Back to search

Are Birthdays Pagan?

pdf:8b38fb2b5bdc7d01f679eeb311dd282c7c27857f37671177ee0d97312ad9e6d5Shane Vaughnpdf

STANDALONE BOOK

Transcript

No exact match for "pagan customs" in this transcript. This result may have matched scripture references, topics, or other metadata—check sections above.

ARE BIRTHDAYS PAGAN? A Biblical and Theological Examination The celebration of life is the celebration of the Giver of life. Pastor John Shane Vaughn First Harvest Ministries International Are Birthdays Pagan? The Question Before Us We refuse to add to the Torah, and we refuse to take away from it. YAHWEH commanded His people to avoid idolatry, reject the worship of false gods, and separate themselves from pagan religious practices. At the same time, He warned us not to create our own commandments and bind burdens upon the people that He Himself never commanded. The question before us is simple: Are birthdays inherently pagan? To answer that question honestly, one must prove four things: 1. That birthdays originated as worship of a false god. 2. That the act of celebrating a birthday honors that false god. 3. That Scripture explicitly forbids the practice. 4. That celebrating a birthday violates a principle of Torah. The burden of proof belongs to the accuser. To date, many have claimed birthdays are pagan, yet few have ever identified the pagan deity supposedly being worshiped through a birthday celebration. This is where the argument begins to collapse. Pharaoh and Herod Many point to Pharaoh's birthday in Genesis 40:20 and Herod's birthday in Matthew 14:6. But these passages merely record that wicked rulers celebrated birthdays. Scripture does not condemn the birthday itself. It condemns the wickedness of the men involved. Pharaoh was not evil because he had a birthday. Herod was not evil because he acknowledged the day of his birth. Pharaoh was evil because of his character and actions. Herod was evil because of his lust, pride, vanity, and murder. First Harvest Ministries International • Page 3 Are Birthdays Pagan? The Source of the Doctrine It must be said plainly. The modern teaching that birthdays are forbidden did not come down to us from the ancient Hebrews. It did not come from Moses. It did not come from the prophets. It did not come from the apostles. It did not come from the early Sabbath-keeping remnant. It was constructed in the twentieth century, built almost entirely upon two passages — Pharaoh's birthday in Genesis and Herod's birthday in Matthew — and elevated into a binding prohibition. A doctrine resting on two verses, neither of which contains a single command, is not a doctrine. It is an inference dressed as a law. The Hebrews of Scripture never knew this prohibition. We are under no obligation to receive a rule that YAHWEH never gave and our fathers never kept. The Argument of the Two Deaths The accusers raise one final point. They observe that the only two birthdays recorded in Scripture each ended in a death. Pharaoh's chief baker was hanged. John the Baptist was beheaded. From this they conclude that death follows the birthday. But this reasoning collapses the moment it is examined. The baker did not die because Pharaoh had a birthday. He died because a wicked king held the power of life and death and used a feast as the occasion to execute judgment. John did not die because Herod marked the day of his birth. He died because of Herodias' hatred, Salome's seduction, and Herod's pride and lust. The death flowed from the wickedness of tyrants, not from the turning of the calendar. First Harvest Ministries International • Page 4 Are Birthdays Pagan? Correlation is not causation. If a righteous act became forbidden because evil once occurred near it, then no man could pray, eat, marry, or worship — for evil men have done all these things and committed murder beside them. The thread connecting both accounts is not the birthday. It is the wicked heart of a tyrant. Pagan Participation Is Not Pagan Origin If birthdays are forbidden simply because pagans celebrated them, then consistency would require us to forbid many other things that pagans also practiced. Pagans held weddings. Pagans gave gifts. Pagans ate bread. Pagans sang songs. Pagans held banquets. Pagans named their children. Pagans brushed their teeth. The fact that a pagan performs an action does not make the action itself pagan. Pagan participation does not equal pagan origin. Christmas, Easter, and Halloween can be shown to possess documented connections to pagan religious observances and the worship of false gods. That is why many believers reject them. But a birthday is different. No one has ever demonstrated that the simple acknowledgment of the anniversary of one's birth constitutes the worship of a false deity. The Witness of Job There is a passage the accusers consistently overlook. In the land of Uz lived a man named Job, of whom YAHWEH Himself testified that there was none like him in all the earth, a man perfect and upright, one who feared God and shunned evil. And what do we read of his household? First Harvest Ministries International • Page 5 Are Birthdays Pagan? “And his sons went and feasted in their houses, every one his day; and sent and called for their three sisters to eat and to drink with them.” — Job 1:4 “Every one his day.” The most ancient understanding of this verse is that each son observed the day of his birth, gathering the family in turn throughout the year. Now notice carefully what the righteous Job did. He did not forbid