MITHRAS
The Didache captures a snapshot of Christianity before it was infiltrated with the pagan religions, which surrounded the areas of Christian concentration, Jerusalem, and Rome.
One of the main influences was the religion of Mithras.
Virtually all the elements of Orthodox Christian rituals, from mitre, wafer, water baptism, alter, and doxology, were adopted from the Mithras and earlier pagan mystery religions.
The religion of Mithras preceded Christianity by roughly six hundred years. However, it was very active in Rome from the 1st to 4th centuries C.E. – Common Era date from the birth of Jesus around 2/3 B.C.
Notice the following facts and then realize that Satan caused this great desception to come into existance 600 years before Jesus was born, knowing God's plan and putting in place a system that would blind the eyes of people to take them away from believing who the real Jesus is and who the only true God is!
(1) According to the Mithras myth, Mithras was born on December 25th as an offspring of the Sun. Next to the gods Ormuzd and Ahrimanes, Mithras held the highest rank among the gods of ancient Persia. He was represented as a beautiful youth and a Mediator. Reverend J. W. Lake states:\
"Mithras is spiritual light contending with spiritual darkness, and through his labours the kingdom of darkness shall be lit with heaven's own light; the Eternal will receive all things back into his favour, the world will be redeemed to God. The impure are to be purified, and the evil made good, through the mediation of Mithras, the reconciler of Ormuzd and Ahriman. Mithras is the Good, his name is Love. In relation to the Eternal, he is the source of grace, in relation to man he is the life-giver and mediator" (Plato).
(2) Mithras was considered a great teacher and master. He had twelve companions and travelled with performing miracles.
(3) Mithras was called "the good shepherd, "the way, the truth and the light, redeemer, saviour, Messiah." He was identified with both the lion and the lamb.
(4) The International Encyclopedia states: "Mithras seems to have owed his prominence to the belief that he was the source of life, and could also redeem the souls of the dead into the better world ...
The ceremonies included a sort of baptism to remove sins, anointing, and a sacred meal of bread and water, while a consecrated wine, believed to possess wonderful power, played a prominent part."
(5) Chambers Encyclopedia says:
"The most important of his many festivals was his birthday, celebrated on the 25th of December, the day subsequently fixed -- against all evidence -- Baptism and the partaking of a mystical liquid, consisting of flour and water, to be drunk with the utterance of sacred formulas, were among the inauguration acts."
(6) Prof. Franz Cumont, of the University of Ghent, writes as follows concerning the religion of Mithras and the religion of Christ:
"Followers of Mithras held Sunday sacred and celebrated the birth of the Sun on the 25th of December....” (The Mysteries of Mithras, pp. 190, 191).
(7) Reverend Charles Biggs stated:
"The disciples of Mithra formed an organized church, with a developed hierarchy. They possessed the ideas of Mediation, Atonement, and a Saviour, who is human and yet divine, and not only the idea, but a doctrine of the future life. They had a Eucharist, and a Baptism, and other curious analogies might be pointed out between their system and the church of the Messiah (The Christian Platonists, p. 240).
Again, we see Satan at work to cause people to stumble and be blind to what tradition has led them to celebrate and practice.
(8) In Roman catacombs a relic of Mithraic worship was preserved. It was a picture of the infant Mithras seated in the lap of his virgin mother, while on their knees before him were Persian Magi adoring him and offering gifts.
(9) He was buried in a tomb and after three days he rose again. His resurrection was celebrated every year.
(10) The Christian Father Manes, founder of the heretical sect known as Manicheans, believed that Christ and Mithras were one. His teaching, according to Mosheim, was as follows: "Christ is that glorious intelligence which the Persians called Mithras ... His residence is in the sun" (Ecclesiastical History, 3rd century, Part 2, ch. 5).
We can see from the above list that there has been a “cross-pollination” of stories and myths between religions.
Our job is to simply strip off the contamination that exists in Christendom to find the original and true belief system.
Above all, to discover the tainted core of Christianity we dare not go past the Counsel of Nicaea.
The emperor Constantine was thought to be a follower of Mithras who adopted Christianity as a matter of expediency for the purpose of uniting and controlling his subjects, many who were Christian. While forging this unity he was active in the formation of Christian doctrines, such as the trinity.
The creed produced under his watchful eye confirms several beliefs held by the followers of Mithras, and likely held by the emperor himself.
CHRISTMAS BEFORE CHRIST? THE HOLIDAY UNMASKED
Most people know the Bible doesn’t mention; much less sanctify; Christmas. Does it make any difference as long as it’s intended to honor God and bring families together?
The popular American comedic actor Drew Carey was once interviewed on an equally popular television talk show, The View. Mr. Carey surprised the audience when he addressed the value of telling children the truth about Santa Claus.
