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The Silence of Educators:
Teachers are all too often silent about the origin of
the customs they are forced to teach in today's schools!
If they were to speak out, many would lose their jobs!

Isn't it time we examined why we encourage our children
to celebrate St. Valentine's Day - when it is never
mentioned in the Bible as a practice of the New
Testament Church?
Today, candy makers unload tons of heart-shaped red
boxes for February 14, while millions of the younger set
are annually exchanging valentines. Florists consider
February 14 - St. Valentine's Day - as one of their best
business days. And young lovers pair off - at least for
a dance or two - at St. Valentine's balls. WHY? Where
did these customs originate? Where do we find any such
practices in the Bible? How did we come to inherit these
customs?
A Christian Custom?
Did you know that centuries before Christ, the pagan
Romans celebrated February 15 and the evening of
February 14 as an idolatrous and sensuous festival in
honor of Lupercus, the "hunter of wolves"?
The Romans called the festival the Lupercalia. The
custom of exchanging valentines and all the other
traditions in honor of Lupercus - the deified
hero-hunter of Rome - was also linked anciently with the
pagan practice of teenagers "going steady." It usually
led to fornication. Today, the custom of teenagers
dating only one person on a regular basis is thought
very modern. It isn't. It is merely a rebirth of an old
custom "handed down from the Roman festival of the
Lupercalia, celebrated in the month of February, when
names of young women were put into a box and drawn out
by men as chance directed." That's the admission of the
Encyclopedia Americana article entitled St. Valentine's
Day.
When Constantine made Christianity the official religion
of the Roman Empire there was some talk in church
circles of discarding this pagan free-for-all. But the
Roman citizens wouldn't hear of it! So it was agreed
that the holiday would continue as it was, except for
the more grossly sensual observances.
It was not until the reign of Pope Gelasius that the
holiday became a Christian custom:
"As far back as 496 A.D., Pope Gelasius changed
Lupercalia on February 15 to St. Valentine's Day on
February 14." (page 172 of Customs and Holidays Around
the World by Lavinia Dobler).
But how did this pagan festival acquire the name of St.
Valentine's Day? And why is the little naked Cupid of
pagan Rome so often associated today with February 14?
And why do little children and young people still cut
out hearts and send them on a day in honor of Lupercus,
the hunter of wolves? Why have we supposed these pagan
customs in honor of a false god are Christian?
Who was the original St. Valentine?
Valentine was a common Roman name. Roman parents
often gave the name of their children in honor of the
famous man who was first called Valentine in antiquity.
That famous man was Lupercus, the hunter. But who was
Lupercus? And why should he have also borne the name
Valentine among the heathen Romans?
The Greeks called Lupercus by the name of Pan. The
Semites called Pan Baul, according to the Classical
Dictionaries. Baal - mentioned so often in the Bible -
was merely another name for Nimrod, "the mighty hunter"
(Genesis 10:9). It was a common proverb of ancient time
that Nimrod was "the MIGHTY hunter before the Lord."
Nimrod was their hero - their strong man - their
VALENTINE!
How plain that the original Valentine was Nimrod, the
mighty hunter of wolves. Yet another of Nimrod's names
was Sanctuc or Santa, meaning Saint. It was a common
title of any hero-god. No wonder that the Roman
Lupercalia is called "St. Valentine's Day"!
But why do we associate HEARTS on a day in honor of
Nimrod - the Baal of the Phoenicians and Semites?
The surprising answer is that the pagan Romans acquired
the symbol of the heart from the Babylonians. In the
Babylonian tongue the word for heart was bal (Strong's
Exhaustive Concordance of the Bible #H1168). The heart -
bal - was merely a symbol of Nimrod - the Baal or Lord
of the Babylonians!
Executed at Rome Nimrod-the original St. Valentine - was
also known as Saturn, the Roman-Babylonian god who hid
from his pursuers in a secret place. The Latin word
Saturn is derived from the Semitic-speaking Babylonians.
It means "be hid," "hide self," "secret," "conceal." The
original Semitic (Hebrew) word, from which the Latin
Saturn is derived, is used eighty-three times in the Old
Testament (see Young's Analytical Concordance to the
Bible under "Sathar," also "sether").
According to ancient tradition, Saturn (Nimrod) fled
from his pursuers to Italy.
The Apenine mountains of Italy were anciently named the
mountains of Nembrod or Nimrod. Nimrod briefly hid out
at the site where Rome was later built. The ancient name
of Rome, before it was rebuilt in 753 B.C. was Saturnia
- the site of Saturn's (Nimrod's) hiding. There he was
found and slain for his crimes. Later, professing
Christians in Constantine's day made Nimrod - the St.
Valentine of the heathen - a Saint of the Church and
continued to honor him under the name of a Christian
martyr.
Why February 14?
But why should the Romans have chosen February 15 and
the evening of February 14 to honor Lupercus - the
Nimrod of the Bible? (Remember that day in ancient times
began at sunset the evening before.)
Nimrod - Baal or sun god of the ancient pagans - was
said to have been born at the winter solstice. In
ancient time the solstice occurred on January 6 and his
birthday therefore was celebrated on December 25 and now
called Christmas. It was the custom of antiquity for,
the mother of a male child to present herself for
purification on the fortieth day after January 6 -
Nimrod's original birth date - takes us to February 15,
the celebration of which began on the evening of
February 14 - the Lupercalia or St. Valentine's Day.
On this day in February, Semiramis, the mother of
Nimrod, was said to have been purified and to have
appeared for the first time in public with her son as
the original "mother and child.”
The Roman month February, in fact, derives its name from
the februa which the Roman priests used in the rites
celebrated on St. Valentine's Day. The febru were thongs
from the skins of sacrificial animals used in rites of
purification on the evening of February 14.
Cupid Makes His Appearance
Another name for the child Nimrod was "Cupid" - meaning
"desire." It is said that when Nimrod's mother saw him,
she lusted after him - she desired him. Nimrod became
her Cupid - her desired one - and later her Valentine!
So evil was Nimrod's mother that it is said she married
her own son! Inscribed on the monuments of ancient Egypt
are inscriptions that Nimrod (the Egyptians called him
Osiris) was "the husband of his mother.”
As Nimrod grew up, he became the child-hero of many
women who desired him. He was their Cupid! In the Book
of Daniel he is called the "desire of women" (Daniel
11:37). Moffatt translates the word as Tammuz - a
Babylonian name of Nimrod.
He provoked so many women to jealousy that an idol of
him was often called the "image of jealousy" (Ezekiel
8:5).
Nimrod, the hunter, was also their Valentine - their
strong or mighty her! No wonder the pagans commemorated
their hero-hunter Nimrod, or Baal, by sending heart
shaped love tokens to one another on the evening of
February 14 as a symbol of him.
Nimrod, the son of Cush the Ethiopian, was later a
source of embarrassment to the pagans of Europe. They
didn't want an African to worship. Consequently, they
substituted a supposed son of Nimrod, a child named
Horus, born after the death of Nimrod. This child then
became a "fair Cupid" of European tradition.
It is about time we examined these customs of the pagans
now falsely labeled Christian. It is time we quit this
Roman and Babylonian foolishness - this idolatry - and
get back to the faith of Christ delivered once for all
time. Let's stop teaching our children these pagan
customs in memory of Baal the sun god - the original St.
Valentine - and teach them instead what the Bible really
says! (BibleStudy.org)
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