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March 15, 2010
Easter or Passover: What Does the Bible Teach?
March 5, 2010
Earthquakes and the Bible
 
February 26, 2010
Competing for the Crown
February 19, 2010
Integrity and the Olympics
February 12, 2010
Olympic Fire
February 8, 2010
Missiles, Anti-missiles and Threats
February 5, 2010
Abortion, Murder, and the Super Bowl
February 3, 2010
Would Jesus Use a "Jesus Rifle"?
February 1, 2010
Change
 
January 28, 2010
The iPad: Obsolete?
January 27, 2010
Where's My Avatar?
January 25, 2010
The Peacemaker
January 15, 2010
Pat Robertson on Haiti: A Bible Fact Check
January 13, 2010
Gay Rights and Proposition 8
January 6, 2010
When All Else Fails...
 
December 30, 2009
... And a Successful New Year!
December 23, 2009
A Distant Family Member
December 21, 2009
The Man Who Will Be King
December 16, 2009
Silvio Berlusconi Attacked
December 14, 2009
Jesus Misquoted
December 9, 2009
Copenhagen: Just Snuff?
December 7, 2009
Christmas: Why Are We Doing This?
December 3, 2009
Et Tu, Tiger?
December 2, 2009
Out of the Rubble
 
 
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GN Commentary: March 15, 2010 - Easter or Passover: What Does the Bible Teach?

Maybe it's time to take a closer look at Easter—and instead learn about the biblical Passover, with its wonderful meaning. It can easily be found in the pages of your Bible.

 

Related Resources

Easter or Passover: Which Is Christian?
Many believe that God's endorsement of Passover ended with Jesus Christ's death—and that He has since replaced it with the observance of Easter as a celebration of Christ's resurrection. But is that so?

The Passover: Why Did Jesus Christ Have to Die?
Most of us have heard that Jesus Christ died for our sins, but what does that really mean? Why was His death necessary? What part does Christ's sacrifice play in God's plan for mankind? How is Jesus Christ's death reflected in God's holy festivals? This chapter on the New Testament Passover will address these important questions.

Easter: Masking a Biblical Truth
Many millions of people believe Jesus Christ rose from the dead on a Sunday morning. But do the Scriptures tell a different story? And how did rabbits and colored eggs come to be associated with Christ's resurrection?

Would Jesus Keep Easter?
Easter Sunday is the most important religious holiday of the year for millions of people. But how much do we understand of its true origins? And, if Jesus were on earth today, would He observe this popular holiday?

 

 

Video Transcript

It's that time of the year again, the time people refer to as the "Paschal season." For many in the Christian world that means eggs, rabbits and Sunday sunrise services. But how many stop to think where all these customs originated? Or even whether they may be found in the Bible? Surprising as it might sound, none of these customs is commanded or sanctioned anywhere in the pages of Holy Scripture.  

In fact the name "Easter" is conspicuous only by its absence. It doesn't appear in modern translations, and occurs only once in the 1611 King James Version of Acts 12:4. The error was corrected in the New King James Version, where the word is translated "Passover."

"Passover": it's a term less familiar than "Easter,"  but it occurs some 28 times in the New Testament! Jesus Christ Himself declared "with fervent desire I have desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer" (Luke 22:15). And the Apostle Paul, writing to the Church of God in Corinth, instructed the Christians to follow the example of Jesus Christ, and partake of the Passover ceremony of bread and wine on the same night the Lord did.

So where did all the Easter customs, like bunny rabbits, eggs and Sunday sunrise services originate? Listen to the words of the Encyclopaedia Britannica:  

"The name Easter…, is a survival from the old Teutonic mythology. According to Bede… it is derived from Eostre or Ostara, the Anglo-Saxon goddess of spring, to whom the month… April, and called Eoster-monath, was dedicated. This month, Bede says, was the same as the mensis paschalis, 'when the old festival was observed with the gladness of a new solemnity'" (11th edition, page 828).

In other words, the Christians took pre-Christian or pagan customs and baptized them, something expressly forbidden in the Word of God. This caused a great controversy among Christians in the second century, referred to as the "Quartodeciman Controversy"; some then contended for the Passover, on the 14th of Nisan, while others favored the syncretized pagan-Christian practice of Easter.  Little wonder many Bible-believing Christians to this day reject the taint of paganism, and cling tenaciously to the biblical festival of Passover.

So what are your plans for your spring religious calendar? Maybe it's time to take a closer look at Easter—and instead learn about the biblical Passover, with its wonderful meaning. It can easily be found in the pages of your Bible.  

For GN Magazine, I'm Ralph Levy.

 

 

 


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