The Story of Easter


What do colored eggs and bunny rabbits have to do with the Messiah and his teachings? Have you ever wondered? Where did the Easter parade and hot-cross buns come from?

The true story of the origin of Easter is intriguing.

At one time God placed angels with flaming swords at the gates of the Garden of Eden. When the people came to worship God at the gates of Eden they faced west, because the gates were on the east. After the flood of Noah the Garden of Eden was no longer there. The people began to worship the things God had made instead of God. Since the sun was the brightest thing, they began to worship the sun.

The story starts thousands of years before the coming of Christ. It starts with Nimrod the great grandson of Noah. Nimrod was a great leader and built the first empire in Babel later called Babylon. His wifes name was Semiramis and she was a great queen.

When Nimrod died Semiramis wanted to remain the queen. So she told the people that Nimrod was the sun god and was now dwelling in the sun. The people believed her. So she told them she was the moon god and when she died she would dwell in the moon. And again the people believed her.

The sun god was now being worshiped in Babylon, Egypt, Greece and Rome. The people noticed that the sun would begin leaving during the year and would start returning on December the 25th. So the people called December the 25th the birthday of the sun god and during this time they celebrated with feasting and orgies.

Semiramis could never marry again, because how could the moon goddess marry a mortal? However, she became pregnant. Semiramis told the people that the spirit of Nimrod had visited her and she was now pregnant with his son. When Semiramis gave birth to a son the people rejoiced. And so did Satan because he had just counterfeited the birth of Jesus.

Tammuz was the son of the sun god and the people worshiped him. They used the first letter in his name and made wooden symbols that looked like this letter and used it to sacrifice to him. They called it the cross and this was the symbol of all those that worshiped him. They also made human sacrifices on these crosses. And they worshiped his mother and made cakes with crosses burned in them.

Tammuz was killed by a wild boar when he was a young man and there was weeping for forty days. And every year these same forty days were set aside for the weeping of Tammuz.

Now it is believed that Semiramis, whom was also known as Ishtar, which is pronounced, Easter, raised her son out of the pits of hell every year at this time.

Christ was born in October and crucified in April at the age of thirty three and a half at the time of the Passover. Jesus was sacrificed on a cross (the very thing the sun worshipers used to make human sacrifices) and on the third day, the first day of sun worship, while the demons and sun worshipers were in their wildest orgy, celebrating their victory over God, Jesus was raised from the dead.

He was raised, showing the world that he was over the sun god.

But Satan found a way around this.

He whispered in the ear of the Catholic Church, why not try and be more accepted?

Then he said, Christ born towards the end of the year.

Why not make it the same day as Tammuz?

Christ was crucified and resurrected in the spring time. We can do the same as Tammuz but say it is to honor Christ. The cakes of the queen became the hot cross buns, the forty days of weeping became lent and it all ended on Easter Sunday.

And is celebrated around the world today.

Happy Easter?

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