Easter Is Not Named After Ishtar, And Other Truths I Have To Tell You

28 Mar

If there is one thing that drives me absolutely bananas, it’s people spreading misinformation via social media under the guise of “educating”. I’ve seen this happen in several ways – through infographics that twist data in ways that support a conclusion that is ultimately false, or else through “meaningful” quotes falsely attributed to various celebrities, or by cobbling together a few actual facts with statements that are patently untrue to create something that seems plausible on the surface but is, in fact, full of crap.

Yesterday, the official Facebook page of (noted misogynist and eugenics enthusiast) Richard Dawkins’ Foundation for Reason and Science shared the following image to their 637,000 fans:

Neither Reasonable Nor Scientific

Neither Reasonable Nor Scientific

Naturally, their fans lapped this shit up; after all, this is the kind of thing they absolutely live for. Religious people! Being hypocritical! And crazy! And wrong! The 2,000+ comments were chock-full of smug remarks about how naïve and stupid Christians were, accompanied by pats on the back for all the atheists who smart enough to see through all the religious bullshit and understand how the evil church had slyly appropriated all kinds of pagan traditions.

And you know what? That’s fine, I guess. I’m all for questioning religion and examining the sociological, historical and anthropological reasons that help explain the hows and whys of our lives today. I’m actually super fascinated by that kind of stuff, even if I do think that there’s a way to discuss it without making yourself sound smarter and more enlightened than the people around you.

But you guys? The image above is rife with misinformation. RIFE, I say.

Let’s start from the top:

This is Ishtar …

Okay, great. So far things are fairly accurate. The relief pictured here, known as the Burney Relief (also called the Queen of the Night relief) is widely considered to be an Ancient Babylonian representation of Ishtar (although some scholars believe that the woman depicted might be Lilitu or Ereshkigal). This relief is currently housed in the British Museum in London, but originates from southern Iraq and is nearly 4,000 years old.

… pronounced Easter.

Actually, in modern English we pronounce it the way it looks. A case could be made for pronouncing it Eesh-tar, but I have yet to come across a credible source that gives the original pronunciation as Easter.

Easter is originally the celebration of Ishtar, the Assyrian and Babylonian goddess of fertility and sex.

Ishtar was the goddess of love, war and sex. These days, thanks to Herodotus, she is especially associated with sacred prostitution* (also known as temple prostitution), which, in the religions of the Ancient Near East, allegedly took on the form of every woman having to, at some point in her life, go to the temple of Ishtar and have sex with the first stranger who offered her money. Once a woman entered the temple of Ishtar for the purpose of sacred prostitution, she was not allowed to leave until she’d done the deed. I can’t imagine that sacred prostitution sex was ever very good sex, but hey, what do I know? Probably some people were pretty into it – I mean, if you can imagine it, someone’s made porn about it, right?

Anyway, the point I am trying to make here is that, yes, Ishtar was associated with fertility and sex. However, her symbols were the lion, the gate and the eight-pointed star; I can’t find any evidence of eggs or rabbits symbolically belonging to her. And Easter has nothing to do with her.

Most scholars believe that Easter gets its name from Eostre or Ostara**, a Germanic pagan goddess. English and German are two of the very few languages that use some variation of the word Easter (or, in German, Ostern) as a name for this holiday. Most other European languages use one form or another of the Latin name for Easter, Pascha, which is derived from the Hebrew Pesach, meaning Passover. In French it’s Pâques, in Italian it’s Pasqua, in Dutch it’s Pasen, in Danish it’s Paaske, in Bulgarian it’s Paskha, and so on and so forth.

In the Christian Bible, Jesus returned to Jerusalem from his forty days in the desert just before Passover. In fact, in the Gospel according to John, Jesus was killed on the day before the first night of Passover, at the time when lambs were traditionally slaughtered for the Passover feast (because Jesus was the Lamb of God, etc. – SYMBOLISM, Y’ALL). There are a few differing accounts of when Jesus actually died, but most Christian texts, philosophers and scholars agree that it was around the time of Passover. Easter is still celebrated the week after Passover, which is why it’s a different day each year, because the Jewish calendar is lunar rather than solar.

Her symbols (like the egg and the bunny) were and still are fertility and sex symbols (or did you actually think eggs and bunnies had anything to do with the resurrection?).

