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rather than converting pagans to Christianity, paganism was thoroughly incorporated into Christianity. The historian Clement A. Miles states:

      In 313, Emperor Constantine “converted” to Christianity and in 321, he enacted the first “Sunday” law, in the following terms:

      On the venerable Day of the Sun let the magistrates and people residing in cities rest, and let all workshops be closed. In the country, however, persons engaged in agriculture may freely and lawfully continue their pursuits; because it often happens that another day is not so suitable for grain-sowing or for vine-planting; lest by neglecting the proper moment for such operations the bounty of heaven should be lost. (Given the 7th day of March, Crispus, and Constantine being consuls each of them for the second time).

      Schaff goes on to explain that Constantine

      As an aside, this event immediately preceded the medieval period of church history. Following Constantine’s edict, regard for Sunday as a day of rest increased and continued through the Christianisation of barbarian nations. Newly converted Germanic tribes recognized the similarities between the Jewish Sabbath and their own pagan taboo-days, therefore they willingly accepted a Sabbatarian Lord’s Day.

      The use of pagan names of the seven days was Constantine’s way of erasing Sabbath and the Lord’s Day. Hence, Christians conformed to the abolition of Sabbath as the day of rest, from an emperor who overtly chose a special day to honor his Sun-God, whom he patronized as being identical to Jesus. Sun-Day was central to Constantine’s thinking and not only was the weekly holy day moved to Sunday, but Easter was moved to a Sunday as well. Easter had originally been celebrated on the fourteenth of the Jewish month of Nisan: the lunar month starting with the first full Moon after the spring equinox. Western Christians shifted it to the following Sunday, but it still depended upon the lunar cycle, which is why Easter falls at different dates in different years, and why it still causes so much confusion. A complicated set of tables is provided in the Anglican Book of Common Prayer for calculating the date of Easter for each year up to 2299.

      Today in Christianity, we think that we can make a very clear distinction between worship of the sun, and worship of the Son. However, we can still commonly find a connection between Sol or Baal and Christianity in much of the Christian artwork of today. It is very common to see Christ, the apostles, prophets, Mary, lambs, and doves portrayed with a sunburst or halo of light surrounding their head. A halo or sunburst is also sometimes included in images of the cross. While some may make a link with the implausible theory of the star of Bethlehem shining directly onto Jesus’ head, these halos and sunbursts are the same as those used in Mithraism or sun worship. Sadly, we can find this type of artwork today in the buildings of many Protestant denominations.

      There were northern and southern European pagan winter festivals which extended from November 1 to January 10. The Celtic New Year began on November 1 and the Teutonic one on November 11. The idea was linked to the death of plants and the loss of leaves from trees. At this time of year there was an obsession with the cult of the dead. The pagan idea, widespread among many peoples, was that on one day or night of the year the souls of the dead return to their old homes and must be entertained. These and other superstitions marked this period up to and beyond the winter solstice. The number and regional variety of pagan folk customs and myths around Europe, based upon this time of year are too many to mention. As the Roman Catholic Church spread, there occurred a great medieval synthesis of paganism and Christianity. The church played a double role, at times an antagonistic one, forcing heathen customs into the shade and at other times one of adaptation, baptizing them into Christ, granting the pagan customs a Christian name and interpretation while often modifying their form. The church attempted to displace the pagan folk festivals with Saints days, in which the Mass was central. As a consequence of all of this, the pagans in the now apostate church could worship the queen of heaven and observe the birth of her son Tammuz, while the untaught, unsuspecting believers thought they were honoring Christ in the same ritual.

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      One may be forgiven for imagining that the gold statue (illustrated), is from a Hindu temple in India. However, this golden child is found in the Vatican treasury and like so many other images of the child in Roman Catholic churches, is reminiscent of the ancient worship of Tammuz as a child. Born on December 25, he represented the rebirth of the sun. In Europe alone, thousands of local female divinities transmogrified into the Virgin Mary, a fact that explains why even today she is represented in such conspicuously different ways in different areas of Italy, Spain, and Portugal.

      We

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