Mark Armstrong
New Member
One of the more intriguing days named for a pagan deity, from a Christian standpoint, is Easter.
According to the Dictionary of Word Origins by Joseph T. Shipley, The holiday we call Easter "is from the Anglo-Saxon Eostre, a pagan goddess whose festival came at the spring equinox. The festival was called Eastron (plural of Eastre). The Christan festival of the resurrection of Christ has in most European languages taken the name of the Jewish Passover...but in the English the pagan word has remained for the Christian festival."
How many of us would change church membership on this issue? How many of us would quit a church simply because it held something it called an "Easter service" and switch to a church that called it something else?
According to the Dictionary of Word Origins by Joseph T. Shipley, The holiday we call Easter "is from the Anglo-Saxon Eostre, a pagan goddess whose festival came at the spring equinox. The festival was called Eastron (plural of Eastre). The Christan festival of the resurrection of Christ has in most European languages taken the name of the Jewish Passover...but in the English the pagan word has remained for the Christian festival."
How many of us would change church membership on this issue? How many of us would quit a church simply because it held something it called an "Easter service" and switch to a church that called it something else?