“Thus saith the Lord, Learn not the way
of the heathen…For the customs of the people are vain…” (Jeremiah 10:2-3)
February 14 is called by some, Valentine's Day, but
it is historically known as the day of Saint Valentine. In any encyclopedia and
almost in any dictionary, we see that the Roman Cupid was the same Greek Eros,
symbols both, of sensual love. Cupid was a god of the Romans and this explains
why the Roman Catholic Institution put it in the Gregorian calendar, only with
the name of “Saint Valentine,” on February 14, doing a miscellany of pagan
religions.
Sexual love has always been the essential
ingredients in the observance of Valentine’s Day. This was true in
ancient Rome, during the Middle Ages, and it is true today. Moreover, the
mid February date of this observance has not changed. Only the name has
changed, since February 14 is the eve of the Roman festival originally called
Lupercalia.
The Valentine of Roman days was less refined,
however, than its modern celebration. After sacrifice of goats and a dog, the
priests, called Luperci, traditionally ran, in two bands, a marked course
around the city on this day, scantily dressed only in goatskin girdles and
carrying strips of goat skin with which they struck women to take away their
infertility. The strips bore the name “Februa,” a word connected with Februare,
“to purify,” hence the day was called “Februatus” and the month
Februarius.
Valentine’s Day is the
world’s “holiday of love.” Since the Bible states that God is love (I John 4:8,
16) does He approve of the celebration of this day? Does He want His people
partaking of any customs associated with this day? Like Christmas, Easter,
Halloween, and other holidays, Valentine’s Day is another attempt to “whitewash”
perverted customs and observances of pagan gods and idols by “Christianizing”
them.
In 313 A.D., Roman Emperor
Constantine legalized Christianity and ended Rome's persecution of Christians.
In 380 A.D., Christianity is made the official state religion of the Roman
Empire. These actions not only enabled the teachings of Christianity to spread
unhindered within the empire, it encouraged non-Christians to convert to the
once-persecuted religion.
The pagans, however, who
adopted Christianity as their religion did not entirely abandon the traditions
and practices they held before their "conversion." One of these
traditions brought into the church was the fertility celebration known as the
Lupercalia.
As innocent and harmless
as Valentine’s Day may appear, its traditions and customs originate from two of
the most sexually perverted pagan festivals of ancient history: Lupercalia and
the feast day of Juno Februata. Celebrated on February 15, Lupercalia (known as
the “festival of sexual license”) was held by the ancient Romans in honor of
Lupercus, the god of fertility.
On this day, the Luperci
(priests) of Lupercus, assisted by Vestal Virgins, dressed in goatskins for a
bloody ceremony. The priests of Lupercus, the wolf god, would sacrifice goats
and a dog and then smear themselves with blood. These priests made red with
sacrificial blood, would run around Palatine Hill in a wild frenzy while waving
a goatskin thong called a “februa.” Women would sit all around the hill, as the
bloody priests would strike them with the goatskin thongs to make them fertile.
The young women would then gather in the city and their names were put in
boxes. These “love notes” were called “billets.” The men of Rome would draw a
billet, and the woman whose name was on it became his sexual lust partner with
whom he would fornicate until the next Lupercalia or February 14th. This custom
was observed in the Roman Empire for centuries.
Thus, February 14th became
a day of unbridled sexual lust. The color “red” was sacred to that day because
of the blood and the “heart shape” that is popular to this day. The heart shape
was not a representation of the human heart, which looks nothing like it. This
shape represents the human female matrix or opening to the chamber of sacred
copulation.
When the Gnostic Catholic
Church began to get a foothold in Rome around the 3rd century A.D., they became
known as Valentinians. The Catholic Valentinians retained the sexual license of
the festival in what they called “angels in a nuptial chamber”, which was also called
the “sacrament of copulation.” This was said to be a reenactment of the
marriage of “Sophia and the Redeemer.” As the participants of the February 14th
ritual began their sexual sacrament, it was presided over and watched by the
priests known as Valentinians,
In A.D. 494, Pope Gelasius
renamed the festival of Juno Februata as the “Feast of the Purification of the
Virgin Mary.” It is also known as Candlemas, the Presentation of the Lord, and
the Purification of the Blessed Virgin, and the Feast of the Presentation of
Christ in the Temple.
After Constantine had made
the Roman church’s brand of Christianity the official religion of the Roman
Empire (A.D. 325), church leaders wanted to do away with the pagan festivals of
the people. Lupercalia was high on their list. Nevertheless, the Roman citizens
thought otherwise.
It was not until A.D. 496
that the Church of Rome was able to do anything about Lupercalia. Powerless to
get rid of it, Pope Gelasius instead changed it from February 15 to the 14th
and called it St. Valentine’s Day. It was named after one of that church’s
saints, who, in A.D. 270, was executed by the emperor for his beliefs.
The church whitewashed
Lupercalia even further. Instead of putting the names of girls into a box, the
names of “saints” were drawn by both boys and girls. It was then each person’s
duty to emulate the life of the saint whose name he or she had drawn. This was
Rome’s vain attempt to “whitewash” a pagan observance by “Christianizing” it.
Though the church in Rome had banned the sexual lottery, young men still
practiced a much toned-down version, sending women whom they desired
handwritten romantic messages containing St. Valentine’s name.
