Easter/Pascha as Christian Passover
Rediscover ancient Jewish-Christian feast of Pascha
Rediscover ancient Jewish-Christian feast of Pascha
By Dr. Eli Lizorkin-Girzhel (read bio)
Reading time: 7 min. Impact: Eternity.
In recent decades, many sincere Christians who truly value the Jewish roots of their faith have grown concerned about the celebration of Easter. Influenced by the “Hebrew Roots” movement (predominantly led and composed of people from non-Jewish, Gentile Christian backgrounds) and a desire to return to the biblical practices of the early Jewish believers, some have concluded that Easter represents a pagan corruption of the pure, scriptural observance of Passover. They point to the English name “Easter,” the symbols of eggs and rabbits, and the different date chosen by the later church as evidence that the early Gentile church abandoned the God-ordained Jewish/Biblical Passover for a pagan holiday called Easter.
These accusations and concerns deserve respectful attention. For believers who treasure the continuity between the Old and New Testaments, who see Jesus as the promised Messiah of Israel, and who long to honor the covenants God made with Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, any suggestion of pagan intrusion into our worship is understandably troubling. The desire to remain faithful to the biblical pattern is commendable and reflects a healthy reverence for God’s Word.
However, even a brief analysis of history, language, and Scripture indicates that what most Christians have commemorated for centuries as Pascha (only later called Easter in English) is not a repudiation of the Biblical Passover of Israel but its divinely ordained fulfillment in the Jewish Christ, our King. This is precisely why, in many countries around the world, what English speakers call “Easter” is known instead as “Christian Passover” or “Pascha.”
The strongest and most repeated objection to Easter often begins with the English word itself, with many claiming it derives from “Ishtar,” the Babylonian goddess of fertility. This idea has circulated widely, but it rests on a linguistic misunderstanding with no historical basis. The English name instead comes from the Old English Ēastre (or Ēostre), which Bede, an eighth-century English monk, linked to a month (Ēosturmōnaþ) and a possible pre-Christian Anglo-Saxon spring festival or goddess. While some scholars accept this as evidence of a local cult, others suggest Bede may have mistakenly inferred the goddess from the month’s name. This single monk remains our only substantial source, and scholars continue to debate the details—some tracing the name to a Proto-Germanic root for “east” or “dawn.” It is true that pre-Christian Anglo-Saxons held feasts in her honor during that month (roughly April), and as Christianity spread, missionaries often used cultural adaptation: they kept the familiar seasonal name but redirected its meaning to celebrate Christ’s Resurrection. Thus, in some Germanic languages, including English, the Aramaic “Pascha” gradually gave way to what we now call Easter.
But while the English name carries this cultural history, it remains a linguistic outlier. In nearly all other languages, and even in much early English usage, the feast has been called some form of Pascha (or Pasch), the direct Judeo-Greek form of the Hebrew “Pesach” (Passover). For the overwhelming majority of Christians throughout history—Greek (Πάσχα), Latin (Pascha), Slavic (Пасха), and Romance (e.g., French Pâques and Spanish Pascua)—the feast has always been called Pascha, which is simply the Judeo-Greek form of the Aramaic/Hebrew word “Pesach” (פֶּסַח), meaning “Passover.” The English name is a regional exception, not a universal Christian norm.
From the earliest centuries, the Church of both Jewish and Gentile believers referred to this celebration as Pascha (Πάσχα). The name itself carries the direct memory of the Jewish Passover. The global Christian observance was never a brand-new holiday invented by Gentiles; it was the ancient Passover optimized and recalibrated on its ultimate meaning (1 Cor 5:7).
For Christians who cherish the Jewish roots of the faith, the deepest question is whether Pascha remains deeply connected to the biblical Passover or if the connection to it has been irreversibly severed by superimposed ideas and time. The New Testament itself provides the bridge. The Apostle Paul, a devout Jew and Pharisee, wrote to a largely Gentile congregation in Corinth:
“Clean out the old leaven so that you may be a new lump, just as you are in fact unleavened. For Christ, our Passover, also has been sacrificed. Therefore let us celebrate the feast, not with old leaven, nor with the leaven of malice and wickedness, but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth.” (1 Cor 5:7-8)
The early Jewish disciples of Jesus, including the apostles, did not see themselves as inventing a replacement for Passover. They understood the death and resurrection of Messiah Yeshua as the fulfillment of what the Passover had always pointed toward: deliverance from judgment through the blood of the Lamb.
