|

POSTED 10 MARCH, 2002
What is the Problem With Easter?
by
J.K. McKee
editor@tnnonline.net
It
comes every Spring, usually sometime in March or April. You know
it because in stores you see the baskets, candy, rabbits, eggs,
and the annoying fake grass that goes in those baskets. You see
the Cadbury cream egg commercials on television with the rabbits
gobbling like chickens. Its name is Easter.
Most sincere Christians celebrate the season Easter not as a
time to honor rabbits or eat candy, but as one to remember the
resurrection of Messiah Yeshua (Christ Jesus). They commemorate
His death on Good Friday and His resurrection on Easter Sunday.
Certainly, of all the events in our faith, His resurrection is
the most important. The Apostle Paul validly writes, “But if
there is no resurrection of the dead, not even Messiah has been
raised; and if Messiah has not been raised, then our preaching
is vain, your faith also is vain” (1 Corinthians 15:13-14).
However, when we consider the pre-Messianic and pre-Christian
origins of “Easter,” it becomes imperative that we reevaluate
it.
It comes as a shock to many Christians, but we who are Messianic
Believers do not celebrate Easter. We do not see this holiday
mandated in Scripture as one of the Lord’s moedim or
“appointed times” of Leviticus 23. We believe it to be a
substitute holiday in place of what God has asked His people
to do. By celebrating Good Friday and Easter Sunday, we believe
that Yeshua comes to die as a random man or common criminal on
the cross at Golgotha (Calvary) in a “generic” manner for the
sin of mankind. He does not come in fulfillment of our Heavenly
Father’s appointed times and part of a prophetic order as the
blameless Passover Lamb slain for our sin, and as the unleavened
sinless Bread of Life who was scourged for our iniquities.
As it has sadly been the case, many Messianics usually respond
to the Christians who criticize us without mercy for not
celebrating Easter, in kind. They accuse them of participating
in pagan “fertility rites” or for worshipping the Babylonian
goddess Ishtar or the sun god. Likewise, because Messiah
Yeshua’s death, burial, and resurrection are not emphasized at
many “Messianic” Passover sedars, such Christians may
feel that we have lost hold of this monumental event, and
perhaps can rightfully say of many such people that they treat
Yeshua’s resurrection with disgust.
How are we as fair-minded Messianic Believers to handle Easter?
How are we to be mature, Spirit-filled, Torah obedient Believers
who follow the example of Yeshua the Messiah? At what time are
we to appropriately remember what He did for us on the cross
2,000 years ago? Easter or Passover?
What did God tell us to do in the Spring?
It is only natural that Believers would want to do something to
honor God in the Springtime. Spring is a wonderful time of year
where we see new leaves on trees, flowers blooming, grass coming
to life again, and things are warming in preparation for Summer.
It is indeed a time and remembrance of “new life.” In the
Springtime, in the Hebrew month of Aviv or Nisan,
the Passover is to be celebrated:
“Speak to all the congregation of Israel, saying, ‘On the tenth
of this month they are each one to take a lamb for themselves,
according to their fathers’ households, a lamb for each
household’” (Exodus 12:3). Exodus 12:6 further tells us, “You
shall keep it until the fourteenth day of the same month, then
the whole assembly of the congregation of Israel is to kill it
at twilight.”
The Lord gives detailed instruction in Exodus 12:1-13 about how
the Passover was first to be observed in commemoration of the
Ancient Israelites’ flight from Egypt. God further goes on and
speaks of the Festival of Unleavened Bread in Exodus 12:14-20
and how, “In the first month, on the fourteenth day of
the month at evening, you shall eat unleavened bread, until the
twenty-first day of the month at evening” (v. 18), establishing
that this feast is to last seven days. Concerning Unleavened
Bread, the Lord makes it quite clear that “you shall observe
this day throughout your generations as a permanent ordinance”
(v. 17). “Permanent ordinance” in the Hebrew is chuqat olam
(~lA[
tQx),
or as the NIV renders this command, “Celebrate this day as a
lasting ordinance for the generations to come.”
