Thread: How [THEY] influenced our Christian holiday, Easter, with Paganism. Who is Ēostre AKA Ostara? The symbolism of the Easter Bunny.
1. Things that we have been taught are innocent, are in fact the first lies we tell the children. Follow the White Rabbit.
2. It was the occults way of removing Jesus from our holidays and replacing him with Pagan symbolism.
3. Why have we been taught to lie to the children? There is no Easter bunny! The fact is, too many children associate Easter with the bunny, egg hunts and candy rather than the resurrection of Christ.
4. I am known as a HistoryFag amongst the Anon community. However, it wasn't until #QAnon started dropping crumbs about the occult, symbolism etc that I strayed away from the indoctrination I received in school.
5. I started to research, what I was taught in school, was just myths or folklore. The things you won't find in the history text books.
6. Once I dived in to it, I realized that there is archaeological, architectural and textual evidence that it isn't myths or folklore. The world is literally controlled by [THEM]. satan is indeed the prince of this world.
7. They no longer teach the bible in school, but they do teach Mythology. MYTH-ology. Why is it called that? The truth is, [THEY] have indoctrinated us in to believing that fact is actually fiction; ie myths.
8. [THEY] did, and still do, worship those Pagan Gods and Goddesses. If you read my previous digs, you saw how I exposed that Moloch and Tanit have gone by different names throughout history.
9. Or, they went by different names in different cultures, but it's still lucifer and his female counter part.
10. You also saw that in all cultures, child sacrifice, or human sacrifice in general, is a part of the religion. [THEY] stopped teaching the bible in schools, because it's an accurate historical record that debunks what [THEY] teach us is Mythology.
11. Per an essay by By Amanda Borschel-Dan: The pagan goddess behind the holiday of ‘Easter’
Most languages use Aramaic to describe Jesus’s resurrection. Why is English different? Meet the ‘woman’ to blame. The goddess Ostara, or Ēostre.
12. Do you notice the likeness to Lilith, Tanit, Juno etc?
13. Why do only English speakers celebrate “Easter”? Most other peoples of the world call the holiday observed by Christians this Sunday by some variant of the word “Pascha.” (Eastern Orthodox churches will observe the holiday on April 12.)
14. Blame it on a woman — and no ordinary woman at that — a goddess. As recounted by the English monk Bede, the 7th-8th century “father of English history,” the former pagans in England called April, or the month marking Jesus’s resurrection,
15. “Ēosturmōnaþ” — Old English for the “Month of Ēostre.” According to Bede in his “De temporum ratione” (“The Reckoning of Time”), the Christian holiday “was called after a goddess of theirs named Ēostre, in whose honor feasts were celebrated in that month.”
16. Ēostre is variously depicted by scholars as a fertility goddess and a goddess of dawn and light. The dawn connection could explain a linguistic link between Ēostre and the word “east.”
17. An academic and a Christian missionary, Bede’s reference to Ēostre (or Ostara) is textually unique, to the extent that many throughout the centuries have asserted it was fabricated. It was only in the 1950s that archeological evidence was found supporting his claim of such
18. a goddess in England. But recently, work was done at the University of Leicester on place names and their connections to Ēostre, which, arguably, buttress Bede’s version. http://www2.le.ac.uk/departments/english/people/drphilipashaw
19. In almost every other international language, the holiday is called by some permutation of “Pesach,” the Hebrew word for the Passover holiday/sacrifice.
20. According to an essay by Hebrew University Prof. Steven Fassberg, during the period of history marking the birth of the Christian church, both Hebrew and Aramaic were used in the Galilee, where Jesus’s ministry was based.
22. The Hebrew word “pesach” is a noun, but it can also be inflected as a verb to mean, depending on the biblical context, “skip over” in a physical sense (according to rabbinical scholar Rashi),
23. or more spiritually as “spare” (as used in the Aramaic translation by Roman convert to Judaism Onkelos in the first century CE).
24. The authors of the Septuagint, the translation of the Hebrew Bible into Greek completed in 132 BCE, also used the more spiritual connotations of the word, as in to save or to hide.
25. This Greek version of the Old Testament was eventually used by most early Christians in the Roman Empire.
26. The Gospel of John, written in Greek around the first-second century CE, goes further and uses the Passover motif in calling Jesus the “lamb of God” — an allusion to the priestly Passover sacrifice on Jerusalem’s Temple Mount. https://www.timesofisrael.com/passover-sacrifice-reenacted-by-jewish-priests-in-training/
27. Interestingly, only the Hebrew noun “Pesach” is transmitted to Aramaic, not the verb forms, where it begins to take on a further meaning — the Christian observance of Jesus’s resurrection.
28. Today, Modern Hebrew has readopted the Aramaic word “Pascha” to mean the Christian celebration of Jesus’s resurrection, not the Jewish Passover.
29. So how is it that one of the two major Christian holidays was named by Anglo Saxons after a pagan deity? And how is it that this name was not only tolerated, but eventually became its normative moniker throughout the English-speaking world?
30. According to the 1835 “Deutsche Mythologie” by Jacob Grimm, “This Ostarâ, like the [Anglo-Saxon] Eástre, must in heathen religion have denoted a higher being, whose worship was so firmly rooted,
31. that the Christian teachers tolerated the name, and applied it to one of their own grandest anniversaries.” In previous digs I touched on how [THEY] infiltrated the church Paul set up in Rome.
32. In other words, early Church fathers seemed to take the tack that if you can’t beat them, join them — and “usurp” an existing holiday for Christian purposes.
33. Historically Easter is not the first instance of a pagan ritual described by Bede that is now imbued with Christian meaning. Also in “The Reckoning of Time,” Bede describes the Anglo-Saxon Pagans’ “Mōdraniht,” (Old English for “Night of the Mothers”)
34. that was held on December 24, or Christmas Eve. Many Christians are uncomfortable in acknowledging the Easter holiday’s pagan name. Others are taking a more philosophical approach and making a valiant effort to rebrand it. “In an attempt to honor God,
36. But for today, Christians around the world observe Easter with prayer and feasting on a traditional meal, which at many tables includes grandmother’s famous recipe for “paschal” lamb.
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