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Why easter.

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stray bullet

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But I consider myself a Born again Christian in relationship with Christ.

I do believe that there are very fundamental similarities between the Catholic church & born again Chritians {The trinity, the Virgin birth,}

Catholics are born again Christians. The Gospel teaches us that we must be born 'anothen' (Greek: Above/again). The difference is that the historical Churches of Christianity have a different view on what this means then the modern interpretations within protestant Christianity, which call themselves 'born again Christians'.

So I ask you all to consider or study the true meaning of Passover & Easter.

Which one is the true Holy Day ordained by God & which one is
a Pagan celebration that has infiltrated the church

No pagan celebration has entered the Church. Easter is easy to confuse English speakers on because the Christians reused the name from a pagan celebration to name a completely Catholic and Christian holiday of Pascha.

English and Germans converted much later, after the holiday was celebrated. They simply used the same name they were familiar with to name the holiday of their new faith.

This is all part of a tactic to convince Christians that anything old is corrupt. Thus- their interpretations are the 'biblical' ones. Furthermore, rejecting Christian holidays is a way of creating isolation with other Christians, further convincing groups to only belong their sects.
 
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Davidnic

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I am trying to figure things out and learn and have learned alot.

Having been born to a Jewish Mother, a non-believing Catholic father. having been baptized & confirmed in a Catholic church in Ticino Switzerland I am searching for answer to many things that do not make sense I strongly believe that Jesus died for us. So I hope the next question is not taken as a debate but as one.

AMGD stated that Bible is Catholic, how do we then reconcile the Old Testament?


So I have a question. Your father was non-believing, did you have any education in the Catholic faith from any source past confirmation, or just what you have been able to find out yourself? How much of a base do you have. This may help in our discussions.

Let me offer. If you are ever in a thread here and trying to find out more and find yourself moving toward debate, you can ask if the person would like to continue talking about it with the private message function so the thread does not become debate. If they do not (not everoyne has alot of time and such), feel free to Private message me and I will do my best to answer your questions if they are getting to where a debate becomes unavoidable.


Your last question is fine.

The Old Testament leads to the new. Protestants and Catholics do not agree on the Canon of the Old Testament (what books are inspired).

Here is an article that talks about the canon of Scripture (link).

And this one on the Jewish canon (link).

Christ quotes many books from the OT in the NT that the jews did not consider canon. He uses these with the authority of Scripture. The second link explains why the Church accepts the Old Testament books it does.
 
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SolomonVII

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I am trying to figure things out and learn and have learned alot.

Having been born to a Jewish Mother, a non-believing Catholic father. having been baptized & confirmed in a Catholic church in Ticino Switzerland I am searching for answer to many things that do not make sense I strongly believe that Jesus died for us. So I hope the next question is not taken as a debate but as one.

AMGD stated that Bible is Catholic, how do we then reconcile the Old Testament?

We have been grafted into the root of the tree of Jesse. The sacrafice of Jesus has reconciled us, the Lost Sheep of Israel, into Israel, the Family of God.

Abraham has become our father too, as a result of this adoption. We are the fulfilment of God;s promise to Abraham, as Abraham has become a father of many nations, through Israel.

It is impossible to pour new wine into old wineskins, and hence the Catholic Church decides upon what books make up the Bible, and the understanding of the OT as being fulfilled in the New Testament.

What had been concealed in the Old Testament is revealed in the New. So behold Jesus Christ makes all things new, even our understanding or the Old Testament.
 
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stray bullet

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I am trying to figure things out and learn and have learned alot.

Having been born to a Jewish Mother, a non-believing Catholic father. having been baptized & confirmed in a Catholic church in Ticino Switzerland I am searching for answer to many things that do not make sense I strongly believe that Jesus died for us. So I hope the next question is not taken as a debate but as one.

AMGD stated that Bible is Catholic, how do we then reconcile the Old Testament?

The books that makes up what we called the Old Testament, predate the formation of the Church at first Pentecost.

