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19 answers

Get an Easter egg? I dunno

2007-03-19 03:19:45 · answer #1 · answered by OriginalBubble 6 · 0 1

I suspect you know the answer ? Why do you ask ? If not:
It is unlucky to be 13 people at the table invited for dinner on Easter Sunday. It is believe that the person sitting nearest the main door is the person who will pass away in the same year.
Always have either 12 or 14 people at the same table for dinner on Easter.

2007-03-19 18:49:21 · answer #2 · answered by Nicolette 6 · 0 0

Is this a question, or is it pagan propaganda? There was no festival of Christ's resurrection in the apostolic church. Even though the Jews' passover festival was very familiar to Jewish Christians, there is no command to observe it, and there is no record of its observance among New Testament Christians. As Paul wrote, such things are a shadow of the reality, which is living in Christ, 24x7. Christ is the Christian's passover, all the time. Those who do not have the bottle, chase shadows, and go back to their paganisms straight after their imaginary festivals. That is a very common observation.

Christians do not celebrate any day more than another, not sabbath, Sunday, 'Christmas', Passover (called 'Pascha' or similar in some countries), or any other invention of the devil's ministers.

Jesus' resurrection was proof that his death paid the price for sins, and every day is lived with that fact in mind, every decision is made with that fact in mind, by those who have committed their lives to him. Celebrating such an event when they are 'talking' to Jesus every day seems totally bizarre. 'Easter' is for the uncommitted, for pagans only. (It's a pagan word, anyway.)

m.

2007-03-19 10:54:20 · answer #3 · answered by miller 5 · 0 0

Neither Easter [pagan name] a pagan event [fertility,bunnies,eggs] or superstition has places with true Christianity.
Christendom embraces this unclean celebration but true Christians celebrate the memorial of Christ on the proper biblical day of the Jewish Passover of Nisan 14 (2nd April 2007 at Sun down)

2007-03-19 12:14:38 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The origin of Easter involves the birth of Semiramis' illegitimate son, Tammuz. Somehow, Semiramis convinced the people that Tammuz was actually Nimrod reborn. Since people had been looking for the promised savior since the beginning of mankind (see Genesis 3:15), they were persuaded by Semiramis to believe that Tammuz was that savior, even that he had been supernaturally conceived. Before long, in addition to worshipping Tammuz (or Nimrod reborn), the people also worshipped Semiramis herself as the goddess of fertility. In other cultures, she has been called Ishtar, Ashtur and yes, Easter

2007-03-19 10:21:10 · answer #5 · answered by Noble Angel 6 · 0 0

THERE IS NO SUCH DAY

ITS MAN MADE

UPON THE FIRST DAY OF THE WEEK THE
DISCIPLES CAME TOGETHER TO BREAK BREAD
ACTS 20:7 2 COR 11:23-30

YOU SEE THE CHURCH THAT CHRIST BUILT
CELEBRATES HIS LIFE BURIAL AND RES. (EASTER)
EVERY SUNDAY RELIGIOUS CHURCHES JUST TALK
ABOUT IT

2007-03-19 10:34:15 · answer #6 · answered by manoman 4 · 0 0

Have intimate relations with the easter bunny?

2007-03-19 10:20:33 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

when i was a teen, i had - you know what - in a stolen car in at a church on good friday, which also happened to be friday the 13th. oh, but i guess that might be considered something that is bad luck TO do - lol - oops

2007-03-19 10:21:37 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

Eat Rabbit.

2007-03-19 10:20:39 · answer #9 · answered by Jeanmarie 7 · 1 1

Breathe.

2007-03-19 10:19:56 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

Pick up all the dog's droppings that have emerged from under the snow.

2007-03-19 10:22:00 · answer #11 · answered by Murazor 6 · 1 1

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