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Howdy boys. Anyone ever think about how he was supposedly crucified on Friday and raised on a Sunday when he was in the ground 3 days and 3 nights?Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
Because when it comes to scriptures the truth should never be compromised. A closer inspection would suggest that he was crucified on Wednesday and raised on Saturday, the high sabbath. It was the Catholic Church that created Easter to cover a pagan fertility ritual. Remember the type set forth from Jonah and the belly of the whaleSent from my iPad using Tapatalk
Not sure on the timeline for Easter. Sunday was made the day of worship for Christians by Emperor Constantine (IIRC). Rome at the time worshiped the Sun god, and by making their day the day for Christians, it made it easier for the populace to convert. The same is true of Christmas, 25DEC being a pagan celebration day, and a lot of the Christian symbology. Adopting all of that into our faith made it easier for pagan practitioners to convert, as there would be some familiarity.
Quote from: cj7ox on April 13, 2020, 11:25:39 AMNot sure on the timeline for Easter. Sunday was made the day of worship for Christians by Emperor Constantine (IIRC). Rome at the time worshiped the Sun god, and by making their day the day for Christians, it made it easier for the populace to convert. The same is true of Christmas, 25DEC being a pagan celebration day, and a lot of the Christian symbology. Adopting all of that into our faith made it easier for pagan practitioners to convert, as there would be some familiarity. You just learned me something!I do recall Constantine as being the person who gave us "sun"-Day, and not a pope, I stand corrected.
No arguments from me TR. I don't know how the term Easter came about, but knew it had to have been a decision made by the Catholic Church. It makes sense that a lot of Christian Holy days coincide with Jewish ones, Christ and his Apostles being Jewish after all. It has always interested me how much man has been involved in our faith, starting with the council of Nicaea in 325, convened by Constantine. It makes me wonder how much of the story has been lost over the centuries. I'm not talking about the message, but the background, and adjacent stories.
One good way is to use Rocky's "Way-Back" machine.But if you don't have one or it's in the shop, then translations from the hebrew and even the aramaic are, quite literal.