#FamilyIsEverything. APL = 8.75/10 *Authorized conspiracy theorist *Not an authorized preacher.

Fact Check = True

Christmas not being Jesus' birthday checks out. (Winter solstice - many pagan holidays - easier to get the converts to celebrate a new holiday in place of the old one)
The date of Easter is still tied to Passover as in the Bible, so it's likely more or less accurate. But the name was definitely taken from Ishtar's spring celebration around the same time (Spring equinox - again, many pagan holidays). An orgy wouldn't be surprising for a fertility goddess.
I can't find anything about child sacrifice to Horus, though. Either/any one of them. Unless sauce is provided, I assume the speaker threw that in for the shock value. (which hurts the message)

In response Vincent Kennedy⍟ to his Publication

Only people mentioned by @WatchingRaven in this post can reply

"Come now, and let us reason together, saith the Lord" Is1:18;

In response Still Learning to his Publication

Horus and Molech were likely two different names (per culture/historical time), and their were several others, of the same "god" ... all representing Lucifer/Satan in one way or another.

The Bible does describe and condemn the practice of the sacrifice of children (via burning) to Molech in several OT books

In response wht 2.0 to his Publication

It's possible - cultures often influenced each other. It seems there's almost no way to compare characteristics, since the Biblical account is of a foreign god and lacks details. I wasn't able to find a non-biblical mention of him, so it's likely his worshippers called him by a different name in their own writings, if those writings survived at all.

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