However, the bible itself, in its full form, is a product of the Catholic Church. There are over 13 Gospels, but only 4 in the bible. There are many Acts, but only one book of Acts in the bible. There are other Apocalypses, but there is only one (Revelation). In fact, there are many Old Testament books which are not in the bible.

Not only did the Church preserve these books, but also declared them infallible. How can the bible be infallible if fallible men are the ones to decided what goes in and what can't?
 
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Davidnic

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We have been grafted into the root of the tree of Jesse. The sacrafice of Jesus has reconciled us, the Lost Sheep of Israel, into Israel, the Family of God.

Abraham has become our father too, as a result of this adoption. We are the fulfilment of God;s promise to Abraham, as Abraham has become a father of many nations, through Israel.

It is impossible to pour new wine into old wineskins, and hence the Catholic Church decides upon what books make up the Bible, and the understanding of the OT as being fulfilled in the New Testament.

What had been concealed in the Old Testament is revealed in the New. So behold Jesus Christ makes all things new, even our understanding or the Old Testament.

Well said:thumbsup:
 
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stray bullet

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FullyMT is in Black-Reubenabrahm response is red-Bible quotes in green= (Sorry for the confusion with the quoted box I am still learning some features of this site)



The Mass does not save,
Romans 10:9 (New King James Version)

10:9 that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved.

Mass does not save, but taking single bible verses and creating doctrine from it is dangerous. The bible also says one must be baptized to be saved. Also that without works, one's faith is dead.
 
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stray bullet

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The Euchriast is symbolic of Jesus and of God the Father who through the Trinity includes Jesus and of His saving grace for the Isaraelites & us today.

John 6 makes it clear the bible is not a symbol. Just as followers of Jesus walked away as recorded at the end of John 6.

Paul makes it clear that receiving unworthily results in condemnation.. Symbolism does not do that.
 
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reubenabraham

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Solomon well said
" What had been concealed in the Old Testament is revealed in the New. So behold Jesus Christ makes all things new, even our understanding or the Old Testament."

This above to clarity and this may explain to me why Jesus celebrated the Passover.

To davidnic- After returning to the States I attended Catholic church however I was not allowed to attended Catholic school since I did not speak English at the time.

I did attend mass regurlarly however I do remeber that one Sunday in HS in my Junior the whole thing did not make sense. I do see the Saving Grace of Jesus and clearly remember a sermon by a priest in 2nd grade that said If you believe in Jesus you will never be scared.

I have not used the private message function since I am relatively new where is the icon?
 
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prodromos

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In repl to Prodromos:
I did some research and could not find anything saying that Oestern (sp?) meant resurection. One reference said it meant sunrise.
I did find the following?
According to St. Bede, an English historian of the early 8th century,
Easter owes its origin to the old Teutonic mythology
<http://www.theholidayspot.com/easter/history/easter_history.htm> . It
was derived from the name Eostre, the Anglo-Saxon goddess of spring, to
whom the month of April was dedicated. The festival of Eostre was
celebrated at the vernal equinox, when the day and night gets an equal
share of the day.
If you study word etymology you will quickly discover that all of those words and names bandied about share common roots. In Greek, for example, the words for dawn/sunrise and dusk/sunset have as their roots the words for East and West since the sun appears in the East and disappears in the West. It is the same in the Teutonic German. The word for sunrise has the word for East as its root and then other words associated with rising are derived from that, including "resurrection".

John
 
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Davidnic

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I have not used the private message function since I am relatively new where is the icon?


There are a couple of ways to do it. The easiest way is to click on someones name (up where all of the icons are for faith, gender and such in the upper left of a persons post) and it will bring a list of stuff. One of them is send Private message to.

Also, in the upper right of the whole screen where it says welcome to you, there should be a blue link that says private message. If you use it that way, you need to type in the username. If you click on the name for it, the name will fill in itself.
 
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stivvy

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Thought this was a good explination in the differences and how it relates to passover.

http://www.melkite.org/lent.htm

The word "Easter" comes from Old English and refers to the Norse Goddess of Fertility, "Istra" - who was symbolized by a rabbit.