As an aside, Polycarp (a disciple of Apostle John) followed the Quartodeciman practice—celebrating Pascha on the 14th of Nisan, the same date as the Jewish Passover. From early times, other churches with apostolic ties, including Rome, observed Pascha on the Sunday following the 14th of Nisan to emphasize the day of the resurrection; both streams, however, shared the core conviction that Pascha was the Christian Passover. (Irenaeus, Against Heresies (Eusebius, Church History 5.24))
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A primary concern for many believers who cherish the Jewish roots of the faith is the Council of Nicaea in 325 AD. The worry is that this council deliberately severed the Christian celebration from its Jewish foundation, marking a decisive turn toward a “paganized” or supersessionist holiday. The council’s decisions and the surrounding rhetoric have caused deep historical pain, making this concern understandable.
To understand what occurred, we must first recognize the context. Before Nicaea, there was no universal practice for dating the Christian Pascha. A significant controversy existed between two ancient traditions. One, known as the Quartodeciman practice (from the Latin for “fourteenth”), was rooted in the churches of Asia Minor, following the Apostle John. They celebrated Pascha on the 14th of Nisan, the day of the Jewish Passover, regardless of the day of the week, focusing on Christ as the true Passover Lamb who was sacrificed. The other tradition, held by churches like that of Rome and Alexandria, celebrated Pascha on the Sunday following the 14th of Nisan, emphasizing the day of the Resurrection.
The Council of Nicaea was convened in part to settle this dispute and bring uniformity to the Church. The council ultimately decreed that Pascha should be celebrated on the first Sunday after the first full moon following the vernal equinox, a method that allowed it to be calculated independently of the Jewish calendar.
This decision is a point of genuine sorrow for those who value the Church’s continuity with Israel. The language used by some at the time, particularly in a letter from Emperor Constantine following the council, included regrettable anti-Judaic rhetoric, framing the move as a way to have “nothing in common with the most hostile crowd of the Jews.” The council was a tragic reflection of the supersessionist attitudes that had begun to grow in the post-apostolic era, and it is appropriate to grieve this rupture and the centuries of alienation it represented and fueled.
However, it is also important to recognize what the council did not do. The council did not change the fundamental identity of the feast. It was not renamed, nor was its meaning redefined. Whether a church followed the Quartodeciman practice or the Sunday practice, both traditions understood the celebration as Pascha—the Christian Passover. The debate was over the calendar, not the content. Even with its new, independent dating system, Pascha continued to be understood theologically as the fulfillment of the Exodus narrative. The entire liturgy, the readings, and the theology of the feast remained anchored in the story of Israel’s deliverance, now brought to its ultimate fulfillment in the resurrection of Israel’s Messiah, Jesus.
Many Christians who value biblical simplicity and are wary of extra-biblical additions feel understandably uncomfortable with eggs, rabbits, baskets, and other springtime customs associated with Easter in Western culture. This discomfort is more than justifiable. These elements are indeed later cultural developments, not part of the original Christian Pascha rooted in the Word of the Living God. As the faith spread into formerly pagan regions of Europe, some local springtime symbols were gradually given Christian interpretations and accepted as harmless cultural traditions of the locals.
Red-dyed eggs, for example, became a tradition in the Eastern churches during the medieval period, symbolizing the blood of Christ and the new life of the resurrection—the empty tomb “cracked open.”
The Easter bunny and egg hunts are much later Western folk practices, largely from Germanic and Protestant contexts in the last few centuries. Historical evidence linking them directly to ancient pagan goddesses is weak and overstated.