Actually, according to Jacob Grimm’s Deutsche Mythologie, which he wrote after journeying across Germany and recording its oral mythological traditions, the idea of resurrection was part and parcel of celebrating the goddess Ostara:

OstaraEástre seems therefore to have been the divinity of the radiant dawn, of upspringing light, a spectacle that brings joy and blessing, whose meaning could be easily adapted by the resurrection-day of the christian’s God. Bonfires were lighted at Easter and according to popular belief of long standing, the moment the sun rises on Easter Sunday morning, he gives three joyful leaps, he dances for joy … Water drawn on the Easter morning is, like that at Christmas, holy and healing … here also heathen notions seems to have grafted themselves on great christian festivals. Maidens clothed in white, who at Easter, at the season of returning spring, show themselves in clefts of the rock and on mountains, are suggestive of the ancient goddess.”

Spring is a sort of resurrection after all, with the land coming back to life after lying dead and bare during the winter months. To say that ancient peoples thought otherwise is foolish, naïve and downright uninformed. Many, many pagan celebrations centre around the return of light and the rebirth of the land; these ideas are not new themes in the slightest.

And yes, rabbits and eggs are fertility symbols, and they are, in fact, associated with Eostre.

Ostara by Johannes Gehrts

Ostara by Johannes Gehrts

After Constantine decided to Christianize the Empire, Easter was changed to represent Jesus.

Hey! Guess what language Constantine, the Roman Emperor, spoke? Not English, that’s for sure! In fact, when he was alive, English didn’t even exist yet. He would have spoken Latin or Ancient Greek, so would likely have referred to Easter as Pascha or Πάσχα.

But at its roots Easter (which is pronounced Ishtar) was all about celebrating fertility and sex.

Look. Here’s the thing. Our Western Easter traditions incorporate a lot of elements from a bunch of different religious backgrounds. You can’t really say that it’s just about resurrection, or just about spring, or just about fertility and sex. You can’t pick one thread out of a tapestry and say, “Hey, now this particular strand is what this tapestry’s really about.” It doesn’t work that way; very few things in life do.

The fact is that the Ancient Romans were smart when it came to conquering. In their pagan days, they would absorb gods and goddesses from every religion they encountered into their own pantheon; when the Roman Empire became Christian, the Roman Catholic Church continued to do the same thing, in a manner of speaking.

And do you know why that worked so well? Because adaptability is a really, really good trait to have in terms of survival of the fittest (something I wish the present-day Catholic Church would remember). Scratch the surface of just about any Christian holiday, and you’ll find pagan elements, if not a downright pagan theme, underneath.

Know what else? Most Christians know this. Or, at least, most of the Christians that I’m friends with (which is, admittedly, a fairly small sampling). They know that Jesus wasn’t really born on December 25th, and they know that there were never any actual snakes in Ireland, and they know that rabbits and eggs are fertility symbols. But they don’t care, because they realize that religions evolve and change and that that’s actually a good thing, not a bad thing. The fact that many Christian saints are just re-imagined pagan gods and goddesses doesn’t alter their faith one iota; because faith isn’t about reason or sense, it’s about belief.

Look, go ahead and debate religion. Go ahead and tell Christians why what they believe is wrong. That’s totally fine and, in fact, I encourage it. A little debate and critical thinking are good for everyone. But do it intelligently. Get to know the Bible, so you actually know what you’re disagreeing with when you form an argument. Brush up on your theology so that you can explain why it’s so wrong. And have some compassion, for Christ’s sake – be polite and respectful when you enter into a debate, even when the person you’re debating with loses their cool. You want to prove that you’re better, more enlightened than Christians? Great, do it by remaining rational and level-headed in the face of someone who’s willing to stoop to personal attacks. To behave otherwise is to be just as bad as the people you’re debating.

Anyway, I hope you guys have a fantastic long weekend, no matter how you spend it. If your holiday involves chocolate, then I hope you enjoy that. If not, just enjoy the extra day or two off work and the (hopefully) warm weather. No matter what you believe in, I think that we can all agree that the end of winter and the rebirth of spring is worth celebrating.

And also? Richard Dawkins? You need to fact-check yourself before you fact-wreck yourself. Spreading this kind of misinformation to your foundation’s 637,000 fans is just plain irresponsible, especially coming from someone like you. Get with the program, buddy.

ETA: The post now seems to be removed from The Richard Dawkins’ Foundation for Science and Reason’s FB page. Thanks Richard! 