The word Pascha ("Fesakh" in Arabic) refers to the Passover - the greatest feast of the Old Testament. That feast referred to the time when God delivered the Hebrew people from slavery and bondage. He commanded them to offer the sacrifice of a spotless lamb and to sprinkle its blood upon their gateposts that the Angel of Death would pass over their houses.

The Christians, seeing the true fulfillment of the Old Law in the New Testament, realized that this ancient feast was but a foreshadowing of the destruction of death by Christ in His burial and Resurrection. The beautiful hymns of Resurrection Matins (sung on Saturday after the procession) frequently refer to Christ as the spotless Lamb, the true Savior, the Victor over sin and death, the Deliverer from bondage, and as the Author of the New creation.

I love the little traditions of eggs and bunnies and such as we relate them to Christ and the resurrection. If we form it in our faith and in our hearts, then that is all that matters I think. IMHO.
 
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hsilgne

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Hi r a,

You will learn how this board operates the more you post.

One suggestion, use the "post quote" or "multi quote" option when responding to people. Not only is it easier for us to decipher your posts, but it will also be easier for you when writing your posts. Explore the tool bar contained in the "reply to thread" page when writing a new response. There's lots of lil tools to make life easier for you when posting. If you simply move your cursor over top of any of these "tools", a caption will appear to tell you what that tool does. The "Wrap" function is especially helpful. You will learn as you post more.

I don't want to side track your thread - just trying to help a little.

My response is in red...
I have no disagreement with the statement that it is central to the Catholic Faith

I would have to disagree that Eucharist Is our Faith. I would hope that Jesus is our Faith.

The Euchriast is symbolic of Jesus and of God the Father who through the Trinity includes Jesus and of His saving grace for the Isaraelites & us today.


No. The Eucharist IS Jesus. This is the main difference between Catholic and many of the Protestant faiths. Catholics believe in the REAL PRESENCE. Many Protestants do not. Scripture and Tradition reveal that The Real Presence is Truth. There are many sources you can investigate in order to better understand this. In particular, if you investigate the writings of the early church fathers, you will discover they too believed in the Real Presence. This belief is not a new belief created by the Church. It is the CORE belief that Christ founded the Church on. Martin Luther, the first Protestant, believed in the Real Presence.

Please know that if you receive the Eucharist unworthily(for instance, when you do not believe in the Real Presence), it is a grave matter. I believe that if someone approaches the Eucahrist unworthily, in particular in a state of disbelief, would be the same as those who approached Jesus hanging on the cross 2000 yrs ago and mocked Him and spat on Him.

I do not say this to you as an insult or anything of the sort. I say this in charity, to make you aware.

Peace.
 
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isshinwhat

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Interesting read from Mark Shea's Blog:

Pseudo-Knowledge and "Pagan Christmas"

Time was when I, like most people, took it for granted the winter solstice and, in particular, the Roman Feast of the Birth of the Unconquered Sun were simply pagan celebrations that hung around into Christian times. In fact, when I set out to write this book I still thought this. But I discovered the reality is far more complicated and interesting. Indeed, it turns out this widely assumed "fact" that "everybody knows" is probably another sample of pseudo-knowledge. For according to William Tighe, a church history specialist at Pennsylvania's Muhlenberg College, "the pagan festival of the 'Birth of the Unconquered Sun' instituted by the Roman Emperor Aurelian on 25 December 274, was almost certainly an attempt to create a pagan alternative to a date that was already of some significance to Roman Christians. Thus the 'pagan origins of Christmas' is a myth without historical substance."

For the fact is, our records of a tradition associating Jesus' birth with December 25 are decades older than any records concerning a pagan feast on that day.
[T]he definitive "Handbook of Biblical Chronology" by professor Jack Finegan (Hendrickson, 1998 revised edition) cites an important reference in the "Chronicle" written by Hippolytus of Rome three decades before Aurelian launched his festival. Hippolytus said Jesus' birth "took place eight days before the kalends of January," that is, Dec. 25.

Tighe said there's evidence that as early as the second and third centuries, Christians sought to fix the birth date to help determine the time of Jesus' death and resurrection for the liturgical calendar&#8212;long before Christmas also became a festival.