For Christians who prefer to avoid these customs altogether, there is no biblical requirement to include them. Many believers today, especially those who treasure the Jewish heritage of the faith, choose to focus solely on the biblical and liturgical heart of Pascha: the reading of the Passion and Resurrection accounts, the celebration of the Lord’s Supper, or taking part in the “Christ in the Passover” celebration. It is perfectly faithful (and I would say advisable!) to observe the resurrection of the Messiah with simplicity, Scripture, prayer, and biblical traditions—without any added cultural layers that feel foreign or distracting. The core of the feast depends on the historic reality that Jesus of Nazareth, the Jewish Messiah, rose bodily from the dead. His tomb is now empty! The judgment of God passed over us.
The tension itself is a sign of fidelity. But thankfully you are not forced to choose between the rich soil of your Jewish heritage and the joyful celebration of your Messiah’s victory. In Pascha, they are one.
Let the debate over names and dates fade before the empty tomb. What remains is not a relic of pagan adaptation but the heartbeat of biblical faith: the Lamb who was slain, now standing alive. This is not a departure from the Passover; it is the Passover’s glorious destination.
Regardless of whether you refer to this day as Pascha, Christian Passover, Resurrection Sunday, or even the less correct Easter; regardless of whether you observe it in close alignment with the Jewish calendar or on the traditional Sunday: Christ, our Passover, has been sacrificed for us, and then He rose from the dead to declare our forgiveness and justification.
The Jewish Messiah, the Seed of Abraham, the Lion of the tribe of Judah, has conquered death. In Him, the ancient promises to Israel receive their “Yes” and “Amen.” In Him, believing Jews and grafted-in Gentiles become one new man, celebrating the fulfillment of what began at the Red Sea and Sinai but ended with heavenly Zion and Jerusalem.
The Jewish Christ is risen! He is risen indeed!
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Comments (44)
Shalom, Dr Eli. Another great article to read, and chew on. I see a lot about a "Christian" Passover, and "Easter Sunday" or by whatever else the World calls it, but not a mention about Yom ha Bikkurim, or the day of the Firstfruits, or more correctly, the Day of the Firstborn, which was when Yeshua was resurrected. NO mention of Easter, Ishtar, Ashtar or any other spelling of the Goddess of Creation of Babylon in the scriptures except for that of being spoken against in the Tanach. I agree with Eddie Lau, in that the day of preparation for the Passover began Wednesday night, when Yeshua was taken by the Temple forces. No way, can you get 72 hours from the early morning of the First Day, which is the special Sabbath day of Firstfruits, back to the 6th; only to the 5th Day.
Danny, I also believe you are correct about the timing and pattern of days during "passion week", but for what it's worth you have mixed up a particular day of special appointment for the priest during Unleavened Bread with the day of Shavuot that comes seven weeks later. Four times the scriptures refer to Shavuot as "first fruits" (Ex. 23, Ex. 34, Lev. 23, and Num. 28 and it is a no-work day (which is often confused with a Sabbath). But the day to which you refer does not have that prohibition.
Danny, I love you, but please read the article. Easter and Ishtar have absolutely NOTHING in common. Its better to call this Christian holiday Pascha as in the rest of the Christian world.
What a wonderful article setting out both the history and meaning of Pascha. Love it. Will send it around to others. Thank you, Dr. Eli. I do already support your ministry.
I am so grateful!!!! Thank you! Happy Pascha!
Dr. Eli, have you ever tied Ex. 12 and John 12 together for the dates of the 10th and 14th? Jesus entering into Jerusalem on the first day of the week would be the 10th. Then count four days. That would be following the order of the Passover.
Yes, Exodus 12 and John 12 can be tied together. In Exodus 12:3, the Passover lamb is selected on the 10th of Nisan and kept until the 14th, when it is slaughtered. In John 12, six days before Passover (John 12:1), Jesus arrives in Bethany. The next day (John 12:12) is His triumphal entry into Jerusalem. If that entry corresponds to Nisan 10 (the day lambs were chosen), then counting four days—Nisan 10 to Nisan 14—leads directly to crucifixion day. This aligns Jesus as the Lamb of God presented publicly on the 10th and slain on the 14th. Some chronologies place Nisan 14 on a Thursday, making Nisan 10 a Sunday, the first day of the week. Thus, the four-day count from selection to sacrifice matches Exodus 12 precisely. This connection offers strong evidence that Jesus followed the Passover timeline literally, fulfilling the typology of the lamb selected, examined, and then killed on the appointed day.