ETA Part Deux: Oh. It looks like it was deleted from their timeline but not the photo album. Welp.

*It should be noted that the only actual historical evidence that we have of sacred prostitution comes from Herodotus (I’ve included an excerpt from Herodotus’ Histories below) and no one is really sure how accurate it is. Herodotus is known for making shit up, like giant ants for example. But it makes for an amazing story and people still make the association between Ishtar and sacred prostitution, so I decided to mention it here.

The foulest Babylonian custom is that which compels every woman of the land to sit in the temple of Aphrodite and have intercourse with some stranger once in her life. Many women who are rich and proud and disdain to mingle with the rest, drive to the temple in covered carriages drawn by teams, and stand there with a great retinue of attendants. But most sit down in the sacred plot of Aphrodite, with crowns of cord on their heads; there is a great multitude of women coming and going; passages marked by line run every way through the crowd, by which the men pass and make their choice. Once a woman has taken her place there, she does not go away to her home before some stranger has cast money into her lap, and had intercourse with her outside the temple; but while he casts the money, he must say, “I invite you in the name of Mylitta” (that is the Assyrian name for Aphrodite). It does not matter what sum the money is; the woman will never refuse, for that would be a sin, the money being by this act made sacred. So she follows the first man who casts it and rejects no one. After their intercourse, having discharged her sacred duty to the goddess, she goes away to her home; and thereafter there is no bribe however great that will get her. So then the women that are fair and tall are soon free to depart, but the uncomely have long to wait because they cannot fulfil the law; for some of them remain for three years, or four. There is a custom like this in some parts of Cyprus.

That crack about ugly women was totally unnecessary, Herodotus. I am just saying.

**The first written reference we have for Eostre dates back to the 7th century AD and can be found in Venerable Bede’s Temporum Ratione, in a passage explaining that April was often referred to as Eostremonth:

“Eosturmonath” has a name which is now translated “Paschal month”, and which was once called after a goddess of theirs named Eostre, in whose honor feasts were celebrated in that month.

Jacob Grimm said that he found further evidence of Eostre and her associations with Easter, eggs and rabbits when researching his Deutsches Mythologie, although he was unable to discover any written records about her.

1,098 Responses to “Easter Is Not Named After Ishtar, And Other Truths I Have To Tell You”

  1. James's avatar
    James June 13, 2014 at 3:42 pm #

    Sorry, but your completely wrong. Who paid you for this blasphemous page?

  2. automacao email marketing's avatar
    automacao email marketing June 20, 2014 at 4:20 am #

    Muy bueno tu blog y estoy siguiendo su cargo por un largo tiempo!

  3. Kyalie's avatar
    Kyalie September 5, 2014 at 2:01 pm #

    As an absolute atheist and big fan of mythologies, I facepalmed hard at the picture. Ishtar pronounced Easter, yeah sure, so it’s Easter in all other languages as well then? Obviously, being a French, my first reaction was “what about Pâques then?”. Plus the only link they could have found between Jesus and Ishtar they happily discarded it: “you didnt think eggs and bunnies had anything to do with resurrection right?”. Stupid asshole, you just said that she was a goddess of fertility! Do you know how spring and fertility are usually represented? By a god dying and being reborned! Persephone, Dionysus, Osiris… And guess what, Ishtar as well when she is imprisoned by her sister!
    But how would they know when it’s obvious they know nothing about how myths and religions have spread…

  4. dave's avatar
    dave September 12, 2014 at 3:06 am #

    Wow identifying as an atheist, got the set to do that in person? On the local news poll?

    Bet not…

    Thabks for the article OP. I was taught an exact melding.

    Eastara was the goddess of the barbarians of sex and bunnies. Must of been a mixup at seminary. It happens.

    I hope to someday meet a real person who is so eager to claim to be an atheist. I think it would make for a great conversation and maybe a new friend! As they say fortune favors the bold.

    • Lindsay's avatar
      Lindsay April 5, 2015 at 8:40 am #

      What’s so brave about identifying as an atheist? I don’t understand your comment. There’s millions of us. It’s the default when we’re born. Babies are atheist until their heads are filled with lies and fairy stories by their parents and/or the church.

