a word takes care of all who are in need. But Sunday is the day on which we all
hold our common assembly, be- cause it is the first day on which God, having
wrought a change in the dark- ness and matter, made the world; and Jesus Christ
our Saviour on the same day rose from the dead. For He was crucified on the
day before that of Saturn (Saturday); and on the day after that of Saturn,
which is the day of the Sun, having appeared to His apostles and disciples, He
taught them these things, which we have submitted to you also for your
consideration. [ibid. 67, ANF 1:186]
The First Easter Date Controversy ( up to 190AD)
So
by the time the first main controversy about Easter became and issue, most
congrega- tions outside of Asia-Minor already celebrated Resurrection on the
Sunday following the Passover.
But
in Asia-Minor there were several congregations that maintained the practice of
cele- brating the Crucifixion on the 14th of Abib. These people became called
“Fourteenthers” [Quartodeciman].
Eusebeus
(Hist. 5:24) records the words of Irenaeus at the time:
12.
“For the controversy is not only concerning the day, but also concerning the
very manner of the fast. For some think that they should fast one day, oth- ers
two, yet others more; some, moreover, count their day as consisting of forty
hours day and night.
13.
And this variety in its observance has not originated in our time; but long
before in that of our ancestors. It is likely that they did not hold to
strict accuracy, and thus formed a custom for their posterity according to
their own simplicity and peculiar mode. Yet all of these lived none the less in
peace, and we also live in peace with one another; and the disagreement in
regard to the fast confirms the agreement in the faith.” (NPNF2-01: 243 emphasis added) Irenaeus stated that
the difference in calendar observance was not divisive of fellow- ship.
There
are two important things to note about this controversy:
First:
The question of whether 14th Abib or the Sunday following pre-dates this
contro- versy. The practice of a Sunday Easter service is shown by Irenaeus’
and Justin’s letters. The practice of Sunday observance of Easter probably
dates back to the Apostolic times.
Second:
The issue at hand was when to break the fast for the Resurrection. We have al-
ready seen that the 40 day Lenten fast pre-dates Constantine. We see here in
Irenaeus that fasting traditions varied from place to place but were considered
old traditions.
The
choice of the Church to celebrate the Resurrection of Christ on Sundays is very
an- cient, probably from the Apostolic period. The choice had nothing to do
with Roman pa- gan holidays or any other pagan holiday. It had to do with
making a clear Christological confession about the Christ-the suffering
Servant, the God-Man incarnate who re- deemed us from sin, Satan, and death
itself.
The Second Easter Date Controversy (323 A.D)
This
debate took place as part of the Council of Nicea where Athanasius worked
against Arius. This is the council that the Easter-haters point to claiming
that Constantine usurped the church and brought in pagan customs and dates.
Sunday
Easter service was already the norm throughout Christianity by this time. The
issue at the Council was which is the best way to calculate when Easter would
occur.
The
desire was to have all the congregations celebrating on the same date. But that
could not happen by depending upon the rabbis fixing the month by physical
observa- tion. One of the complaints recorded is that dependency on such
physical calculations might allow Passover to be celebrated twice in one solar
year.
The
practice was to wait until the rabbis had “set the month by observation” (קדוש החדש
.)קדוש החדש על פי חשבון( or by means of reckoning )על פי ראיה
[
From "Mishna Torah, Book of Times, Regulations for the Sanctifying of
the Month" - משנה תורה
]ספר
זמנים - הלכות קידוש החודש - הכול פרק ב
The
Council sought to keep the Passover in Christ from being arbitrarily decided
and to have the date uniformly kept throughout the church at large. They set
the equinox as the earliest possible date of Passover–already established by
early tradition as the day of Creation, Incarnation, and the original
Crucifixion.
Nothing
in their discussions or in any of the surviving evidence suggests that these
dates were chosen or influenced by any pagan practice or teaching. All the
actual con- temporary evidence points to a great concern that the Passover be marked
accurately for the sake of confessing the Hypostatic Union of Christ and His
saving work in His Incar- nation, Passion and Resurrection.
The Third Easter Date Controversy (c. 600 A.D)
Churches
in the British Isles which had been established early were using a different
method of calculation than were the churches in the Mediterranean area. The
calcula- tions used in the British Isles were using the formula from the time
of the Roman occu- pation, the formula that the church at Rome had made
improvements to.
The
Easter date in the British Isles had nothing to do with pagan worship, but was
based on the older method originating with the churches in the Mediterranean
area. When this older method was replaced it had nothing to do with pagan
practices. The churches in the British Isles were just conforming to what had
been established by the Church at large in the Mediterranean world.
[Thurston,
H. (1909). Easter Controversy. In The Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert
Appleton Company. Retrieved March 26, 2013 from New Advent: http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/05228a.htm]
Summary
The
date of Easter and the rest of the High Holy Days of the Church are rooted in
the observance of the Passover and have no roots in any pagan practice. The
Passover was established by God nearly 1500 years before the fulfilment of the
Promise in Christ’s death and resurrection. The Church sought to clarify how
this date chosen in the calen-
dar
and help make the practice consistent throughout the Church.
None
of the controversies surrounding the dating of Easter had anything to do with
pa- gan practices. Essentially these controversies were either disagreements on
whether to observe the 14th of Abib rather than the Sunday following, or
disagreements on the best way to calculate when the Biblical 14th of Abib (the
Passover) would take place.
Anyone
who contends that the dates were chosen on the basis of pagan sources is mak-
ing a claim contrary to all actual evidence from the actual periods.
What About Other Pagan Influences?
Part
2 coming soon.....
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