
Hundreds
of years before the birth of Christ, the Celts, inhabitants of Britain
and Ireland, observed a festival on October 31st. Unlike modern-day
Halloween, theirs was no children's holiday. The Celts and their
priests, the Druids, celebrated Samhain, a festival that marked
the eve of the Celtic New Year, which began on November 1. The fall
harvest was complete and winter loomed ahead. The Celts believed
the power of the sun was fading. For the next several months, darkness
would prevail.
The
Celts believed that during Samhain the veil separating the living
from the dead was at its thinnest. They believed that on the evening
of October 31, evil spirits and the souls of the dead passed through
the barrier and entered the world of the living. Departed family
members would revisit their earthly homes. The thought was frightening-and
exciting!
The
Celts believed these spirits and dead souls could torment the living.
Crops might be destroyed, babies stolen, farm animals killed. But
this was also an opportunity to commune with the spirits-and divine
the future. The Devil, the lord of darkness, was ordinarily feared,
but during Samhain, his power would be called on to foretell the
future.
TRICK
OR TREAT
The Druids were charged with appeasing the goblins and preventing
harm to the people. Huge Samhain bonfires were lit to guide the
way of the spirits. Various sacrifices (including human sacrifices)
were performed to assure a good year. Several ancient authors commented
on the gory religious rites of the Druids. It is believed that,
like many pagan cultures around the world, the Celts left out food
for the spirits, hoping that a "treat" would prevent an
evil "trick," such as spontaneous fires that would burn
down a house or barn.
Centuries
later, descendants of the Celts continued to observe the Samhain
festival by dressing as evil spirits. They roamed from house to
house demanding food in exchange for the "spirits" leaving
the home unharmed. They carved demon faces in hollowed-out turnips
and lighted them with candles. That night they also practiced many
customs designed to divine the future.
Young
people roasted nuts in Samhain fires to see which would crack first-and
tell them who they would marry. The person who retrieved an apple
with his mouth from a tub of water assured himself of a lucky year.
Obviously some of these customs (like "apple-bobbing")
have remained with us, strictly as amusement.
ALL
HALLOWS' EVE
When Christianity began to spread through Europe in the third and
fourth centuries, the pagan temples were torn down. But pagan worship
never completely disappeared. The festival of Samhain remained a
primary pagan festival. Belief in spirits may have waned, but many
of the old Samhain traditions continued to be practiced-especially
by the children.
Primarily
in Ireland, children dressed as spirits went from house to house
demanding a treat. If they received none, they performed an unwelcomed
trick. They were play-acting the part of evil spirits that had to
be appeased, just as in the old Samhain festival the people believe
they really did have to appease spirits.
In
the 700s, the Roman Church decided to combat this festival by replacing
it with a Christian celebration. Instead of honoring evil spirits
and the souls of the dead, the church chose to recognize the saints,
or hallowed ones, who had lived godly lives. The Church seemed to
be saying, "All right, if you must have a day to celebrate
the dead, then celebrate those who died and are now with the Lord."
So
November 1 came to be called All Saints' Day, also called All Hallows'
Day. The evening before was called All Hallows' Evening. From that
we get the modern name of Halloween. But pagan customs continued.
And with the growth of witchcraft in the Middle Ages, additional
symbols became associated with Halloween - black cats, witches,
bats, and skulls.
HALLOWEEN
IN AMERICA
Irish immigrants in the mid-1800s brought to America the Halloween
customs we're familiar with - costumes, trick-or-treat, carved Jack-o-lanterns,
etc. (The Jack-o-lantern is simply an American version of the hollowed-out
turnip, mentioned earlier. The pumpkin did not grow in Ireland and
Britain). Unfortunately, they also brought "tricks" with
them; such mischief often involved breaking windows and over-turning
sheds and outhouses.
Even
though the practice of actually performing a trick if no treat is
given has faded, the custom of children going "trick-or-treating"
has become an established American tradition. Only in recent years
have parents hesitated to send their children into the streets because
of the increased danger of accidents, poisoned food, and menacing
strangers. Nonetheless, despite the dangers associated with trick-or-treating,
Halloween is celebrated more than ever. In fact, the night is the
second most popular party night of the year (after December 31)
for "baby-boomer" adults. Many adults look at it as the
one night of the year they can dress up and act foolish.
CONTINUING
OCCULT SIGNIFICANCE
But while children and adults innocently imitate ancient Celtic
customs, darker practices persist. Witches and Satanists still consider
Halloween to be one of the strongest times during the year to cast
a spell. On Halloween most witchcraft practitioners participate
in a ritual called "drawing down the moon." In this, the
chief witch of the coven (group of witches) becomes, they believe,
a channel for the moon goddess. During this ritual the participants,
both male and female, are 'sky-clad," that is, naked.
Stonehenge,
the mysterious ancient stone formation in England, is often the
site for bizarre gatherings of occultists, some of who believe they
are modern-day Druids. (Many people believe that Stonehenge was
a Druid religious site.) And evidence persists that some Satanist
and voodoo groups offer sacrifices - usually animals, but at times,
human babies - on Satan's high day of the year, October 31.
THE
BIBLICAL RESPONSE TO HALLOWEEN
Witches and Satanists are, of course, a small minority. Few people
who celebrate Halloween these days ever think about the darkness
that underlies most Halloween practices. A beaming child dressed
in a black pointed hat and matching gown with a wart carefully drawn
on her nose and a trick-or-treat bag held tightly in her hand-is
hardly thinking of death or the spirits of departed relatives. Nor
should she be. She's thinking of candy and fun. She's glowing because
of her delight in her special costume. And she's anticipating the
adventure of her house-to-house pilgrimage.