      Why are you implying that the author wouldn’t have the balls to say it in public or to your face? They’re not admitting to being a rapist. Where the hell do you live that an atheist will suffer abuse?! Coz here in the UK, nobody cares. In fact most people are not religious and you’d probably be exposed to more ridicule if you did believe in The Invisible Man in the Sky. And rightly so.

  5. 1weaver's avatar
    1weaver September 29, 2014 at 9:31 am #

    wow, I am awfully late to this party but I just have to say: I love love LOVE this post. amen to all of it!

  6. Quidinish's avatar
    Quidinish November 15, 2014 at 4:58 pm #

    But an hour is coming, and now is, when the true worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth; for such people the Father seeks to be His worshipers. “God is spirit, and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth.” John 4:23,24

    It’s no good celebrating untruth, whether it’s Ishtar, Oestre, Saint Nicholas, or any other false god, worship The True God, Jehovah.

    • ralfellis's avatar
      ralfellis November 16, 2014 at 7:47 am #

      >>worship The True God, Jehovah

      But that is the trouble. The god of the Torah is actually called Adon. Try reading it in the Hebrew. In other words, this is the Aton, the god of Pharaoh Akhenaton.

      Ralph

      • chrismerc's avatar
        chrismerc March 21, 2015 at 4:21 am #

        Sorry Ralph incorrect… First of all it is Adonai which means “The Lord” or “My Great Lord”.

        Jehovah was an incorrect translation by a German translator in the 16th century. It is derived from YHVH which is God’s name given to Moses in the Torah.

      • ralfellis's avatar
        ralfellis March 25, 2015 at 7:57 am #

        >>First of all it is Adonai which means “The Lord”

        Yes, and “The Lord” is a reference to god.
        And the form Adon is used in Jos 3:11, Jos 3:13, Ps 105:21 and Ps 114:7.
        And Adon was derived from the Egyptian Aton or Adon, the god of Pharaoh Akhenaton.

        Apologies?

      • Randje's avatar
        therandjerandje April 7, 2015 at 12:36 am #

        BAM

    • don conrad's avatar
      don conrad March 29, 2015 at 2:18 pm #

      Jehovah is a DEMON …….

  7. dbp49's avatar
    dbp49 November 16, 2014 at 8:05 am #

    Love it all, and as soon as I read the claim of Ishtar, the little voice in my head said, “Eostre is going to be rather upset at these guys, they’ll be lucky if she doesn’t come and reproduce all over their heads or something!” Lol.

  8. Pagan's avatar
    Pagan December 13, 2014 at 9:53 am #

    Two links that argue for the link between Easter and Ishtar

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQZDdHIOSmw

    http://www.christiananswers.net/q-eden/edn-t020.html

    • penny's avatar
      penny December 14, 2014 at 1:02 pm #

      This is a response to that christian article about linking Easter and Eostre. It refers to the flood as being God’s divine wrath being sent down on the world due to all the wickedness in it. Just maybe, there was severe climate change at that time, whether that is related to the wrath of God, or to cosmic events such as a meteor hitting earth and causing widespread climatic consequences, is debatable at best.

      • ralfellis's avatar
        ralfellis December 14, 2014 at 2:17 pm #

        >>It refers to the flood as being God’s divine
        >>wrath being sent down on the world

        Only an evil god would kill people.
        God must be the devil.

        R

      • penny's avatar
        penny December 14, 2014 at 4:02 pm #

        Yeah, it’s enough to make you wonder; we can all get caught in the trap that “God made man in his image”, so are we divine or are we devils??!!, or is the whole thing just totally solipsistic.

    • Lolabunny's avatar
      Lolabunny April 6, 2015 at 12:06 pm #

      Amen Brother, 1st comment that is based on facts, not what others believe ! Thank you

  9. Mrrda's avatar
    Mrrda January 5, 2015 at 3:39 pm #

    The english language is the language of the fallen angels.

    Easter = ishtar. Wordplay is mockery of God, just like every other aspect of european cultures

  10. Bob Ryan's avatar
    Bob Ryan March 26, 2015 at 8:21 pm #

    Dear sir, You know not of which you speak.

  11. sandro's avatar
    sandro March 27, 2015 at 7:05 pm #

    I wonder if it is like Adams peak in Sri Lanka, where every religion wants to have their claim…
    21st century folks..religion’s a joke!

