Does Easter Really Have Satanic Roots? Ex-Witch Explains
The days Christians observe to remember Christ sacrifice are days Satanists use to perform human sacrifices, Beth Eckert says. Yes, Easter is among them.
As a victim of satanic ritual abuse and trauma, Eckert, a former witch, says there is a significant correlation in the calendar days used to celebrate Christ and the days satanists perform evil.
Eckert explains a brief history of Easter on her blog:
Easter is a holiday that was first celebrated by the first Christians as Passover. After the Exodus of Israel from Egypt, where they were enslaved for hundreds of years, God commanded His people to observe a new festival. The feast of Passover was to remind God’s children of the freedom they received at the hands of their Father. The early church recognized that Passover became a new covenant with God’s people to be a time where we are to commemorate Jesus as the Passover lamb.
As time went on and many pagans came into salvation through Christ, they began to bring in the traditions they carried with them for generations. Traditions of celebrating new life, rebirth, fertility and the spring equinox fit in perfectly with the idea of the death and resurrection of Christ. As the early church began to explode with new converts, Christians couldn’t help but adapt their pagan ways to their new Christian beliefs.
Other Christians have talked about this connection before, including Answers in Genesis.
Pagans who weren’t saved also celebrated at the same time of the year, using Christian days to perform child sacrifices among other horrors.
“Maundy Thursday, Good Friday and Easter Sunday are Satanic ritual days. They are days where death, blood-letting and human sacrifice are ritualized in satanic celebrations. Real people in America and all over the world are being harmed in this depraved and inhumane rituals; adults and children alike. While Christians are flocking to church to celebrate the death and resurrection of Christ, hundreds, if not thousands of innocents are being defiled,” Eckert says.
So what does this mean for us as Easter rapidly approaches?
Watch the video to see.
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