These two holidays of Passover and Unleavened Bread were
codified in Leviticus 23:5-14:
“‘In the first month, on the fourteenth day of the month at
twilight is the Lord’s
Passover. Then on the fifteenth day of the same month there is
the Feast of Unleavened Bread to the
Lord; for seven
days you shall eat unleavened bread. On the first day you shall
have a holy convocation; you shall not do any laborious work.
But for seven days you shall present an offering by fire to the
Lord. On the
seventh day is a holy convocation; you shall not do any
laborious work.’ Then the
Lord spoke to Moses, saying, ‘Speak to the sons of Israel
and say to them, “When you enter the land which I am going to
give to you and reap its harvest, then you shall bring in the
sheaf of the first fruits of your harvest to the priest. He
shall wave the sheaf before the
Lord for you to be
accepted; on the day after the sabbath the priest shall wave it.
Now on the day when you wave the sheaf, you shall offer a male
lamb one year old without defect for a burnt offering to the
Lord. Its grain
offering shall then be two-tenths of an ephah of fine
flour mixed with oil, an offering by fire to the
Lord for a
soothing aroma, with its drink offering, a fourth of a hin of
wine. Until this same day, until you have brought in the
offering of your God, you shall eat neither bread nor roasted
grain nor new growth. It is to be a perpetual statute throughout
your generations in all your dwelling places.”’”
It is only natural for us to want to celebrate new life and
commemorate something in the Spring. That is why our Heavenly
Father has told His people to celebrate Passover and Unleavened
Bread. We as Messianic Believers observe these holidays not only
in remembrance of the Ancient Israelites’ Exodus from Egypt, but
also for the prophetic fulfillment in Messiah that these
festivals have. In Yeshua, we experience an exodus from slavery
to sin to freedom in Him. He has been slain as the Passover Lamb
for us, and was bruised like the unleavened matzah (hCm)
bread.
What does the New Testament say?
In the Apostolic Scriptures, the Apostle Paul makes a strong
parallel between Passover and Unleavened Bread and the salvation
that we have in Messiah Yeshua. He writes, “Clean out the old
leaven so that you may be a new lump, just as you are in fact
unleavened. For Messiah our Passover also has been
sacrificed”
(1 Corinthians 5:7). “Leaven”[1]
here is representative of sin and as Believers in Messiah we are
told to “clean [it] out,” the verb ekkathairō (ekkaqairw)
meaning “to remove as unclean, clean out” (BDAG)[2]
and “to cleanse out, clean thoroughly” (Thayer).[3]
This demonstrates how serious it is for us to get the sin out of
our lives. Why are we told to do this? The answer startles many
Christians:
“Therefore let us celebrate the feast, not with old leaven, nor
with the leaven of malice and wickedness, but with the
unleavened bread of sincerity and truth” (1 Corinthians 5:8).
Why are we told to clean out the leaven in our lives? So we can
properly celebrate the feast. What feast would Paul be referring
to here? Obviously, he would be referring to Passover and all it
encompasses! The Greek in 1 Corinthians 5:8 states quite plainly
that we are to “celebrate the festival.” Heortazō (eortazw)
means “to
celebrate as
or by a
festival” (LS).[4]
These verses take on some new meanings with the Hebrew terms
used in the Complete Jewish Bible: “Get rid of the old hametz
[leavened dough], so that you can be a new batch of dough,
because in reality you are unleavened. For our Pesach
lamb, the Messiah, has been sacrificed. So let us celebrate the
Sedar not with leftover hametz, the hametz
of wickedness and evil, but with the matzah of purity and
truth.”
1 Corinthians 5:7-8 establishes how important it is that we
observe Passover, and likewise the Feast of Unleavened Bread.
