Google Dictionary: "Old English, from Latin, ‘light-bringing, morning star’, from
lux,
luc- ‘light’ +
-fer ‘bearing’. Lucifer (sense 1)is by association with the ‘son of the morning’ (Isa. 14:12), believed by Christian interpreters to be a reference to Satan."
Dictionary.com: "before 1000; Middle English, Old English < Latin: morning star, literally, light-bringing, equivalent to lūci- (stem of lūx) light + -fer -fer"
Merriem-Webster: "Middle English, the morning star, a fallen rebel archangel, the Devil, from Old English, from Latin, the morning star, from
lucifer light-bearing, from
luc-, lux light +
-fer -ferous — more at
LIGHT"
Oxford: "Old English, from Latin, ‘light-bringing, morning star’, from lux, luc- ‘light’ + -fer ‘bearing’. Lucifer (sense 1) is by association with the ‘son of the morning’ (Isa. 14:12), believed by Christian interpreters to be a reference to Satan."
Gee, it looks like every single dictionary disagrees with your assertion.
Looks a lot like
you are the one making things up.