  12. Ishtar-Lhotus's avatar
    Ishtar-Lhotus March 28, 2015 at 2:36 am #

    Hello! Thanks for pointing out about Herodotus. I read about that too… what is that book-author? Not an easy read, but maybe worth crediting. I also have the hunch that the original teachings of Tantra got twisted or perverted or corrupted by some communities, forcing their females (or perhaps conquered enslaved females) to perform such services for someone else’s profit… And so misusing Ishtar’s name, just as millions use Christ’s name for all kinds of atrocities.

    • Ishtar-Lhotus's avatar
      Ishtar-Lhotus March 28, 2015 at 2:49 am #

      Also, if you research the constellation mythologies of Ishtar, it begins with Virgo… and is basically a story about the Seasons. Though her motives are represented extremely diversely, the main journey is the same… down to the Underworld and back, through 7 gates. These actually symbolize the 7 main Chakras. And she returns in the Spring, a kind of resurrection and rebirth and renewal.
      There are also some more interesting perspectives and projects by an Australian woman named Tanishka… website Star of Ishtar.
      Happy Treasure Hunting!

  13. Jock William Doubleday's avatar
    Jock William Doubleday March 28, 2015 at 12:02 pm #

    One thing’s for sure: Every religion says that every other religion is wrong. I agree with all of them.

  14. Barry's avatar
    Barry March 28, 2015 at 1:57 pm #

    this is worst than the facebook shared

  15. Thor's avatar
    Thor March 28, 2015 at 4:15 pm #

    TL;DR: Still a stolen (absorbed) holiday.

  16. Birch Wind's avatar
    Birch Wind March 28, 2015 at 6:32 pm #

    Reblogged this on Terra Spiritus and commented:
    This — so very well said!

  17. StillKeepingAfloat's avatar
    StillKeepingAfloat March 29, 2015 at 7:30 pm #

    Reblogged this on Still Keeping Afloat and commented:
    With Easter weekend fast approaching, misinformation will soon abound. This, however, is a well written article on pre-Christian origins.

  18. Psalter's avatar
    Psalter April 1, 2015 at 4:29 am #

    Almost, but your view is still narrow. http://www.christiananswers.net/q-eden/edn-t020.html

  19. Chris's avatar
    Chris April 3, 2015 at 3:37 pm #

    You do realize all of these names are for the same “goddess”, right? Astarte, Ostara, Ishtar, Ashtar, Aphtodite, Venus… all the same concept personified. Just like “Jesus” was “Iesus” in Latin, “Isa” in Arabic, YHVH in Hebrew… The cultures and customs that surrounded the worship of Ishtar varied as much as the worship of anything else does across the world. All of them are based in some level of truth and some level of myth but the tales go back as far as recorded time of recycling the same deities over and over again.

  20. Pastor Richard D Floyd Sr's avatar
    Pastor Richard D Floyd Sr April 4, 2015 at 12:32 am #

    All this is, is accusations against GOD and the born again believers. This is what satan does, he is the accuser.
    Satan has come to kill, steal and destroy.
    Going about like a roaring lion seeking whom he may devour. There is not one thing you can do or say that can hurt us Born Again believers on Judgment Day, but it can hurt you. I advise you to call on the Name of JESUS CHRIST and confess you are a sinner and ask JESUS to forgive your sin’s and repent, believe on the LORD JESUS (the SON of GOD), and that JESUS was born of a virgin,(Mary)and JESUS who is(the WORD made flesh) and lived as a man (GOD in the flesh) and was crucified on the cross (died in our place, and for our sins) and GOD raised JESUS CHRIST from the dead and behold JESUS CHRIST is alive and seated on the right hand of GOD.
    I tell you the Truth, JESUS Loves you, I promise you with my whole being.
    I can prove that JESUS CHRIST is alive and that will save you from your sins and give you eternal life, but you would have to be involved. Start by saying, LORD JESUS I am a sinner and i can’t save myself, please forgive my sin’s and save me my LORD. I don’t know you personally but I would like to know you.
    Please make yourself real to me. LORD I now put my faith in you. Thank you for saving me, in your name I pray, JESUS Name Amen. Pastor Richard D Floyd Sr

    • Chris's avatar
      Chris April 9, 2015 at 12:20 pm #

      No, sir. All this points out is that before the set of sacred beliefs came along that you decided to agree with, there were thousands of others that laid its foundation.