These moedim were established by God long before the
Messiah’s First Coming, and give us the pattern of Him being our
blameless Passover Lamb atoning for our iniquities, and then
being the scourged, sinless, leavenless Bread of Life as was
prophesied in Isaiah 53:5: “But He was pierced through for our
transgressions, He was crushed for our iniquities; the
chastening for our well-being fell upon Him, and by His
scourging we are healed.”
This prophecy
speaks of Messiah the Suffering Servant. Those of you who have
seen unleavened bread or matzah know that it has lines
with small holes in it, which represent Yeshua’s suffering for
us. A “scourge,” or chaburah (hrWBx)
in Hebrew, is defined as “stripe, blow, stroke,” and “blows
that cut in” (BDB).[5]
Furthermore, Paul also writes in Colossians 2:17 that the
Biblical feasts specified by God in the Torah are “are a shadow
of the things to come, but the substance belongs to Christ” (ESV).
In understanding the feasts as a “shadow,” we know that they
give a foretaste of the prophetic fulfillment of Yeshua’s First
and Second Coming, in which the ultimate sōma (swma)
or “substance” is found.
We as Messianic Believers are of the strong position that the
Lord gave us His appointed times for a reason. He gave them to
us to show us the reality of Yeshua, which gives testimony to us
about His plan for order in His Creation. Yeshua’s First and
future Second Coming are not “random events” on the calendar, as
many Christians perceive them. They are rather ordered events
that occur in a set pattern according to the Father’s “appointed
times” or moedim.
What was “the Last Supper”?
We do recognize, of course, that many Christians recognize the
prophetic significance of the Biblical festivals, including
Passover, and many churches regularly do hold Passover sedars.
While I believe that churches that celebrate both
Passover and Easter Sunday are (somewhat) compromised, this is
certainly better than those churches that feel that Passover has
no significance whatsoever and condemn those who observe it.
Many of these same do not realize that the Last Supper meal, as
it is commonly called, was in actuality a Passover meal
conducted between Yeshua and His Disciples:
“Now on the first day of Unleavened Bread the disciples
came to Yeshua and asked, ‘Where do You want us to prepare for
You to eat the Passover?’ And He said, ‘Go into the city to a
certain man, and say to him, “The Teacher says, ‘My time is
near; I am to keep the Passover at your house with My
disciples.’”’ The disciples did as Yeshua had directed them; and
they prepared the Passover” (Matthew 26:17-19; cf. Mark
14:12-16; Luke 22:8-15).
Some Christians waver as to whether or not the Last Supper was
actually “Passover” (although some editions of the NASB have
Matthew 26:20-25 titled as “The Last Passover”). This is
partially based on John 19:14 which tells us that Yeshua was
crucified on “the day of preparation for the Passover,” meaning
that Passover began the evening of His crucifixion and so the
evening that He and His Disciples partook of the Last Supper
would have not been the Passover. There is an easy response to
this when we understand that “practice Passovers” were common in
the days of Messiah prior to the Passover beginning. Rabbis
would usually do this with their students to train them to
conduct their own Passover meals, or for those entering to
Jerusalem from afar to become accustomed to Passover in the
Judean tradition. It makes perfect sense for Yeshua, our Rabbi,
to do something like this as He was establishing the New
Covenant with His own blood, and commissioning His Disciples to
continue His work:
“While they were eating, Yeshua took some bread, and
after a blessing, He broke it and gave it to the
disciples, and said, ‘Take, eat; this is My body.’ And when He
had taken a cup and given thanks, He gave it to them,
saying, ‘Drink from it, all of you; for this is My blood of the
covenant, which is poured out for many for forgiveness of sins’”
(Matthew 26:26-28; cf. Mark 14:22-24; Luke 22:19-20).
The common practice of communion or “the Lord’s Supper” is
derived from the Passover. In Luke 22:19 Yeshua says “do this in
remembrance of Me.”