“I don’t think you should tell kids that there is a Santa Claus,” he said. “That’s the first lie you tell your children.” Instead, “Tell kids that Santa’s a character we made up to celebrate a time of the season.” Otherwise, “When kids get to be 5 . . . they realize their parents have been lying to them their whole life.”
Earlier that same year the A&E cable television channel aired a program about Christmas titled Christmas Unwrapped: The History of Christmas. The promo for this program read:
“People all over the world celebrate the birth of Christ on December 25th. But why is the Savior’s nativity marked by gift-giving, and was He really born on that day? And just where did the Christmas tree come from? “Take an enchanting journey through the history of the world’s favorite holiday to learn the origins of some of the Western world’s most enduring traditions. Trace the emergence of Christmas from pagan festivals like the Roman Saturnalia, which celebrated the winter solstice.”
These two programs addressed the fact that Santa Claus is fictitious and that Christmas and its trappings emanate from pagan Roman festivals. By no means are these the only sources of information about the background of Santa Claus and Christmas.
Is there more to these ancient traditions and practices than meets the eye? And, more important, does it make any difference whether we continue them?
Celebration of the sun god
It may sound odd that any religious celebration with Christ’s name attached to it could predate Christianity. Yet the holiday we know as Christmas long predated Jesus Christ. Elements of the celebration can be traced to ancient Egypt, Babylon and Rome. This fact doesn’t cast aspersions on Jesus; it does, however, call into question the understanding and wisdom of those who, over the millennia, have insisted on perpetuating an ancient pagan festival that has devolved through much of the world as Christmas. Again, we see the results of Satan's great desciption taking place, as he deceives humanity though false religion!
Members of the early Church would have been astonished to think that the customs and practices we associate with Christmas would be incorporated into a celebration of Christ’s birth. Not until several centuries had passed would Christ’s name be attached to this popular Roman holiday.
As Alexander Hislop explains in his book The Two Babylons: “It is admitted by the most learned and candid writers of all parties that the day of our Lord’s birth cannot be determined, and that within the Christian Church no such festival as Christmas was ever heard of till the third century, and that not till the fourth century was far advanced did it gain much observance” (1959, pp. 92-93).
Note: If Jesus was born 6 months after John the Baptist who was born in the spring [Passover time] then Jesus was probably born in the fall around the Jewish fall festivals i.e., the feast of Tabernacles.
As for how Dec. 25 became the date for Christmas day, virtually any book on the history of Christmas will explain that this day was celebrated in the Roman Empire as the birthday of the sun god, Mithras.
Explaining how December 25 came to be selected as the supposed birthday of Jesus, the book 4000 Years of Christmas says: “For that day was sacred, not only to the pagan Romans but to a religion from Persia that worshipped Mithras, in those days, was one of Christianity’s strongest rivals. This Persian religion was Mithraism, whose followers worshiped the sun, and celebrated its return to strength on that day” (Earl and Alice Count, 1997, p. 37).
Not only was Dec. 25 honored as the birthday of the sun, but a festival had long been observed among the heathen to celebrate the growing amount of daylight after the winter solstice, the shortest day of the year. The precursor to Christmas was in fact an idolatrous winter festival characterized by excess and debauchery that predated Christianity by many centuries.
Pre-Christian practices incorporated
This ancient festival went by different names in various cultures. In Rome it was called the Saturnalia, in honor of Saturn, the Roman god of agriculture. The observance was adopted by early Roman church leaders and given the name of Christ (“Christ mass,” or Christmas) to conciliate Christmas.
The precursor to Christmas was an idolatrous winter festival characterized by excess and debauchery that predated Christianity by centuries.
Pro-Christian practices incorporated
This ancient festival went by different names in various cultures. In Rome it was called the Saturnalia, in honor of Saturn, the Roman god of agriculture. The observance was adopted by early Roman church leaders and given the name of Christ (“Christ mass,” or Christmas) to conciliate the pagan converts and swell the number of the nominal adherents of Christianity.
The tendency on the part of third-century Catholic leadership was to meet paganism halfway; a practice made clear in a bitter lament by one of the early Catholic church fathers, Tertullian. In 230 he wrote of the inconsistency of professing Christians. He contrasted their lax and political practices with the strict fidelity of the pagans to their own beliefs: “By us who are strangers to Sabbaths, and new moons, and festivals [the biblical festivals spelled out in Leviticus 23], once acceptable to God, the Saturnalia, the feasts of January, the Brumalia, and Matronalia, are now frequented; gifts are carried to and fro, new year’s day presents are made with din, and sports and banquets are celebrated with uproar; oh, how much more faithful are the heathen to their religion, who take special care to adopt no solemnity from the Christians” (quoted by Hislop, p. 93).