  21. Mark Whelan's avatar
    Mark Whelan April 4, 2015 at 2:24 pm #

    Thanks for a wonderfully enlightening post which also brightened my reflections on this time. Call it divine intervention, but I am just in the process of composing my own post, sharing thoughts I have on the most recent events of the last few days. I also felt compelled to mention you in my post. Henceforth, I am also re-blogging this post for the benefit of my small group of followers. Hope you don’t mind.

    Mark.

    PS. Also a lover of Sylvia Plath’s life and works.

  22. Mark Whelan's avatar
    Mark Whelan April 4, 2015 at 2:25 pm #

    Reblogged this on Mark Whelan and commented:
    Soundly composed thoughts on the myths and falsifications of Easter by a very good contemporary writer.

  23. PeregrineKiwi's avatar
    PeregrineKiwi April 5, 2015 at 12:04 am #

    Nice post. That’ll give me something to link to.

    On small correction, Strabo also mentions sacred prostitution in Babylonia (it’s in book 16, somewhere around chapter 8).

  24. marc's avatar
    marc April 5, 2015 at 3:02 am #

    You know where easter eggs came from? It came from ishtar as per her story she came back to earth as a form of giant egg and the first miracle she did when she comes back she turned one animal into a rabbit. See where easter bunnies and easter eggs cam from? Research further do not just post something out of anger. Apart from that rabbit was never mentioned in the bible nor eggs being given as a gift. Passover is different from catholic’s holyweek.

  25. kevthepoet's avatar
    kevthepoet April 5, 2015 at 1:00 pm #

    Reblogged this on KP Kev the Poet and commented:
    The Ishtar story isn’t far from the truth though, the article itself says it was a Pagan Goddess, they just got the wrong one “Easter gets its name from Eostre or Ostara**, a Germanic pagan goddess. English and German are two of the very few languages that use some variation of the word Easter (or, in German, Ostern) as a name for this holiday. …Her symbols (like the egg and the bunny) were and still are fertility and sex symbols (or did you actually think eggs and bunnies had anything to do with the resurrection?).”

  26. Colin's avatar
    Colin April 5, 2015 at 4:04 pm #

    The op is a devil and any Christian that puts this persons views into practice it’s mad! Our faith CAN NOT change! Gods word is written and can’t change to our liking. If you value the word of God do not celebrate these pagan festivals and DO NOT take this writers advice that it’s ok for Christianity to absorb other beliefs. Other than that this article is a non starter.

  27. chi's avatar
    chi April 5, 2015 at 4:46 pm #

    I think the point of people posting that picture saying that this is Ishtar is that’s it’s more about fertility than about Jesus. It’s more pagan than it is Christian. There are people who want others to realize that Christianity stole or “borrowed” pagan celebrations.

  28. Travis York's avatar
    Travis York April 5, 2015 at 5:27 pm #

    Great article! Very informative my friend. I have but one complaint… you say that religion “isn’t about reason or sense it is about belief.” As a man of unwavering faith I will agree that the Holy Bible is NOT a science book. In fact the bible tells you time and time again that if you read it literally it will kill you spirtually. That is why Christians laugh when atheist pull up scriptures about homosexuals, beating women with rods and rape being OK. We know the bible is for spiritual interpretation. But to my point. When we are children we do not know why we believe what we do and we usually follow our parents. As we get older we all form a set of beliefs to in fact make sense of our lives and our place in the universe. Religion has EVERYTHING to do with sense and reason. I have found that comfort in Christianity but not via the usual path. I found God through science, math and philosaphy. I found God by spending the better part of 25 years trying to prove He did not exist. I also found that the bible, if read in spiritual context the way it was intended, is in fact infallable.

    • FJ's avatar
      FJ February 28, 2016 at 5:53 am #

      Shalom Travis wonderful to hear. Nothing we can do but agree with the One who created us. Hope you will look at these. I found Messiah or He found me I should say through my ignorance, He still loved me. Do hope you are a student of the Word & this makes your journey of Faith a greater delight in knowing not just the Salvation but also the magnificence of the Kingdom in you.

      https://youtu.be/aGxDdMYh0rg

      Be blessed in Truth
      FJ

  29. danny's avatar
    danny April 5, 2015 at 5:31 pm #

    That was the most worthless research somebody could pull out of their ass
    You must be a fuckin jew