But what is the most important thing as it relates to what many
Christians do today? If we truly want to follow the Messiah’s
example, then we should pay careful attention to these words of
His in regard to “the Last Supper.” He says, “I have eagerly
desired to eat this Passover with you before I suffer” (Luke
22:15, NRSV). Translated “earnestly desired” (NASU, NIV, RSV),
the Greek epithumia (epiqumia)
means “a
longing after
a thing,
desire of or for it” (LS).[6]
Allow these words to seek deep into your spirit.
Yeshua strongly desired to celebrate Passover with His
Disciples. We should also follow His example and likewise
earnestly desire to celebrate Passover, remembering all the
while what He did for us.
A Brief History of Easter
Following Yeshua’s final Passover meal He was arrested in the
Garden of Gethsemane, taken before Pontius Pilate, scourged and
beaten by the Roman soldiers, and then crucified for us, atoning
for our sin. Three days later He arose from the dead, and forty
days following He ascended to the right hand of the Father in
Heaven. The story sounds all too familiar, but it takes on a
completely new light when viewed in the significance of God’s
appointed times.
So how did we get Easter Sunday, a holiday that by many accounts
seems to be divorced from Passover? At Passover time we are told
to eat unleavened bread and lamb, whereas on Easter Sunday yeast
rolls and hams are commonplace. Yeast or leaven represents sin
in relation to Passover and the Festival of Unleavened Bread.
Swine is an unclean animal, the consumption of which God says is
“an abomination unto you” (Leviticus 11:10, 11, 12, 20, 23).
One of the things that we have to understand is that neither
Yeshua nor the early Believers and Apostles celebrated “Easter.”
They observed the Passover and the Festival of Unleavened Bread
as they always had and remembered the Messiah in all. “Easter”
as its own holiday was not formalized until centuries later at
the Council of Nicea. While establishing many critical doctrines
of our faith, including the Messiah’s Divinity, later Church
councils such as the Council of Antioch (341 C.E.) and the
Council of Laodicea (363 C.E.) made it illegal for Christians to
participate in the Sabbath or Passover. Susan E. Richardson’s
comments from Holidays & Holy Days confirm this:
“…In A.D. 325, the Council of Nicea set aside a special day just
to celebrate the Resurrection. The problem with an official day
was deciding whether or not the Resurrection should be
celebrated on a weekday or…on a Sunday.
“Many felt that the date should continue to be based on the
timing of the Resurrection during Passover. Once Jewish leaders
determined the date of Passover each year, Christian leaders
could set the date for Easter by figuring three days after
Passover…
“…As
Christianity drew away from Judaism, some were reluctant to base
the Christian celebration on the Jewish calendar.”[7]
These comments should essentially confirm the fact that the
Church of the Fourth Century wanted to create a holiday separate
from anything “Jewish.” Like Jeroboam of old, many of the
bishops wanted to replace the Lord’s appointed times with their
own replacement holidays. Richardson continues,
“Since Easter is a celebration of Jesus’ Resurrection, you would
think there wouldn’t be room for paganism. However, Easter is
one of the holidays most intertwined with pagan symbolism and
ritual.
“The origin of
the word easter isn’t certain. The Venerable Bede, an
eighth-century monk and scholar, suggested that the word may
have come from the Anglo-Saxon Eostre or Eastre—a
Teutonic goddess of spring and fertility…”[8]
We do point
out, however, that Richardson does state, “Recent scholars
haven’t been able to find any reference to the goddess Bede
mentioned and consider the theory discredited.”[9]
However, there
may be a similarity and connection between the name “Easter” and
the Babylonian fertility goddess Ishtar, especially as
Richardson does admit that “easter would be linked to the
changing of the season”[10]
and hence be connected to Spring fertility and growing. Either
way, the fact that Easter Sunday is connected to paganism should
raise some serious eyebrows among those wanting to follow
Scripture.
