TDS Democrats

No matter what President Trump does, the demented heathens will rage.

Easter

The word “Easter” is often the first casualty in the war over holiday origins. For nearly 200 years, a “Rogues’ Gallery” of myth-makers—from the sectarian Alexander Hislop to the nationalist Brothers Grimm—has claimed the word is a “baptized” pagan goddess.
👉 The evidence says otherwise.
⭐ 1. The Translation:
When the Gospel reached the English and Germanic tribes, they faced a choice: adopt the Latin Pascha or translate the concept into their own tongue. While the Franks rolled over and became Romanized (giving us the French Pâques), the Saxons stood their ground. They didn’t keep a goddess that didn’t exist; they translated a reality.
* The Event: The Resurrection.
* The Season: The period of the “Rising Sun” or “Early Dawn.”  It was a reference to the season of the year when the dawn started earlier each day.
* The Word: Easter (Old English: Eastron) which comes from the ancient German word for east / dawn, ōstarūn.  It has zero connection to any verifiable pagan German goddess and absolutely nothing to do with Ishtar the Babylonian goddess of war and prostitutes.
⭐ 2. The “Ishtar” Phonetic Trap:
The claim that “Easter” comes from the Babylonian “Ishtar” is a 19th-century fabrication (aka A LIE) by Alexander Hislop (1807-1865) and popularized by the bonafide heretic and cult leader, Herbert W. Armstrong (1892-1986).

The claim relies on a sketchy phonetic coincidence that ignores 3,000 miles of geography and entirely different language families. It is the historical equivalent of claiming a “Car” is named after a “Cartoon,” or a baseball “bat” is named after a flying mammal.
⭐ 3. The “Goddess” Ghost:
The only historical mention of a goddess named Eostre comes from a single sentence by the monk Bede in 725 AD. Bede was a brilliant scholar, but he was “filling in the gaps” by speculation based on the naming conventions of Julian calendar.
* The Absolute Zero Reality:
There are zero altars, zero inscriptions, and zero mentions of this goddess in any other Germanic territory (Gothic, Norse, or Frankish).
* The Linguistic Proof:
Every Germanic language uses the root Austr- to mean “East” or “Dawn.” The Goths in Eastern Europe were using this root 400 years before Bede was born. It is a compass point, not a cult.
⭐ 4. A Reformation Before the Reformation:
Using the word Easter was the opening salvo in a 1,300-year struggle to worship God in the common tongue. By refusing to use the Latin Pascha, the Saxons asserted that the Resurrection belonged to their language and their identity as believers.
👉 The Verdict:
Those who call Easter “Pagan,”  aren’t debunking a myth; they are repeating propaganda from the lies of Hislop to the dechristianization attempts of the Nazis to the invention of hippie nature paganism that has little resemblance to the actual dark Celtic paganism it claims to follow.

BTW: bunnies and eggs have nothing to do with ancient fertility symbols.  They come from Germanic folk traditions.  The claim  they come from Babylon is just flat out make believe. 

Eggs were forbidden during lent.  Hard boiling them was part of the process to preserve them.  Coloring them was to help in identifying them and as a way to celebrate the end of the fast.  And that ancient statue people claim has “eggs” all over its chest isn’t Ishtar but the unrelated goddess, Artemis of Ephesus.  Those aren’t eggs but bull testes.

The first mention of the The “Easter Hare”  appears in 1682 in a German medical dissertation by Georg Franck von Franckenau. He describes it as a local folk myth. It has no connection to any ancient goddess.

The Neo-pagan claims that eggs and bunnies are their ancient fertility symbols is a modern fabrication.  They took non-religous add-ons and claimed them as their own.  To be clear, modern nature paganism compared to ancient Celtic paganism is a bigger stretch than claiming New Coke tasted exactly the same as Coke Classic. The original “dark” paganism was a world of blood-oaths and sacrifice; the modern version is a romanticized “nature-vibe” built on 19th-century myths.

👉 Easter isn’t a pagan holdout or rebranding. It is a Saxon Declaration of Independence in the fight to worship God in one’s own language and not the language of Rome (Latin).
________________
⭐ Technical Note for the Curious:
The spelling Easterne (as found in the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle) and the Old High German Ōstarūn share a plural suffix. This indicates that “Easter” wasn’t a person, but a season of dawns—the time of year when the light finally overtakes the darkness. It is the perfect linguistic match for the Resurrection.

Pastorwardclinton.com

Leftist’s Hatred

The Spiritual Implications That Leftists Do Not, Nor Will Not Understand…

Their ‘No Kings’ Proclamation Runs Deeper Than Their Hatred and Disapproval of Trump…

It Sets Precedent within Their Hearts…

‘No King’ But Themselves…

“We’ll Take Barabbas Over the ‘King of All Kings’…Please, and Thank You…”
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Democrats “no King” thing

The Spiritual Implications That Leftists Do Not, Nor Will Not Understand…

Their ‘No Kings’ Proclamation Runs Deeper Than Their Hatred and Disapproval of Trump…

It Sets Precedent within Their Hearts…

‘No King’ But Themselves…

“We’ll Take Barabbas Over the ‘King of All Kings’…Please and Thank You…”
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Francis Asbury

As a frail 71-year-old preacher laid on the table behind the pulpit, he preached his last sermon. Too weak to stand, he was carried into the Methodist church in Richmond, Virginia. It was March 24, 1816. Though weakened in health, he spoke for an hour with an unmistakable quiet authority. The congregants were rapt with every word as they perceived the magnitude of the moment. The Prophet of the Long Road was nearing the end of a remarkable journey. 