Failing to make much headway in converting the pagans, the religious leaders of the Roman church began compromising by dressing the heathen customs in Christian looking garb. But, rather than converting them to the church’s beliefs, the church became largely converted to non-Christian customs in its own religious practices. Although at first the early Catholic Church censured this celebration, “the festival was far too strongly entrenched in popular favor to be abolished, and the Church finally granted the necessary recognition, believing that if Christmas could not be suppressed, it should be preserved in honor of the Christian God. Once given a Christian basis the festival became fully established in Europe with many of its pagan elements undisturbed” (Man, Myth & Magic: The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Mythology, Religion, and the Unknown, Richard Cavendish, editor, 1983, Vol. 2, p. 480, “Christmas”).
Celebration wins out over Scripture
Some resisted such spiritually poisonous compromises. “Upright men strove to stem the tide, but in spite of all their efforts, the apostasy went on, till the Church, with the exception of a small remnant, was submerged under Pagan superstition. That Christmas was originally a Pagan festival is beyond all doubt. The time of the year, and the ceremonies with which it is still celebrated, prove its origin” (Hislop, p. 93).
The aforementioned Tertullian, for one, disassociated himself from the Roman church in an attempt to draw closer to the teachings of the Bible.
He wasn’t alone in his disagreement with such trends. “As late as 245 Origen, in his eighth homily on Leviticus, repudiates as sinful the very idea of keeping the birthday of Christ as if he were a king Pharaoh” (The Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th edition, Vol. 6, p. 293, “Christmas”).
Christmas was not made a Roman holiday until A.D. 534 (ibid.). It took 300 years for the new name and symbols of Christmas to replace the old names and meaning of the winter festival, a pagan celebration that reaches back so many centuries.
Was Jesus born in December?
Most Bible scholars who have written on the subject of Jesus’ birth conclude that, based on evidence in the Bible itself, there is no possible way Christ could have been born anywhere near Dec. 25.
Again we turn to Alexander Hislop: “There is not a word in the Scriptures about the precise day of [Jesus’] birth, or the time of the year when He was born. What is recorded there, implies that at what time soever His birth took place, it could not have been on the 25th of December. At the time that the angel announced His birth to the shepherds of Bethlehem, they were feeding their flocks by night in the open fields . . . The climate of Palestine . . . from December to February, is very piercing, and it was not the custom for the shepherds of Judea to watch their flocks in the open fields later than about the end of October” (Hislop, p. 91, emphasis in original).
He goes on to explain that the autumn rains beginning in September or October in Judea would mean that the events surrounding Christ’s birth recorded in the Scriptures could not have taken place later than mid-October, so Jesus’ birth likely took place earlier in the fall (Hislop, p. 92).
Further evidence supporting Jesus’ birth in the autumn is that the Romans were intelligent enough not to set the time for taxation and travel in the dead of winter, but during more favorable conditions. Since Joseph’s lineage was from Bethlehem, and since he had to travel from Nazareth in Galilee to Bethlehem, and since his expectant wife Mary traveled with him, it would have been nearly impossible for the two to make the trip in the winter.
What difference does it make?
The Bible gives us no reason; and certainly no instruction; to support the myths and fables of Christmas and Santa Claus. They are tied to the ways of this world and contrary to the ways of Christ and His holy truth.
“Do not learn the way of the Gentiles,” God tells us (Jeremiah 10:2).
Professing Christians should examine the background of the Christmas holiday
symbols and stop telling their children that Santa Claus and his elves,
reindeer and Christmas gift-giving are connected with Jesus Christ.
Emphatically they are not! God hates lying. “These six things the Lord hates,
yes, seven are an abomination to Him: a proud look, a lying tongue, hands that
shed innocent blood, a heart that devises wicked plans, feet that are swift in
running to evil, a false witness who speaks lies, and one who sows discord
among brethren” (Proverbs 6:16-19).
Christ reveals that Satan the devil is the father of lies (John 8:44). Parents
should tell their children the truth about God and this world’s contrary and
confusing ways. If we don’t, we only perpetuate the notion that it is
acceptable for parents to lie to their children.
Can a professing Christian promote a pagan holiday and its symbols as
something that God or the Messiah has not approved?
Let’s see what God thinks about people using customs and practices rooted in
false religion to worship Him and His Son.
We find His views clearly expressed in both the Old and New Testament. God
specifically commands His people not to do what early church leaders did when
they incorporated idolatrous practices and relabeled them Christian. Before
they entered the Promised Land, God gave the Israelites a stern warning: “Take
heed to yourself that you are not ensnared to follow them [the inhabitants of
the land] . . . and that you do not inquire after their gods, saying, ‘How did these nations
serve their gods? I also will do likewise.’ “You shall not worship the Lord
your God in that way; for every abomination to the Lord which He hates they
have done to their gods . . . Whatever I command you, be careful to
observe it; you shall not add to it nor take away from it” (Deuteronomy
12:30-32, emphasis added throughout).