To make a long and complicated story short, there was agitation in the early Church concerning, not Jesus' birthday, but the day upon which the historical Good Friday and Easter fell. It finally ended up that, in the Eastern Church, the tradition focused on April 6 as the date for the original Good Friday, while in the
Western Church it was widely held that the date was March 25. Why does this matter? Tighe continues:
At this point, we have to introduce a belief that seems to have been widespread in Judaism at the time of Christ, but which, as it is nowhere taught in the Bible, has completely fallen from the awareness of Christians. The idea is that of the "integral age" of the great Jewish prophets: the idea that the prophets of Israel died on the same dates as their birth or conception.

This notion is a key factor in understanding how some early Christians came to believe that December 25th is the date of Christ's birth. The early Christians applied this idea to Jesus, so that March 25th and April 6th were not only the supposed dates of Christ's death, but of his conception or birth as well. There is some fleeting evidence that at least some first- and second-century Christians thought of March 25th or April 6th as the date of Christ's birth, but rather quickly the assignment of March 25th as the date of Christ's conception prevailed.

It is to this day commemorated almost universally among Christians as the Feast of the Annunciation, when the Archangel Gabriel brought the good tidings of a savior to the Virgin Mary, upon whose acquiescence the Eternal Word of God ("Light of Light, True God of True God, begotten of the Father before all ages") forthwith became incarnate in her womb. What is the length of pregnancy? Nine months. Add nine months to March 25th and you get December 25th; add it to April 6th and you get January 6th. December 25th is Christmas, and January 6th is Epiphany.

And because these traditional, albeit competing, birth dates were already being revered in the rapidly growing Church, the emperor of a failing pagan empire instituted the Feast of the Unconquered Sun not only as an "effort to use the winter solstice to make a political statement, but also almost certainly [as] an attempt to give a pagan significance to a date already of importance to Roman Christians."

In addition to this there's another small, but telling, point. We also find St. John Chrysostom (a patriarch of
Constantinople who died in 407 A.D.) noted that Christians had celebrated December 25 from the Church's early days. Chrysostom reinforced his point with an argument that used Scripture, not pagan mythology, for corroboration:
Luke 1 says Zechariah was performing priestly duty in the Temple when an angel told his wife Elizabeth she would bear John the Baptist. During the sixth month of Elizabeth's pregnancy, Mary learned about her conception of Jesus and visited Elizabeth "with haste."

The 24 classes of Jewish priests served one week in the Temple, and Zechariah was in the eighth class. Rabbinical tradition fixed the class on duty when the Temple was destroyed in A.D. 70 and, calculating backward from that, Zechariah's class would have been serving Oct. 2-9 in 5 B.C. So Mary's conception visit six months later might have occurred the following March and Jesus' birth nine months afterward.

So how did it become "common knowledge" that Christmas is really just a warmed-over pagan festival? It happened through a series of ironies capped by yet another example of pseudo-knowledge.

The first irony is the reaction of the Christians of the late
Roman Empire to Aurelian's attempt to co-opt Christmas and make it a pagan day of celebration. Instead of fighting with Sun-worshipers who were trying to rip off their feast, early Christians simply "re-appropriate[d] the pagan 'Birth of the Unconquered Sun' to refer, on the occasion of the birth of Christ, to the rising of the 'Sun of Salvation' or the 'Sun of Justice.'" Mark that, because we shall return to it.

The next irony happens in the 17th and 18th centuries, when the myth of "pagan Christmas" really took hold.
Paul Ernst Jablonski, a German Protestant, wished to show that the celebration of Christ's birth on December 25th was one of the many " paganizations" of Christianity that the Church of the fourth century embraced, as one of many "degenerations" that transformed pure apostolic Christianity into Catholicism. Dom Jean Hardouin , a Benedictine monk, tried to show that the Catholic Church adopted pagan festivals for Christian purposes without paganizing the Gospel.

In the Julian calendar, created in 45 B.C. under Julius Caesar, the winter solstice fell on December 25th, and it therefore seemed obvious to Jablonski and Hardouin that the day must have had a pagan significance before it had a Christian one.