Whether “Easter” is a name of pagan origin or not in this case
is unimportant. The fact that there are strong pagan
connections to it as Richardson, a Christian author, readily
attests should be shocking to those endeavoring to be Bible
Believers who follow Scripture and not manmade tradition. The
fact that later generations of Christians would form a holiday
honoring the Messiah’s resurrection originally based in paganism
and not celebrate Passover and the Festival of Unleavened Bread,
casts a shadow upon Good Friday and Easter Sunday. People have
largely decided to ignore what God asks us to do in Leviticus
23, reemphasized by Paul in 1 Corinthians 5:7-8, and instead
feel it prudent to assert their own holidays.
We should not be as dense so as to think that all Christians
over the centuries have been participating in “fertility rites.”
I do believe that God has honored those who have celebrated
Easter in ignorance, truly wanting to honor Him. However, the
Father is leading us into a time where the fuller truth is being
revealed and He will give us the choice of whether or not we
want to observe His holidays or those of human origin.
Fairy Tale Reasoning
Of course, there are many more traditions associated with Easter
that are supposed to “commemorate” the resurrection of Yeshua.
What about the venerable “Easter bunny”? Where did he come from?
The only place rabbits are mentioned in Scripture is in
Leviticus 11:6 and Deuteronomy 14:7 where the Lord declares them
to be unclean animals that we are forbidden to eat. We once
again turn to Susan E. Richardson’s rather “revealing” Christian
commentary from Holidays & Holy Days:
“There are
several reasons for the rabbit, or hare, to be associated with
Easter, all of which come through pagan celebrations or beliefs.
The most obvious is the hare’s fertility. Easter comes during
spring and celebrates new life.”[11]
This statement
is disturbing because rabbits are commonly associated with sex.
A popular expression in relation to young people nowadays is
that they “have sex like rabbits.” And I would point out that
this sex is usually always outside the bounds of marriage.
God did not tell us to associate new life with rabbits in
Spring. Richardson also states, “The hare or rabbit’s burrow
helped the animal’s adoption as part of Easter celebrations.
Believers saw the rabbit coming out of its underground home as a
symbol of Jesus coming out of the tomb. Perhaps this was another
case of taking a pre-existing symbol and giving it Christian
meaning.”[12]
Adopting a rabbit’s coming out of its underground burrow
comparing it to Yeshua’s resurrection is complete fairy tale
reasoning in my assessment—and makes little or no sense
whatsoever!
Is “Easter” mentioned in Scripture?
There is, however, one instance where many Christians tell us
that “Easter” is mentioned in the Bible. “Easter” appears in the
King James Version rendering of Acts 12:4:
“And when he [Herod] had apprehended him [Peter], he put him
in prison, and delivered him to four quaternions of
soldiers to keep him; intending after Easter to bring him forth
to the people.”
This is not an
accurate translation of the Greek text at all. The Greek does
not have “Easter” but Pascha (pasca),
the transliteration of the Hebrew Pesach (xsP)
or “Passover.” The New King James Version has corrected this
seemingly intentional error:
“So when he had arrested him, he put him in prison, and
delivered him to four squads of soldiers to keep him,
intending to bring him before the people after Passover” (Acts
12:4, NKJV).
King James Only advocates, who believe that the King James
Version is perfect and without error, superior to the original
Hebrew or Greek, have argued that this rendering of “Easter” for
Pascha is accurate. Why is this the case? Because King
Herod, they say, the one who took Peter captive, was a pagan and
celebrated Easter. While this is unsupported by the text,
notably because Acts 12:3 tells us that “Then were the days of
unleavened bread” (KJV) connecting Pascha to Passover, it
is interesting that they must admit that “Easter” is a holiday
of non-Biblical, rather than Biblical, origins.
Easter in Perspective
Many Christians will continue to not understand why we as
Messianic Believers do not celebrate Easter Sunday, and instead
honor Passover and the Festival of Unleavened Bread. They, in
their ignorance, may look at us with utter disgust and will
proclaim that we deny the resurrection of Messiah Yeshua. But
this is truly not the case as Messiah is our Passover Lamb slain
for the forgiveness of sin, and “is the firstfruits of those who
have died” (1 Corinthians 15:20, CJB). We do not deny Yeshua’s
resurrection; we just believe that Christians are commemorating
it inappropriately. They are honoring it outside of the bounds
God has given us, and have given credence to a holiday that has
some pagan connections.