Many centuries later the apostle Paul traveled to and raised up church
congregations in many gentile cities. To the members of the Church of God in
Corinth, a city steeped in idolatry, Paul wrote: “What fellowship has
righteousness with lawlessness? And what communion has light with darkness? And
what accord has Christ with Belial? Or what part has a believer with an
unbeliever? And what agreement has the temple of God with idols? For you are
the temple of the living God . . . “Therefore ‘Come out from among them and be
separate, says the Lord - Yehovah. Do not touch what is unclean, and I will receive you.’
. . .
Note: If Paul witnesses what is done to celebrate Christmas and all it represents the words "Come out from among them and be sepasrate, says the Lord - Yehovah,", would apply to all those who are new creations in the Lord Messiah Jesus
Therefore, having these promises, beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all
filthiness of the flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness [separateness] in the fear of God” (2
Corinthians 6:14-17; 7:1).
Instead of allowing members to rename and celebrate customs associated with
false gods, Paul’s instructions were clear: They were to have nothing to do
with them. He similarly told Athenians who were steeped in idolatry, “Truly,
these times of ignorance God overlooked, but now commands all men everywhere to
repent” (Acts 17:30).
God alone has the right to decide the special days on which we should worship
Him. Jesus the Messiah plainly tells us that “God is Spirit, and those who worship
Him must worship in spirit and truth [with a truthful spirit]” (John 4:24).
We cannot honor God in truth with false practices adopted from the worship
of nonexistent gods or demons posing as gods. Jesus said: “This people honors
Me with their lips, but their heart is far from Me. And in vain they worship
Me, teaching as doctrines the commandments of men” (Mark 7:6-7).
With God no substitutes are acceptable. It makes no difference that
Christians mean well when they observe Christmas. God is not amused or pleased.
The knowledge of how to honor Almighty God, who made us, preserves us and gives
us eternal life, has been made available to you. Will you honor God or follow
the traditions of mankind?
Professing Christians should examine the background of the Christmas holiday
symbols and stop telling their children that Santa Claus and his elves,
reindeer and Christmas gift-giving are connected with Jesus Christ.
How Did Santa Claus Enter the Picture?
How did Santa Claus enter the picture? Why is this mythical figure so closely aligned with the Christmas holiday? Here, too, many books are available to shed light on the origins of this popular character.
“Santa Claus” is an American corruption of the Dutch form Sinterklaas or Sint Nicolaas, a figure brought to America by the early Dutch colonists (see The Encyclopaedia Britannica, 11th edition, Vol. 19, p. 649, “Nicholas, St.”). This name, in turn, is said to stem from St. Nicholas, bishop of the city of Myra in southern Asia Minor, a Catholic saint honored by the Greeks and the Latins on Dec. 6. He was bishop of Myra in the time of the Roman emperor Diocletian, was persecuted, tortured for the Catholic faith and kept in prison until the more tolerant reign of Constantine (ibid.).
Various stories claim a link from Christmas to St. Nicholas, all of them having to do with gift-giving on the eve of St. Nicholas, subsequently transferred to Christmas Day (ibid.).
How, we might ask, did a bishop from the sunny Mediterranean coast of Turkey come to be associated with a red-suited man who lives at the North Pole and rides in a sleigh pulled by flying reindeer? Knowing what we have already learned about the ancient pre-Christian origins of Christmas, we shouldn’t be surprised to learn that Santa Claus, too, is nothing but a figure recycled from ancient pagan beliefs.
The trappings associated with Santa Claus; his fur trimmed wardrobe, sleigh and reindeer; reveal his origin from the cold climates of the far North. Some sources trace him to the ancient Northern European gods Woden (or Odin) and Thor, from which the days of the week Wednesday (Woden’s day) and Thursday (Thor’s day) get their designations (Earl and Alice Count, 4000 Years of Christmas, 1997, pp. 56-64).
Others trace him even farther back in time to the Roman god Saturn and the Greek god Silenus (William Walsh, The Story of Santa Klaus, pp. 70-71).
How much do you know about the origins of Christmas and it's strange practices? What do such things as holly, mistletoe, decorated trees and a man in a red suit (riding in a sleigh pulled by flying reindeer) have to do with the coming of the Son of God? You need to know the answers! When you do you will remove any practices of Christmas from your living your life as a representative of the lord Jesus as I did in 1964.
Written by: by Jerold Aust Edited by Bruce Lyon
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