Note that: Jablonski began, not with evidence, but with an assumption that the winter solstice must have had a pagan significance before it had a Christian one. In other words, Jablonski simply noticed a correspondence between the Julian calendar's solstice and Christmas and assumed the pagan feast must have been the prior one even though he had no proof for his theory. Meanwhile, Hardouin, rather than challenge that assumption, simply went along with it. And it's upon these two authors that the entire myth about Christmas being a warmed-over pagan Sun-worshiping feast is based.

But in fact, the date [December 25] had no religious significance in the Roman pagan festal calendar before Aurelian's time, nor did the cult of the sun play a prominent role in Rome before him.

There were two temples of the sun in Rome, one of which (maintained by the clan into which Aurelian was born or adopted) celebrated its dedication festival on August 9th, the other of which celebrated its dedication festival on August 28th. But both of these cults fell into neglect in the second century, when eastern cults of the sun, such as Mithraism, began to win a following in Rome. And in any case, none of these cults, old or new, had festivals associated with solstices or equinoxes.


What Can We Learn From This?

It is vital we not get bogged down in minutiae and miss the blazingly obvious. So, for instance, we must not get distracted by the irrelevant question of whether Roman Christians were right to place Jesus' birthday on December 25. Nor should we waste time saying, "Ah ha! Some early Christians relied on the unbiblical Jewish tradition of 'integral age' or Chrysostom's 'rabbinic tradition'!" Again, granted: the date of Christmas isn't found in Scripture. But that isn't what matters.

The crucial thing is not, "Did the early Christians get the date of Christmas right?" It is, rather, "What mattered to them as they determined the date of Christmas?" And when you look at that, you again immediately realize that what dominates their minds is not Diana,
Isis, sun worship, or anything else in the pagan religious world. What interests them is, from our modern multicultural perspective, stunningly insular. Their debates are consumed, not by longing for goddess worship, or pagan mythology, or a desire to import Isis and Diana into the Faith, but the exact details of the New Testament record of Jesus' death, alloyed with a Jewish&#8212;-not pagan&#8212;-theory about when Jewish&#8212;-not pagan&#8212;-prophets die. They don't care a bit how pagan priests ordered their worship in the Temple of Diana at Ephesus. They care intensely about how Levitical priests ordered their worship in the Temple of Solomon at Jerusalem. These Christians are completely riveted on Scripture and details of Jewish and Christian history and tradition. They don't give a hoot what sun worshipers, Osiris devotees, or Isis fans might think.

A Common Objection

At this point some people object, "But you yourself acknowledge the early Christians 're-appropriated the pagan "Birth of the Unconquered Sun"' to refer to the birth of Christ". True. That is, I'm willing to grant that when Aurelian tried to co-opt a Christian holy day by designating it as the date for a pagan festival, Christians checkmated Aurelius by refusing to allow him to claim a sort of copyright on the Sun for paganism. Instead, they insisted on returning the Sun to the service of God its Creator&#8212; Whom Scripture calls the True Light of the World and a Sun and a Shield&#8212;and did not make the blunder of worshiping the creature. They behaved rather like modern Christians who offer punning riffs on current cultural phenomena ("Jesus: He's the Real Thing" "Christ: Don't Leave Earth Without Him," etc.). Exactly what they did not do is take passages of Scripture which referred to Jesus and apply them to Apollo or some other pagan deity. Nor did they look to Apollo or some other pagan deity to tell them about Jesus; they knew perfectly well Jesus could be represented as the Sun of Justice and Light of the World long before Aurelius invented his pagan festival. That's because early Christians were behaving in a way perfectly consistent with Scripture, becoming "all things to all men" (1 Corinthians 9:22), not "holding the form of religion while denying the power of it" (2 Timothy 3:5).

This matters immensely because it bears directly on the first moment when the early Catholic Church really did borrow something from pagans. And not just any pagans, mind you, but actual adherents of Babylonian Mystery Religion. And most amazingly, the early Catholics' decision to do so receives the complete approval of, and even hearty defense by... Evangelicals.
 
