More like happy Hallmark, florist, jeweler, and See's Candy Day. Valantines Day has it's roots in Catholicism and isn't mentioned any where in the Bible, so don't really see a need for acknowledging it.
"Valentine’s Day, also called
St. Valentine’s Day,
holiday (February 14) when lovers express their affection with greetings and gifts. The holiday has origins in the Roman festival of
Lupercalia, held in mid-February. The festival, which celebrated the coming of spring, included fertility rites and the pairing off of women with men by lottery. At the end of the 5th century, Pope
Gelasius Ireplaced Lupercalia with St. Valentine’s Day. It came to be celebrated as a day of romance from about the 14th century."
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Valentines-Day
"Lupercalia, ancient Roman
festival that was conducted annually on February 15 under the superintendence of a corporation of priests called
Luperci. The origins of the festival are obscure, although the likely derivation of its name from
lupus (Latin: “wolf”) has variously suggested connection with an ancient deity who protected herds from wolves and with the legendary she-wolf who nursed
Romulus and Remus. As a fertility rite, the festival is also associated with the god
Faunus.
Each Lupercalia began with the
sacrifice by the Luperci of goats and a dog, after which two of the Luperci were led to the altar, their foreheads were touched with a bloody knife, and the blood was wiped off with
wool dipped in milk; the ritual required that the two young men laugh. The sacrificial feast followed, after which the Luperci cut thongs from the skins of the sacrificial animals and ran in two bands around the Palatine hill, striking with the thongs at any woman who came near them. A blow from the thong was supposed to render a woman fertile. In 494 CE the Christian church under Pope
Gelasius I appropriated the form of the rite as the Feast of the Purification."
https://www.britannica.com/topic/Lupercalia
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