The Deception Of Easter

in #conspiracy8 years ago (edited)

Before retiring last night, a video was shared with me of a little girl asking her father about Jesus, and the Easter bunny. And while the video had an element of cuteness to it, especially when she was pondering what Jesus’ favorite chocolate was, it reminded me of my own desire to understand the relationship between the celebration of Easter and the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Like the girl in the video, my family wasn’t a very good source of information, so I ended up having to do my own research. Mind you, this was before the existence of what we now know as the internet, along with Wikipedia, or Google.

One question I had asked during this time was why do all the Christian churches that I was aware of at that time assemble for worship on Sunday? The answer was always the same: Because Jesus was raised from the dead on a Sunday. The fact is, according to the Bible, Jesus rose from the dead on the third day of Passover week. In the Bible, the third day of Passover is when the priest took a sheaf of grain into the temple, and waved it before God. This first fruit represented a pledge of the bountiful harvest to be gathered, and the waving indicated thanksgiving and praise to the Lord of the harvest as the one who is the source of life.

On resurrection morning (the word Sunday is not in the Bible), Jesus, along with those who were resurrected with him, were taken before the Father in heaven, and presented as the antitypical wave sheaf as a pledge of the general resurrection of the righteous in the final generation.

With that, the question now is, why do the Christian churches assemble on Sunday when the third day of Passover is on a different day of the week every year? Not only that, but one of the Ten Commandments says “Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy.” According to the Bible, the Sabbath begins at sunset on Friday, and ends at sunset on Saturday. Why not assemble during that time? Some have said that the resurrection of Jesus changed the Sabbath to Sunday. The Bible doesn’t say that. Others say that the Sabbath is for the Jews. But according to the Bible, the Sabbath existed since the days of Eden, centuries before there was a Jewish identity.

Some suggest, or rather insist, that the observance of the Sabbath represents an attempt to save one’s self by their own works while the observance of Sunday represents being saved by God’s grace. These are the same people who want the Ten Commandments to be displayed in court rooms, and have them as the basis of American law. In other words, you’re damned by God if you keep the Sabbath, and damned by man if you don’t. Oy vey!

So why do those Sunday advocates, who love to talk about how they are saved by God’s grace, not live grace filled lives? Why do they continually need to ask God to forgive them for doing those things they know they ought not? It is because there is a difference between grace and forgiveness. According to the Bible, forgiveness is what we are given when we recognize, and acknowledge we have not been living in accordance with God’s law. Grace is the power we are then given to live in accordance with God’s law.

But the natural state of man desires to have no other law than his own, and this is the true origin of the celebration of Easter Sunday. In patriarchal times, before the industrial revolution, the acquisition of power and influence was directly proportional to the size of one’s family. Family sizes are increased through sexual activity (have you ever taken a walk in the woods, and stumble upon rabbits having sex?). Families are fed with food that relies on sunshine. In ancient cultures, the first day of the week was dedicated to the sun for this very reason. The egg was a symbol of fertility, the procreation of life, which brings more power, influence...money, greed, conquest.

As Christianity spread throughout the Roman Empire, it became leavened with these pagan influences until they became the majority. At that point, the true and faithful were derided as wackos, and driven underground, if not killed off altogether. With that, the power of God was also driven out of the congregation, and replaced with the power of state. Once this union of “church” and state was complete, the influence of the natural man had free course to exalt himself above the law of God, and assert the change of the Sabbath to Sunday, in honor of himself.

Fortunately, none of this has taken God by surprise. Jesus warned that these things would happen, and He has done everything necessary to save his children from the consequences that will, and presently are coming upon this final generation for their clear, wide-open, inexcusable rebellion to his kingdom, and the law which governs it.
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I've always thought the reason Christians assembled on the First day of the week is because in the New Testament, that's when the early church always assembled. The whole Sabbath issue, for me, is a non-issue. I see the WHOLE ten commandments as being the law for the Mosaic covenant, and the Law for the New Covenant is to love one another.

I went to a Catholic grade school, and they actually taught us the church adopted pagan holidays to make it easier to convert the pagans. They didn't say that's why they met on Sunday, just why Christmas, Easter, Lent, etc. were celebrated when they were. (no longer Catholic btw)

Either way, this year you can still celebrate the Resurrection on Easter Sunday because First Fruits is this Sunday too.

The Bible does not emphatically state that the early church assembled on Sunday while there are several references to Sabbath meetings documented. Sunday meeting is an assumption based on 2 Bible verses.

If there is no law against things such as killing and stealing, then how is it loving to do such things?

Well, I just looked and found these for the first day, (remember the Jews didn't call the days Monday, Tuesday, etc.)

John 20:19 and Acts 20:7

I also found evidence that all Jesus' appearances were on the first day: . Mk 16:9; Mt 28:5-9; Lk 24:34; Lk 24:13-15; Lk 24:33,36 + Jn 20:19; Jn 20:26 (This is someone else' list http://www.bible.ca/7-sunday-significance-for-christians.htm)

I can't really find the Sabbath meetings, where are they?

As far as your second sentence, I don't understand what you're getting at. It's clearly not loving to steal or kill, so they would be against the law of the New Covenant.

However, I see the new Covenant as more than lists. God says He will write His law on our hearts, so we don't need a list to tell us what's right and wrong. Jesus is inside us. This gives us freedom. I would say that sometimes it might be the right thing to do to steal. For instance, if someone was suicidal and they had a gun, it might not be a bad thing to steal the gun to prevent them from killing themselves. Same with lying: if your wife asks you if a pair of pants makes her butt look big, it might be more harmful to say yes, even if you think they do.

I'm not saying civil laws should all be abolished; I'm talking about the laws for believers.

The fact that Jesus appeared on the first day of the week proves nothing other than that happened to be the third day of Passover.

Chapters 13-18 of Acts speaks of Paul meeting with people. He never tried to tell them that the Sabbath was changed. As far as Acts 20:7 is concerned, the event at midnight was Saturday night because the first day of the week begins at Saturday sunset.

While I agree that life is about following a spirit rather than a list, a person's attitude toward God's law is a reflection of what spirit they are of.

Well, I'm not trying to "prove" anything, I'm just having a conversation. I think if someone is really convinced of something all you can do is give them something to think about.

I agree Paul wouldn't have said the Sabbath was changed. I really don't think there's any biblical evidence for the idea the Sabbath changed. The Sabbath is the seventh day, it's pretty clear, NT and OT.

The point about Acts 20:7 wasn't the "event," just to show the believers "came together on the first day." The first day was Sunday. Anyway, I don't have too much invested in this, it's not something I think is all that important. I agree that our attitude towards God's law is a reflection of the spirit we are of, I just think we have a different idea of what the law is.

I think it's this: ""A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another." John 13:34

If you want to follow the Ten Commandments and call that "God's Law," go ahead. Some people think all the laws in the Pentateuch are "God's Law." Okay, fine.

As for me, I think the command to love one another is enough. If you let this be your guide for what love means:

1 John 3:16 King James Version (KJV) Hereby perceive we the love of God, because he laid down his life for us: and we ought to lay down our lives for the brethren.

That's a pretty high bar and I don't think we need the Ten Commandments because we have the Spirit of the Holy One within us.

Either way you want to look at it, I hope you have a blessed Resurrection day tomorrow. (Or today it you're going by the Hebrew calander:))

Excellent work dear friend @timothyb very interesting, thank you very much for sharing

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