But this problem, just like that of Christmas, is compounded by
Messianics who condemn Christians mercilessly and claim that
they are worshipping Ishtar or the sun god on Easter Sunday.
Truly this is not the case and such criticism is unjustified,
especially as many of these “Messianics” do not seek to honor or
remember Yeshua’s death, burial, and resurrection at their
Passover meals. Yeshua Himself says, “For in the way you judge,
you will be judged; and by your standard of measure, it will be
measured to you” (Matthew 7:2). Many of these same people will
readily admit that when they celebrated Easter they were not
celebrating pagan fertility rites. They, in ignorance, just like
me, did not know the origins of the holiday and were unaware of
the greater blessings and significance of celebrating Passover.
Messianic Believers need to set the higher standard when Easter
comes. It is only one day out of the year, and fortunately it is
not given the same type of commercialization as Christmas is.
Let us be the ones who lead by our example of loving others who
are ignorant of the truth of Easter’s history and celebrate it
because they do not know any better, believing the Biblical
appointed times of the Lord to be unimportant.
What is the problem with Easter?
While we do not celebrate Good Friday or Easter Sunday because
they were adapted by Roman Catholicism to replace Passover, we
do not condemn those who celebrate it in ignorance, and neither
do we condemn those who defiantly celebrate it and are opposed
to us celebrating the Lord’s moedim. (God will handle
them). But we do pray and urge Christians to reconsider what
they are doing, and consider whether or not “the Church” has the
right to replace God’s holidays with its own holidays. We find
no justification for this and will choose to commemorate the
Messiah’s resurrection at its appropriate time connected to the
Spring appointments, not a holiday that historically has
connections to pagan fertility rites. We will also encourage
others to do the same making Yeshua’s sacrifice for us part of
God’s orderly plan, rather than part of the unorderly and
unsanctified days of the heathen.
What is the problem with Easter?
Easter was not established by God. It was established by men to
be a substitute of some of the most important of the Lord’s
appointed times: Passover and the Festival of Unleavened Bread.
Just as the Ancient Israelites were in Exodus from Egypt to the
Promised Land, so we as Believers who have received Messiah
Yeshua into our hearts have experienced our own exodus from sin
into new life, and the promise of a future resurrection and
eternal communion with Him in His Kingdom on Earth. We have the
confidence of knowing that He came in a preordained order, not
as part of a random, unordered day of revelry.
J.K. McKee (B.A., University of Oklahoma; M.A., Asbury
Theological Seminary) is the editor of TNN Online (www.tnnonline.net)
and is a Messianic apologist. He is author of several books,
including: The New Testament Validates Torah, Torah In the
Balance, Volume I, and When Will the Messiah Return?.
He has also written many articles on the Two Houses of Israel
and Biblical theology, and is presently focusing on Messianic
commentaries on various books of the Bible.
NOTES
[1]
Heb. seor (raf),
chametz (#mx);
Grk. zumē (zumh).
[2]
Frederick William Danker, ed., et. al.,
A Greek-English Lexicon of the New
Testamen and Other Early Christian Literature,
third edition (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
2000), 303.
[3]
Joseph H. Thayer, ed., Thayer’s
Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament (Peabody,
MA: Hendrickson, 2003), 195.
[4]
H.G. Lidell and R. Scott, An
Intermediate Greek-English Lexicon (Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1994),
277.
[5]
Francis Brown, S.R. Driver, and Charles
A. Briggs, Hebrew and English Lexicon of the Old
Testament (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1979), 289.
[6]
LS,
292.
[7]
Susan E. Richardson, Holidays & Holy
Days (Ann Arbor, MI: Vine Books, 2001), 58.
[8]
Ibid, 58-59.
[9]
Ibid, 59.
[10]
Ibid.
[11]
Ibid.
[12]
Ibid, 60.
|