THE FIRST MAN CALLED VALENTINE
However, who was the
original Valentine? What does the name Valentine mean? Valentine comes from the
Latin Valentinus, which derives from Valens “to be
strong, powerful, and mighty.” The Bible describes a man with a similar title:
“And Cush begat Nimrod: he began to be a mighty one in the
earth. He was a mighty hunter before the Lord: wherefore it is
said, Even as Nimrod the mighty hunter before the Lord”
(Gen. 10:8-9)). He was said to have hunted with a bow and arrow.
As mentioned, the Romans
celebrated Lupercalia to honor the hunter-god Lupercus. To the Greeks, from
whom the Romans had copied most of their mythology, Lupercus was known as Pan,
the god of light. The Phoenicians worshipped the same deity as Baal, the sun
god. Baal was one of many names or titles for Nimrod, a mighty hunter,
especially of wolves. He was also the founder and first lord of Babel (Gen.
10:10-12). Defying God, Nimrod was the originator of the Babylonian Mystery
Religion, whose mythologies have been copied by the Egyptians, the Greeks, the
Romans, and a multitude of other ancient peoples. Under different names or
titles Pan, Lupercus, Saturn, Osiris. Nimrod is the strong man and
hunter-warrior god of the ancients.
What does the heart symbol
have to do with a day honoring Nimrod/Valentine? The title Baal means
“lord” or “master,” and is mentioned throughout the Bible as the god of pagans.
God warned His people not to worship or even tolerate the ways of Baal
(Nimrod). In ancient Chaldean (the language of the Babylonians), bal,
which is similar to Baal, meant, “heart.” This is another reason
why the heart symbol was used on this day.
The name Cupid comes
from the Latin verb cupere, meaning “to desire.” Cupid was the son
of Venus, the Roman goddess of beauty and love. Also known as Eros in ancient
Greece, he was the son of Aphrodite. According to myth, he was responsible for
impregnating numerous goddesses and mortals. Cupid was a child-like archer
(remember, Nimrod was a skilled archer). Mythology describes Cupid as having
both a cruel and happy personality. He would use his invisible arrows, tipped
with gold, to strike unsuspecting men and women, causing them to fall madly in
love. He did not do this for their benefit, but to drive them crazy with
intense passion, to make their lives miserable, and to laugh at the results.
WHAT GOD THINKS (Jeremiah 10:2-3, Matthew 15:9)
Does it matter that an
ancient festival used to worship pagan gods and promote fertility was adopted
by the church and used to worship the God of the Bible? Does God care what
customs are used to worship and honor Him or what holidays we celebrate?
Throughout the Bible, God
describes “heathens” as those who worship things that He had created (animals,
the sun, the moon, stars, trees, etc.), man-made idols, or anything but the
one true God. He calls such people and their practices pagan. True believers
understand that God hates any customs, practices, and traditions that are
rooted in paganism.
When God rescued the
twelve tribes of Israel from Egypt, He commanded them, “After the doings of the
land of Egypt, wherein you dwelt, shall you not do: and after the doings of the
land of Canaan, where I bring you, shall you not do: neither shall you walk in
their ordinances” (Lev. 18:3). God demanded the Israelites not to defile
themselves with the pagan practices and customs of surrounding nations (vs.
24-29). “Therefore shall you keep Mine ordinance, that you commit not any one
of these abominable customs, which were committed before you, and that you defile
not yourselves therein: I am the Lord your God” (vs. 30).
"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 . . .” (Deuteronomy
12:29-31). The issue in this passage is not the worship of other gods. The
warning is to not adopt customs used to worship or honor other gods to serve
and worship the true God. The Israelites were severely punished because
they lusted after pagan customs, rituals, traditions, and practices. As you can
see, God does not take paganism lightly.
“COME OUT OF HER, MY PEOPLE”
Concerning this pagan,
satanic system, God commands His people, “Come out of her, My people, that you
be not partakers of her sins, and that you receive not of her plagues” (Rev
18:4).
Valentine’s Day originates
from the ancient paganism of this Satan-influenced world. It is designed to
deceive mankind by appealing to fleshly, carnal desires or, as the Bible calls
them, the works of the flesh. “Now the works of the flesh are manifest
[made obvious], which are these; Adultery, fornication, uncleanness,
lasciviousness, idolatry…drunkenness, revellings, and such like” (Gal.
5:19-21). Does any of this sound like Lupercalia to you?
It should go without
saying that as true believers we should not celebrate Valentine’s Day. In God’s
eyes, it is still “Lupercalia”. We must ask ourselves, “Should we, as
children of God, be associated in any way with this celebration of evil roots?
Should we be doing what the heathen have done for so many years and try to
justify it as love?” Romans 12:2 answers this very well, “And be not conformed
to this world: but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind…”
A true child of God knows
that he must actively come out of this world, out of its pagan-infested
customs, practices, and traditions. The true origin of Valentine's Day and
its symbols are rooted in the worship of false gods and have no Biblical basis.
To participate in the practices of Valentine’s Day
or Cupid, although they have been modified over the years and candies and
romantic cards are given, we are displeasing God, as well as when He was upset
with the people who served Ashtaroth (Judges 10:6-7). If we say that we serve
the true God, it is best that we do so taking into account I Samuel 7:3: “Then
Samuel spoke to all the house of Israel, saying, “If you return to the
Lord with all your hearts, then put away the foreign gods and the
Ashtaroth from among you, and prepare your hearts for the Lord, and serve
Him only; and He will deliver you from the hand of the Philistines.”
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