  30. BlindXodus's avatar
    BlindXodus April 5, 2015 at 6:38 pm #

    This information is so false thanks again for being another false prophet

  31. Edward's avatar
    Edward April 5, 2015 at 8:47 pm #

    Herodotus didn’t lie (although Thucydides said he did. He simply reported the stories he was told. Which may not be history, but it is anthropology. 🙂

  32. Geoff's avatar
    Geoff April 5, 2015 at 10:14 pm #

    Look….NONE of this history changes one simple fact. Christians stole….yes STOLE holidays from other religions that were FAR older to make themselves seem more legitimate. Don’t care if it’s an Assyrian goddess or a Greek goddess or an Egyptian goddess. The fact remains that Easter…just like Christmas…are PAGAN holidays that were stolen to lend legitimacy to the Christian mythos. Never were the pagans who celebrated these holy days asked if they could “borrow” (usurp really) their holy days. So Christians are vile retards for doing so & believing these days to have ANY meaning to their religion. I dare say….in 200 years if WHITE PEOPLE decided to make Dr. Martin Luther King day a “white people holiday” they’d be looked at with disgust…and that would be deserved. Cultural assimilation doesn’t excuse the theft & desecration of any other cultures practices. Warping these holy days the way Christians have is inexcusable. Period….end of “debate”.

    • Fretfire's avatar
      Fretfire March 29, 2016 at 12:32 am #

      No Geoff – not all Christians, but the Catholic Church did all that. They are the ones who took over the pagan holidays. They apparently had this “if ya can’t beat ’em, join ’em” philosophy, between the times of Constantine & Theodosius I, when “Christianity” was legalized and then finally made the state religion. Since the people in the empire were practicing these things anyway, they thought they could make things smoother by “baptizing” the pre-existing beliefs & practices. Christ Himself & the Apostles would never have tolerated this. The result of all this compromising is that it gave Christians a bad name, and people like you think that this is what Christians are like and what they did. And today, you have all the apostate “Christian” churches uniting in the Ecumenical Movement, with all the other world religions to eventually form a “One World Religion”, which will fulfill many of the prophecies in the bible about the Antichrist (the Beast) and the False Prophet. It’s called “Mystery Babylon” in the book of Revelation. Everyone will be welcome, except people who truly follow the bible, they’ll be persecuted and killed. All those who follow the Antichrist and this world religion will worship the Beast and allow a microchip to be implanted in their forehead or right hand, probably with a tattoo, without which no one can buy or sell – you, I, and everyone today can see that this technology is already in place and much of it is already in use, but tell me – how could the Apostle John have known about it almost 2,000 years ago? Christians are not supposed to have anything to do with anything pagan. And the pagan beliefs are the ones that are myths, not the Christian beliefs from the bible – that is precisely why Christians are supposed to shun and avoid them! Period.

  33. patrick's avatar
    patrick April 5, 2015 at 10:28 pm #

    Good article. Yes, many folks that hate Christianity, or Christians, drum up texts from Deuteronomy or Leviticus to disparage Hebrew law and subsequent traditions without an inkling of understanding of ANE legal traditions and social context.

    There extant evidence of early church celebration of Christ’s resurrection prior to the 7th century. I’m also careful to parse the difference between the actual historical saints and the myth and ornamentation that’s been attached to them, some taken from mythological deities.

  34. Ummer Farooq's avatar
    Ummer Farooq April 5, 2015 at 10:48 pm #

    Roster is Freyja, who is Isis, who is Ishtar, who is Inanna the symbolic mother of Nimrod and the ancestor of the EU and the Nazis and Napoleonic empire and roman empire and Alexandrian empire all from Plato’s republic. Plato who revived Babylonian magic which was all in honor to Esther who is Ishtar. All these characters, being the death fanatic and lusting types like their mother inanna who are of the brother gig and the other magog, defenders of the city of London.

  35. jeannereames's avatar
    jeannereames April 5, 2015 at 11:10 pm #

    Thanks for this entry. As a historian of Greece, Macedonia and the ANE, the first time I saw that silly meme floating around, I wanted to pull out my hair. Guy really needs to check his Akkadian before posting silly stuff. ;> Way too many otherwise intelligent people try to make connections between words/names because they sound/look similar, when they lack any knowledge of the language(s) in question.