Fittingly, he preached on Romans 9:28, “For he will finish the work…”

For forty-five years he faithfully ministered in a country not his own. Yet this man sent by John Wesley left family and loved ones in England, never to return again to his homeland. His heart found its resting place in Him. A memorial erected near this Methodist church where the last sermon was preached denotes him as one “whose only home was his saddle, his parish the continent.” This inscription upon a memorial was clearly evident with every step along the long road this faithful circuit rider trekked.

This man was Francis Asbury.

His last journal entry on December 7, 1815 grants us a glimpse into the life of the Father of American Methodism:

“My consolations are great. I live in God from moment to moment.”

The saddle was his home and the continent was his parish simply because he found his greatest satisfaction and source of consolation in Christ during each passing moment. His longevity in God was sustained with a heart utterly dependent upon God’s grace. Though Asbury suffered much to advance God’s kingdom, he faithfully preached Christ until the very end.

Pray for Trump

A Georgia pastor has gone viral after a sermon in which he urged Christians to pray for Donald Trump, saying he believes God is “using” the president in ways that may be difficult for people to understand.

Otha L Turnbough, pastor of Lionheart Church in Georgia, told congregants not to speak negatively about the president, but instead to pray for him, emphasizing that God often works through unexpected and controversial figures.

“God is using that man outside your understanding,” Turnbough said. He encouraged listeners to look to the Old Testament, where God used unlikely leaders and prophets to confront evil and carry out judgment, arguing that similar biblical patterns can be seen today.

Turnbough suggested that while some of Trump’s actions provoke strong reactions, they should be viewed through a spiritual lens rather than an emotional one. He told the congregation that when God moves to judge evil, the individuals He uses are often misunderstood or viewed as unconventional. #Trump #trumpadministration

America’s Foundation

Did you know that in early America, some elected officials couldn’t take office unless they publicly professed faith in Jesus Christ? When the American colonies first became independent states, several of them wrote constitutions that required public officials to affirm Christian belief.

One of the clearest examples comes from the Delaware Constitution of 1776. Anyone elected to public office in Delaware had to take an oath that included this declaration:

“I profess faith in God the Father, and in Jesus Christ His only Son, and in the Holy Ghost, one God, blessed forevermore…”

Officials also had to affirm that the Holy Scriptures were given by divine inspiration.

Another piece of American history many people have never been told. History becomes a lot more interesting when you read the original documents!

Democrat Lawfare

DEMOCRATS’ DARK THREAT: SUSAN RICE PLOTS PAYBACK AGAINST TRUMP SUPPORTERS

Susan Rice, Barack Obama’s former national security advisor and now a Netflix board member, just dropped the mask. In a February podcast rant, she warned corporations, law firms, universities, and media outlets that “take a knee” to President Trump: Don’t think Democrats will forgive and forget if they claw back power. “It’s not going to end well,” she snarled. Preserve your documents. Get ready for subpoenas. An “accountability agenda” is coming for anyone who dared align with Trump.

This isn’t tough talk. It’s a naked call for weaponizing government against political enemies—pure lawfare dressed up as justice. Rice basically admitted what conservatives have warned about for years: Democrats view the law as a club to smash anyone who won’t bow to their agenda.

Enter Senator John Kennedy, who took to the Senate floor and nailed it cold. “What Ms. Rice is talking about is payback,” he said. “What Ms. Rice seems to be saying is that it’s okay in America today to use the law to prosecute and harass your political enemies. I find that astounding.”

Kennedy’s right. This is banana republic stuff—retribution over rule of law. In a free country, you don’t threaten businesses for doing business with a duly elected president. You don’t promise revenge just because voters picked the other side. Rice’s comments expose the real authoritarian mindset on the left: Elections are fine, until they lose them. Then it’s hunting season.

Americans are sick of it. We’ve watched years of selective prosecutions, endless investigations, and two-tiered justice. Rice just confirmed the plan—if Democrats regain power, the purge begins. Companies better think twice before bending the knee to her side next time.

The message is clear: Vote like your freedom depends on it. Because according to Susan Rice, it does.

Who Am I?

What is one word that describes you?

In response to the above “Daily Prompt” that would be

Pastor

  Now I am fully aware that that would trigger a lot of negative thoughts in the minds of some folk and there are others that would e somewhat ambivalent.  While still others would have positive thoughts.

  Among those who have positive thoughts, many, if not most, would wonder; are you one of the good ones?  Most of those who know me would say “yes”.  I am sure there are some who would answer otherise.

  I am almost always amused by social media posts that say snarkely “…and you call yourself a Pastor?”  A lot of those individuals, if they were able to spend some time with me face-to-face would soon, by their own choice and from the heart begin to call me “pastor”.  Others, on social media, have angrily made that snarky statement because their hypocrisy -or- Scriptural ignorance has been exposed.  Thereby, I have accomplished my God-given task – Comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.

SOTU Speech was Very Good

Sadly Congressional Democrats demonstrated that they hate almost everything this nation stands for tonight.

Nevertheless our nation is back, in the last years we have had a turn-around for the ages.  Our border is secure. Gas prices have decreased, inflation is down, the border is secure, and so much more.

This will be a year to celebrate America and thank God for His blessings on us.