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reubenabraham

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To the many that have responded. Thanks

1-Stivvy great resource I have to look up the Eggs at Passover mentioned in the link you gave us. Also gives a good explanation of Holy week and it includes to some extent the Passover/or Lords supper explanation. It is still confounding to me that we do not celebrate it when Passover actually occurs; this would be great in the spirit of the Ecumenical movement to unite all all believers at a common time.

2-Davidnic =I have found the icon for private messaging however it requires AOL. I did find the one next to the welcome I however was able to read incoming ones could not figure out how to send.

3-I have learned much from these discussions

4-As I continue to grow in the Lord I will never doubt that He died for me and that He is the reason for my Salvation. I will never doubt the Trinity and the presence of the Holy Spirit.

5- I have been stimulated to further look at the history of the early church and how it is connected to the Jewish faith and how we must always remember this connection.
 
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isshinwhat

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If you get a chance, drop by the library and pick up A FATHER WHO KEEPS HIS PROMISES and. THE LAMBS SUPPER, both by Scott Hahn. They are excellent books which relate the experience of God's Covenant love for His people beginning with the Israelites, and the relationship of the Lord's Supper to Passover respectively.

And for some online material of the early Church, www.newadvent.org/fathers has many texts. I would recommend starting with the Didache, St. Ignatius' letter to the Smyrnans,and then St. Polycarp (both of the last two were ordained by an Apostle and were hearers of the Disciple John). Another good one is St. Justin's dialogue with Trypho the Jew, and St. Iranaeus' Against Heresies is great, as well.

All of them were written between 90 and 180 AD and bear witness to the beliefs and practices of the first and second generation Church.

God bless,

Neal
 
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reubenabraham

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This is in reply to isshinwhat.

I believe you have clarified one of the points I tried to make with the two resources you mentioned. God's covenant with Israel and others after the resurection and the connection between with Passover. Thanks for the links.

We must never forget our Jewish heritage.
 
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Hairy Tic

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Hairy Tic writes "## An excellent reason to throw out the Bible :) - after all, the New Covenant is not a book - it is "in My Blood" (Matt. 26.26)"

1- very scary- The Bible is the word of God and the foundation of the Church.

2-Yes Jesus shed his blood for us however if you go back it was during the Passover Meal. The hostorical context of the Pasover meal is very important. I believe there were four cups at the Passover Seder. Jesus used the "Third Cup the Cup of Redemption. "

"God gave us an object lesson to be observed by all those who counted themselves as being made free by His Power.But equally important was the hidden symbolism of a greater , future redemtion, which one day would free free us all those who cried out to God in their sin and despair- a redemption for all people, Jews and Gentiles to bring them into a new and eternal relationship with their Creator and with each other..." Christ in the Pasosver by Ceil & Moishe Rosen

2-Yes not all Christians ar Jews however it is the Father of Abrahms, Isaac & Jacob the God of the Jews that sent His Son to save our Unity in Christ is our unity in The Father, the Son & the Holy Spirit.
Christ did not replace the God of the Old teatament He is the God of the Old Testament and we must honor him.

3-Paul did ask us to celebrate the Passover
"Yeshua observed the biblical holidays during his earthly life. In
addition, the apostle Paul exhorted the Corinthian Christians to
celebrate the seder (1 Corinthians 5:8)." http://www.messianicjewish.net/aboutmj_christian.shtml#question10

4-Hairy Tic states
"he made a vow (it was while paying it that he was arrested), but he did not except others to do so. ##"
In 1 Corintians 11:23-25 The Lord says two times " Do this in Remeberance of Me"
The Lord expect us to do this my contention is yes we do communion which is a small part of the Pasosver celebration, My contention is that Jesus wanted us to do the whole Passover in Honor of His resurection.
Scary it may be - but that is what the Gospel says. The Lord Jesus did not say something like "This writing is the New Testament"; He did not say anything about a writing or a body of writings being a NT, of any kind. Instead, He gave us the Sacramental Sacrifice of His Body and Blood; as typified by the sacrifices of the Law, which finds its conclusion & fulfilment in Him.