the feasts. He did not condemn the day. He did not call the gathering pagan. “And it was so, when the days of their feasting were gone about, that Job sent and sanctified them, and rose up early in the morning, and offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all... Thus did Job continually.” — Job 1:5 Here is the heart of the matter. The most righteous man of his generation treated the celebration as a normal and accepted thing. His only concern was the condition of the heart. He did not address the calendar. He addressed sin. The danger was never the day. The danger was always the heart of the one observing it. If a birthday were inherently pagan, the perfect and upright Job would have torn it from his sons' lives. Instead, he sanctified them and continued the practice continually. Let the accuser answer Job. There Is Only One Giver of Life More importantly, Scripture reveals that there is only one source of life. Life does not come from nature. Life does not come from fate. Life does not come from luck. Life comes from YAHWEH. First Harvest Ministries International • Page 6 Are Birthdays Pagan? “See now that I, even I, am He, and there is no god with Me: I kill, and I make alive...” — Deuteronomy 32:39 “For with You is the fountain of life...” — Psalm 36:9 Every breath we take is a gift from the Creator. Every heartbeat is sustained by His mercy. Every year of life is granted by His hand. This leads us to a profound theological reality: The celebration of life is ultimately the celebration of the Giver of life. When a family gathers to thank YAHWEH for another year granted to a husband, wife, child, parent, or friend, they are not honoring a pagan god. They are acknowledging the mercy of the One who preserved that life. Every birthday declares that YAHWEH has sustained another year. Every birthday acknowledges that life is a gift and not a possession. Every birthday testifies that the breath within us belongs to the Creator. The Contradiction of the Accuser The anti-birthday position often creates a contradiction. Most who oppose birthdays rejoice when a baby is born. They thank YAHWEH for the gift of life. They celebrate the arrival of a child. They gather family and friends. They give gifts. They express gratitude to God. Yet a birthday is simply the anniversary of that same miracle. If it is righteous to thank YAHWEH for the gift of life on the day life begins, why would it suddenly become unrighteous to thank Him for preserving that life one year later? Long Life Is a Blessing The Scriptures repeatedly present long life as a blessing from YAHWEH. First Harvest Ministries International • Page 7 Are Birthdays Pagan? “With long life will I satisfy him, and show him My salvation.” — Psalm 91:16 Length of days is described throughout Scripture as a gift, a blessing, and evidence of divine favor. The Bible frequently records the ages of righteous men and women. The years of their lives mattered because every year testified to the sustaining hand of YAHWEH. A birthday celebration, properly understood, is not self-worship. It is not human exaltation. It is not the worship of creation. It is gratitude directed toward the Creator. Remembrance Is Not Idolatry Furthermore, Scripture consistently embraces the principle of remembrance. YAHWEH established Sabbaths, Feasts, memorials, stones of remembrance, and annual observances so His people would not forget His acts. The biblical problem has never been remembrance. The biblical problem has always been idolatry. Remembering what YAHWEH has done is not pagan. Giving thanks for His blessings is not pagan. Acknowledging His faithfulness is not pagan. A birthday, when viewed through a biblical lens, is simply a remembrance that YAHWEH gave life and has sustained that life for another year. The Sword That Cuts Both Ways We return now to where we began. “Ye shall not add unto the word which I command you, neither shall ye diminish ought from it, that ye may keep the commandments of YAHWEH your God.” — Deuteronomy 4:2 This is the sword that cuts both ways. First Harvest Ministries International • Page 8 Are Birthdays Pagan? The man who removes a commandment of YAHWEH sins against the Torah. But so does the man who adds one. To bind upon the people of YAHWEH a prohibition He never spoke is not zeal. It is the very transgression the Torah forbids. It is to stand in the place of the Lawgiver and to write commandments with a human hand. The Pharisees did this. They built fences around the Law until the fences themselves became heavier than the Law, and YAHSHUA rebuked them for teaching as doctrines the commandments of men. We will not become Pharisees in reverse. We will guard the Torah YAHWEH gave. We will not manufacture a Torah He did not give. The Charge Falls Therefore, we reject Christmas, Easter, Halloween, and every practice that can be demonstrated to possess roots in pagan worship and false religion. But we refuse to create a commandment where YAHWEH gave none. Until someone can name the false god worshiped in a birthday, prove the act honors that god, point to the verse that forbids it, and show the principle it violates, the charge falls to the ground unproven — and the burden returns to the one who laid it. We will not add to the Torah. We will not bind burdens upon the people of YAHWEH. And we will not apologize for thanking the Creator for the gift He alone can give. Life. For there is only one Giver of life. His name is YAHWEH. First Harvest Ministries International • Page 9