In my opinion, the Sunday practice fails to make a clear distinction between the Passover, the Feast of Unleavened Bread, and the Feast of Firstfruits. By celebrating Pascha on the Sunday following the 14th of Nisan, this tradition has stripped the Passover of its Jewish foundations (the ancient landmark has been removed) and has eclipsed the Feast of Firstfruits, pushing it into the background and attributing its significance to another feast. The death and resurrection of Yeshua are two separate yet closely related events that were biblically and theologically referred to by the Passover and the Feast of Firstfruits. What do you think about that?
The Sunday after Nisan 14 (the Sunday of Unleavened Bread) is, in fact, the wave-sheaf day according to one interpretation of Leviticus 23:11. And Easter Sunday is the Sunday of Unleavened Bread according to the Gregorian calculation of Nisan 14 and the week of Unleavened Bread.
I tend to agree.
Thank you for your article, Dr. Eli. I have three questions. If the early Jewish disciples of Jesus, including the apostles, did not see themselves as inventing a replacement for Passover, are you not doing the opposite just by referring to the Jewish Passover and the Christian Passover? If Christ is prophetically and theologically at the heart of the Passover in Exodus 12, what prevents the latter from being Christian?
Julien, shalom. Remember that I am not seeking to make the distinction myself. To me Passover is Pascha, and Pascha is Passover. I am, however, pointing out that this is how different followers of Christ see the issue.
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I totally agree that the rabbit has nothing to do with Passover at all some Christian people want to wake up to the fact and the truth that it is about Y’shua and His Majesty and His coming Kingdom remembering His supreme sacrifice for us all
Not chocolate eggs and rabbits
Y’shua is the Passover Lamb
Shalom Lekulam
Thank you, Martin!
I wonder who came up with the idea of switching from painted eggs to chocolate ones?
I don't know how, but I like chocolate. Especially the dark chocolate :-).
Unless I'm misunderstanding, Colossians 2:16 and surrounding context says all that needs to be said.
It seems these words are to the gentile believers who were being pressured to conform to Jewish celebrations. Paul seems to be saying that since Christ died for our sins, the necessity of keeping these celebrations is gone. I believe he's saying, don't worry about whatever judgement the Jewish leaders and teachers bring against us if we don't keep these old laws and traditions, because they have served their purpose. So, maybe we shouldn't be judging those who celebrate traditional holidays or those who don't, due to their own beliefs, because all that matters is our relationship with Jesus Christ and our freedom in Him if we keep His Word. But I'm no scholar, so I may be wrong.
Richard, I agree with you, although I think the content of Paul's setting may have been just the other way around - https://jewishstudiesforchristians.com/should-gentile-christians-celebrate-the-feasts-of-the-lord/
Richard, in what sense do you think it says "all that needs to be said"?
We are gentile believers…saved in a Messianic congregation in the 90’s. Since then, and four children later…we’ve only celebrated Passover. My matzah balls are quite good..or so my children tell me.😉
I really liked your explanation of the ‘switch’ by Rome. Eusebius I believe describes that as well. It has caused quite a rift though and today’s current rise in antisemitism is very upsetting. The Jewish roots of our faith are so important…more studies like this one need to get to a wider audience.
Thank you, Kim. May the LORD bless you!
An excelent summary! I have always felt disgusted at the commercial promotion of 'Easter Bunny', chocolate eggs etc. along with Santa Claus/Father Christmas, taking away the true meaning of the Nativity and the Crucifixion and Ressurection. For me, the season of Easter is a joyous celebration of the saving, and very expensive in terms of his suffering, sacrifice of Yeshua on our behalf.
[Not on topic but] could I ask about the change in surname from Lizorkin-Eyzenberg to Lizorkin-Girzhel?
Blessings,
Barrie
Sure. It's a lengthy tale. But basically Lizorkin was my adopted name. Gizhel was my name at birth, so I wanted to honor it. Better late, than never.
Indeed.
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