We aren't free to have a Christianity we might like - we have to have the one He gave us. And it is no more than a fact, that He had nothing to say about a written text being a New Covenant or Testament.

As for the Bible being "the foundation of the Church" - this is not Scriptural. It's unBiblical, un-New Testamental, contrary to the explicit words of the NT itself. The Bible is good & holy & inspired & canonical - but it is not, by any stretch, the foundation of the Church. Christ is the cornerstone - not the Bible. The Apostles are the foundations - not the Bible.

Something is not right, if the place of honour which the Holy Bible so rightly occupies becomes a place to which the Bible itself testifies it has no claim. So the CC does not give it that position; it venerates it - the Gospel-book at Mass is kissed before being read, & the priest prays before he reads it & after: but it cannot be given a position to which Christ, & He alone, is entitled. He, & not His Book, is the Lord & Shepherd & Saviour of the Church; so much so, that without His Spirit the Bible is of no value; it can become as deadly as the Torah became for St. Paul.
 
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Gwendolyn

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It is still confounding to me that we do not celebrate it when Passover actually occurs; this would be great in the spirit of the Ecumenical movement to unite all all believers at a common time.

True enough. The issue just has to do with calendars - we now use a different calendar than we did when the Christian faith began. The Orthodox celebrate closer to Passover - they are on the Julian calendar, and we are on the Gregorian. There was a discussion in the early centuries of our faith as to whether or not we ought to remember our Lord's death and Resurrection on the actual date it occurred (in the month of Nisan), or whether we should remember it on the Sunday closest to the date (Sunday being the Lord's day, and therefore celebrating it on that day would be a great feast day).

I think what you will find is that as the many different cultures were evangelised, they brought bits and pieces of their old culture with them into their Christian faith. Things like Easter eggs, which may have been pagan one part of the world,was significan in the East for another reason - eggs were a BIG source of nourishment, but were given up for the Lenten fast. Paschal Sunday was the day when the fast was broken, and eggs could be reintroduced to the diet. The eggs would often be dyed red (obviously we don't eat the shells) in remembrance of the Lord's Passion.

Things like that are lost to us now, because we can either eat eggs or not eat eggs, and our diet doesn't take much of a hit. But to an agrarian society, it would have been a really significant thing.

When this tradition met with the pagans evangelised in the Nordic regions, the Germanic peoples saw a different significance in the eggs - the shell melts away to give birth to new life. Is Pascha not a celebration of Christ's rising to life, and offering all of us the possibility to rise to new life in Him as well?

Of course, this has been almost entirely degraded by pop culture, which somehow introduced the story of a rabbit who brings eggs around to children... but that has nothing to do with the religious aspect of it. It is secondary and has nothing to do with the real celebration of Pascha.

I think a lot of people see all of these mixed traditions and don't know how to make sense of them. Just because pop culture likes to stick a bunny in the Paschal season, that doesn't mean that the bunny has anything to do with how we Christians celebrate Pascha. You won't find bunnies with eggs anywhere in our Masses or Divine Liturgies. ;) Just the joyful recognition that Christ has risen from the dead, and we must sing Alleluia.

Side note: only in English and German is Pascha known as "Easter" or "Ostern" - that has to do with language roots, though, and it has nothing to do with a pagan celebration. Because Pascha is, and always has been, the celebration of Christ's Resurrection, regardless of what other people try to introduce to it throughout the years.
 
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AMDG

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It's not just about calendars. It's about the authority Christ gave his vicar on earth. When Easter is celebrated is due to a three-phase controversy that wasn't settled for hundreds of years. At first some Christians in the Near East, called Quartodecimans, wanted Easter to be celebrated on the 14th day of the Hebrew month Nisan--whenever it occurred. (I suspect that this is the Jewish feastday of Passover.) Well in 190, the Pope ordered a Sunday (the Lord's Day) observance of the feast. Then in 325, the Council of Nicea, in line with the Church at Rome and Alexandria, decreed that Easter should be observed on the first Sunday following the first full moon of spring. But it really wasn't until the Synod of Whitby in 664 that uniformity of the practice in the West was achieved.
 
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