It does not do well to apologize for poor or misleading interpretations.
Personally, I don't think it was ever meant to be a literal understanding. It was more of a dictum. See Hosea 6:2 or the Midrash teaching on Genesis 42:17. The point is Jesus died, and was buried. And then rose again from the dead.
What does its being a dictum or your personal opinion have to do with what Jesus, himself, said?
I'm not sure of your point. The church has celebrated from very early that Jesus rose on the first day of the week, or as it is sometimes known, the 8th day.
Which would start on Saturday Evening. Just like Passover--your reference, not mine--starts in the evening.
Well again, yes you are wrong.
What am I wrong about?
Like most religions back then - the lunar calendar was supreme. Every religion pretty much celebrated on that date. Hence, why I say coincidence. The Christians followed the Passover date. Just because you have gods venerated on the same date does not invalidate the Christian teaching. Your reasoning is arrogant and presumptuous.
My point is not to invalidate Christian teachings; my point is to provide you with the tools to distinguish between Christian teachings and pagan rituals. There's no biblical reference whatsoever to "Easter Sunday" or "eggs" or "bunnies" as it concerned Jesus's death and resurrection. There's also no directive to commemorate Jesus's resurrection. This is not "arrogance" or "presumption"; I've read the Bible in its entirety several times, so if you have a dispute, please submit the appropriate biblical reference, and refrain from Catholic or Protestant "catechism."
Nothing you have said proves your point.
Actually it does. We know that Good Friday to Easter Sunday does NOT amount to three days and three nights. We also know that Jesus did not resurrect on what we know today as "Sunday." We know of the pagan holidays that follow the vernal equinox. We know of the origin of the name Easter. We know that bunnies and eggs are not associated with Jesus, but with the mother Goddess in her Celtic, Greek, Sumerian, Semitic, Egyptian, etc. incarnations. It is not a "coincidence" that the Roman (Catholic) Church has conflated celebration of the mother goddess and her divine son/lover with the concept Jesus's resurrection.
Your argument seems to be - all of these previous religions celebrated on this date, therefore everyone after the event is simply following. That is very weak and thin.
My arguments never "seem." My arguments always explicitly state; and I did not explicitly state what you've claimed. My argument states this: many of these religious celebrations especially in April are associated with convoluted and often misleading interpretations so that Luciferians can pervert these celebrations with their pagan rituals.
And while the papacy might have weird ideas
Weird? The papacy has institutionalized pederasty; endorsed homosexuality and transexuality; names the resurrection after Celtic/Sumerian goddess; Celebrates "the birth of Jesus" on the same day as the birth/reincarnation of the Sun God; and embodies everything against which Jesus stood, and your assessment is that it's "weird"?
Who says there is no biblical stipulation?
There isn't any. Please make reference to it, and I'll stand corrected.
Some people do this - so what?
And I just told you "so what?" They are being prompted to inadvertently indulge pagan rituals.
Not all, and probably not even most.
Since the majority of the Christian population is Catholic, wouldn't it be most?
And so that is why we need to explore it thoroughly.
Exactly. My perspective is from a non-denominational standpoint, while yours is writhe with protestant catechism and apologism.
I'm not catholic.
Never stated that you were; that does not suggest however that Protestants are without their pagan rituals.
I have researched widely.
Not enough. Research the Babylonian-Kemetic mysteries as well as the Elusinian mysteries; Research Sumerian, Kemetic/Egyptian, Celtic, Semitic, Estruscan, Greek/Roman, Russian, Chinese/Japanese, Mexican mythologies; research ancient and neo-paganism; research Buddhism and Hinduism; research Luciferianism, Satanism and Free Masonry. There are forces attempting to pervert your Christianity; I'm merely trying to bring them to your attention.
I can see your research is distorted and incomplete. Perhaps you should read wider.
If you believe I have a blind spot, point me in the right direction.