Post by TheFirebrand on Mar 1, 2012 16:52:37 GMT -6
I have stated before that less than 2 hundred years ago churches in this country did not celebrate Christmas or any other pagan festival ...
Easter has long been known as a pagan festival! America's founders knew this! A children's book about the holiday "Easter Parade: Welcome Sweet Spring Time" by Steve Englehart states: "When the Puritans came to North America, they regarded the celebration of Easter - and Christmas - with suspicion. They knew that pagans had celebrated the return of Spring long before Christians celebrated Easter. For the first two hundred years of European life in North America, only a few states, mostly in the South (which is also where Mardi Gras takes place) paid much attention to Easter." Americans did not celebrate this holiday until after the Civil War ... "Easter first became an American tradition in the 1870's." The original 13 colonies of America began as a "Christian" nation, with the cry of "No King but King Jesus!" The nation did not observe Easter or Christmas or Valentines or any other within an entire century of its founding. But we never see the true way people lived and worshiped in the movies or tv now do we?
We have been indoctrinated and seduced by the watered beauty of evil pagan festivities and rituals. A prime example is with the arrival of story by Charles Dickens about Scrooge and the "Christmas Spirits" ... When that came to America it was one giant losing turning point in the churches battle against the holiday. That story was a demonic influence that has made something Satanic into something beautiful and wonderful ...
Easter has long been known as a pagan festival! America's founders knew this! A children's book about the holiday "Easter Parade: Welcome Sweet Spring Time" by Steve Englehart states: "When the Puritans came to North America, they regarded the celebration of Easter - and Christmas - with suspicion. They knew that pagans had celebrated the return of Spring long before Christians celebrated Easter. For the first two hundred years of European life in North America, only a few states, mostly in the South (which is also where Mardi Gras takes place) paid much attention to Easter." Americans did not celebrate this holiday until after the Civil War ... "Easter first became an American tradition in the 1870's." The original 13 colonies of America began as a "Christian" nation, with the cry of "No King but King Jesus!" The nation did not observe Easter or Christmas or Valentines or any other within an entire century of its founding. But we never see the true way people lived and worshiped in the movies or tv now do we?
We have been indoctrinated and seduced by the watered beauty of evil pagan festivities and rituals. A prime example is with the arrival of story by Charles Dickens about Scrooge and the "Christmas Spirits" ... When that came to America it was one giant losing turning point in the churches battle against the holiday. That story was a demonic influence that has made something Satanic into something beautiful and wonderful ...