    I saw that you did edit your post at the end to state that our only source for “sacred prostitution” is from Herodotus. Herodotus, and the Greeks in general, tended to misunderstand what they were seeing in the ANE, whether in religion (such as the nonsense about sacred prostitution), or in terms of social constructs (slamming Persian royal women for “interfering” in politics–because no “good” Athenian/Greek woman should exercise political power–when in fact, Persian queens and others were doing exactly what they were supposed to be doing [v. Maria Brosius’s wonderful little book WOMEN IN ANCIENT PERSIA, c1998]).

    But there is little evidence from ANE sources for sacred prostitution. Herodotus’s idea seems to be built on the New Year’s Festival (their new year was the spring equinox, unlike Greece’s at mid-summer or Roman at mid-winter), and Sacred Marriage Rite. For the Sacred Marriage Rite, Inanna/Ishtar’s priestess “married” the king of Babylon (or earlier, a Sumerian city, such as Uruk). Whether or not it included sex is actually not known, but it may well have. Sex was not “dirty” or “sinful” to ANE minds within the proper context. Gwendolyn Leick has a great little book called THE BABYLONIANS: an Introduction, that I like to assign to my students because it’s both readable and chock full of good info about Babylonian history/culture/religion.

    This idea of a spring rite combining marriage/sex/fertility was not unique only to the ANE. In Athens, at the early spring Anthesteria, “Dionysos” (the elected basileus/king chosen specifically for cultic activities) was carried through the streets in a boat to the Boukolion, where he was united in a sacred marriage (heiros gamos) to “Ariadne” (the basilinna, usually his wife), and then they were to consummate the marriage. There’s a lot of debate about just exactly was involved and how old it it (certainly at least pre-colonization of Asia Minor, so early archaic), but the basic idea of a sacred marriage pops up all around the world (and not always via direct borrowings).

    What people tend to forget in looking too hard for parallels is that human beings are pretty creative. They can invent the same/similar things in different places without needing to get it from other people (much less aliens). 😀

  36. mairisa's avatar
    mairisa April 6, 2015 at 9:58 am #

    who’s this cunt author,how did i get here?
    fuck you bitch,where the fuck am i?

  37. Roger Hornaday's avatar
    Roger Hornaday April 6, 2015 at 11:50 am #

    I think God disagrees with Christianity “evolving and that is a good thing” Just like each time the Bible is rewritten and changed to allow for the evolution of religion. Revelation 22:18-19 No matter what pagan festival, god or goddess some of the Easter traditions were taken from, it still breaks both the first and second commandments and that is far from a good thing. I guess it will take God to straighten everyone out and just be prepared to explain this and justify it to Him on judgment day

  38. Julius's avatar
    Julius April 6, 2015 at 4:36 pm #

    Sorry to burst your porn again bubble but it s all mythology and they all borrowed from the ancients

  39. George Best's avatar
    George Best April 6, 2015 at 4:54 pm #

    It seems quite clear to many scholars that Ishtar & Astarte are archetypes for Eostre! Facebook might have put up disinformation but this is misinformation.

  40. PMC's avatar
    PMC April 6, 2015 at 5:39 pm #

    At list you have gave an in depth insight which gave clarity for the fact that Ishtar is a pegan way of celebrating this evil goddess, however, in the Bible the term Easter does not even exist and that settles the fact that its a pegan way of doing things which is being infused in the church to distort the ultimate celebration of the death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus. My conclusion is sons of God dont celebrate Easter or Ishtar and it has nothing to do with our faith, but we celebrate the death and resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ, and that have no specific time it can be anyday and anytime.

  41. I Am's avatar
    I Am April 6, 2015 at 6:55 pm #

    Jesus isn’t real either

  42. Flower Child's avatar
    Flower Child April 7, 2015 at 5:32 am #

    I have not gone through all 800+ comments to see if this issue has been dealt with, but for the person who posted about Easter being mentioned in the Bible, if you check the parallel Bible comparison (link below) you will see that “Easter” is mentioned in only two translations, the King James version and the Third Millennium Bible. In the Tyndale Bible, which contains many words with non-standard spellings, “ester” is mentioned. All the other translations say Passover or Pesach.

    http://www.biblestudytools.com/acts/12-4-compare.html

    • zarove's avatar
      zarove May 13, 2015 at 2:26 am #

      The Bishops Bible and Coverdales also say “Easter”, as doe The Matthew’s Bible.

      But Easter was just the English word for Pssover so…

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