Each year on
February 14th countless millions of people celebrate a day known as “St.
Valentine’s Day.” Millions of heart-shaped cards and boxes of
chocolates are given as gifts, and even churches have Valentine parties on
this so-called “Day of Love.” In schools, from pre-school and
kindergarten on up, children draw names from a box
and exchange heart-shapes notes which “pair off” the children
and is said to be “all in fun.” People of all ages get into the act,
and the words that are heard everywhere on that day are, “Be My
Valentine.”
The sad fact is
that most people never question the origin of the customs that they
involve themselves with. Most people do not ask questions but do what
everybody else does, never stopping to consider how the Almighty God of
Heaven feels about their activities.
When we consider that Valentine’s Day is a day
of preoccupation with the heart, it is essential that we listen to
the following words spoken by the Almighty, “The heart is deceitful
above all things, and desperately wicked: who can know it? I the Lord
search the heart, I try the reins, even to give every man according to his
wages, and according to the fruit of his doings.” Jeremiah 17:9-10
Christians should
be known by their discernment and
should be asking questions regarding Valentine’s Day. What is the origin
of this unusual day? Why is
there a preoccupation with the color red? Where did the heart shape come
from, and what does it mean? These and other questions will now be
answered, as we examine the roots and pagan origin of this popular day.
In the days of the
Roman Empire, the month of February was the last and shortest month of the
year. February originally had 30 days, but when Julius Caesar named the
month of July after himself, he decided to make that month longer and
shortened February to 29 days while making July a month of 31 days. Later
when Octavius Caesar, also known as Augustus, came to power, he named the
month of August after himself, and not be outdone he also subtracted a day
from February and gave the month of August 31 days. To this very day it
remains that way. The ancient Romans believed that every month had a
spirit that gained in strength and reached its peak or apex of power in
the middle or ides of the month. This
was usually the 15th day, and it was a day when witches and augurs, or
soothsayers worked their magic. An augur was a person filled with a spirit
of divination, and from the word augur we get the word “inaugurate”,
which means to “take omens”. Since
February had been robbed by Caesars and had only 28 days, the ides of
February became the 14th day of that month. Since the Ides of a month was
celebrated on the preceding eve, the month of February was unique, because
it was the 13th day that became the eve of the Ides that month, and it
became a very important pagan holiday in the Empire of Rome. The sacred
day of February 14th was called “Lupercalia” or “day of the wolf.”
This was a day that was sacred to the sexual frenzy of the goddess
Juno. This day also honored the Roman gods, Lupercus and Faunus, as well
as the legendary twin brothers, who supposedly founded Rome, Remus and
Romulus. These two are said to have been suckled by wolves in a cave on
Palatine Hill in Rome. The cave was called Lupercal and was the center of
the celebrating on the eve of Lupercalia or February 14th. On this day,
Lupercalia, which was later named Valentine’s Day, the Luperci or
priests of Lupercus dressed in goatskins for a bloody ceremony. The
priests of Lupercus, the wolf god, would sacrifice goats and a dog and
then smear themselves with blood. These priests, made red with sacrificial
blood, would run around Palatine Hill in a wild frenzy while carving a
goatskin thong called a “februa.” Women would sit all around the hill,
as the bloody priests would strike them with the goatskin thongs to make
them fertile. The young women would then gather in the city and their
names were put in boxes. These “love notes” were called “billets.”
The men of Rome would draw a billet, and the woman whose name was on it
became his sexual lust partner with whom he would fornicate until the next
Lupercalia or February 14th.
Thus, February 14th
became a day of unbridled sexual lust. The color “red” was sacred to
that day because of the blood and the “heart shape”
that is popular to this day. The heart-shape was not a
representation of the human heart, which looks nothing like it. This shape
represents the human female matrix or opening to the chamber of sacred
copulation.
When the Gnostic
Catholic Church began to get a foothold in Rome around the 3rd century
A.D., they became known as Valentinians. The Catholic
Valentinians retained the sexual license of the festival in what
they called “angels in a nuptial chamber”, which was also called the
“sacrament of copulation.” This was said to be an reenactment of the
marriage of “Sophia and the Redeemer.” As the participants of the
February 14th ritual began their sexual sacrament, presided over and
watched by the priests known as Valentinians, the following literary was
spoken: “Let the seed of light descend into thy bridal chamber, receive
the bridegroom… open thine arms to embrace him. Behold, grace has
descended upon thee.”
As time went on,
the Orthodox Church suppressed the Gnostic Catholics and manufactured
“St. Valentine”, whose day continues to be celebrated in these modern
times.
It
should be without saying that the Christians should avoid Valentine’s
Day like a plague. In God’s
eyes, it is still “Lupercalia”,
the “Day Of The Wolf.” Men become wolves, as they carry on the Satanic
rituals of fornication, which means sexual intercourse without marriage.
We have heard of the “wolf whistle”, and we all know that wolves do
not whistle. It is lustful men and women, who carry on Satan’s blasphemy
to this very day.
In
conclusion, we must ask ourselves, “Should a true Christian be
associated in any way with this celebration of evil roots? Should we be
doing what the heathen have done for so many years
and try to justify it as love?” Romans 12:2 answers this very
well, “And be not conformed to this world: but be ye transformed
by the renewing of your mind…”