Merchants
also look forward to October 31. The sale of candy, costumes, decorations,
and party goods make Halloween one of the major retail seasons of
the year. Surely, no one can deny children or adults all the Halloween
fun simply because of its unsavory history. Can there really be
anything wrong with this lighthearted revelry? Does the Bible have
anything to say about celebrating Halloween?
In
Corinth, meat that had been sacrificed to idols was sold in the
market, along with other regular meats. People who wanted to honor
a particular pagan god, bought meat offered to that god, took it
home, and ate it in honor of that idol. The early Church was divided
over whether to eat such meat. In 1 Corinthians 10:19-33, Paul stated
that although people who worshipped idols actually worshipped the
demons behind those idols (v. 20), nothing spiritual happened to
the meat itself - it wasn't tainted; it was perfectly fine. The
problem for Christians was not the meat; it was their own consciences,
and their testimony in the community.
1.
On the conscience issue, Paul said that Christians could eat meat
offered to an idol and maintain a clean conscience by simply not
asking the vendor in the marketplace, or the host at whose home
they were eating, whether the meat was offered to an idol (vv. 25-27).
2.
If, while eating at an unbeliever's house, they mentioned that the
meat was offered to an idol, the Christian should decline to eat
the meat because the unbeliever knows that to eat such meat is a
celebration of the idol, which a sincere Christian would not do
(vv. 27-29).
If
we apply this passage to the celebration of Halloween, then one
could argue that Christians can dress in ghostly costumes and practice
the traditions that have been passed down from the ancient Celts;
after all, "everything is permissible" (v. 23). The supernatural
powers the Celts tried to appease don't have power over those who
belong to Christ, and the religious significance has become more
traditional than meaningful.
But
Paul didn't stop with a statement of his freedom. He said, "'Everything
is permissible, but not everything is beneficial." And whereas
believers in Corinth didn't ask about whether a piece of meat had
been involved with a Satanic ritual, modern believers know that
every Halloween is associated with an occult past. It is in this
light that Christians need to examine how to observe Halloween.
EXAMINE
HOW YOU CELEBRATE HALLOWEEN
1. What may not hurt you may hurt others. Paul said that
it wouldn't harm a Christian to eat meat sacrificed to an idol.
After all, the pagan gods that the meat had been sacrificed to weren't
real gods. In the same light, he probably would say that Christians
are not prohibited from dressing in costumes and going trick-or-treating
or attending Halloween parties. After all, "We know that an
idol is nothing at all in the world and that there is no God but
one" (I Corinthians 8:4).
But
Paul went on to say that by doing what the believer was free to
do, the believer may be distressing another believer who doesn't
realize he has this freedom. "Be careful, however, that the
exercise of your freedom does not become a stumbling block to the
weak" (I Corinthians 8:9). The weak ones would be those who
still had problems with the idea of eating the food sacrificed to
idols.
During
Halloween, little children in particular are the weak ones. On TV,
in movies, in school, and with their playmates, many children today
are exposed to occult influences. We may be opening our children
to these influences if we approve of these things in Halloween fun.
We adults may be fully aware that we are only spoofing witches and
ghosts, but the young many not be so sure.
If
we have given our lives to Jesus Christ, then our eternal destiny
is safe in the hands of Almighty God. But that's not true of most
of the people around us. There is a valid reason for most people
to fear a "lord of death" even if they don't take him
seriously on Halloween. We who have found life in Jesus should be
careful that our freedom doesn't keep others from finding that same
eternal life.
2.
Some permissible things may hinder your Christian growth. The
Bible encourages us to "throw off everything that hinders and
the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance
the race marked out for us. Let us fix our eyes on Jesus" (Hebrews
12:1-2). This one night of the year, most eyes are not fixed on
Jesus but on a darker image. The Christian's "race of faith"
leads him to eternal life, to a joy that has no shadow. Should we
really be focusing on the devil, witches and other dark beings,
even for one night?
3.
God says, "Don't imitate evil!" "When you enter
the land the Lord your God is giving you, do not learn to imitate
the detestable ways of the nations there. Let no one be found among
you who...practices divination or sorcery, interprets omens, engages
in witchcraft, or casts spells, or who is a medium, or spiritist
or who consults the dead? (Deuteronomy 18:9-11).
If
our children dress as witches and sorcerers, if we hang cardboard
ghosts in our windows, if we entertain with tales of ghouls and
haunted houses-what are we doing but imitating that which is evil?
We need to make it clear as Christians that witches and evil spirits
are not funny and are not harmless, even if the people in witch
costumes are only play-acting.
Furthermore,
we are trivializing for our children a serious realm when we pretend
to have things like ghosts and witches. There are real witches;
the "Red Church" is a massive, world-wide organization
committed to the downfall of Christians, churches and the cause
of Christ. There are real wicked spirits by the millions in the
world around us, with whom we wrestle continually although we are
not always aware of it (Ephesians 6:12). There are real séances,
trances and spells; the Ouija board is real; astrology is real.
People who dabble in these things can bring demonic bondage upon
themselves. So, when we make light of them with our children, are
we teaching them that these things are unreal and harmless like
Father Christmas or the Easter Bunny?
ARE
THERE ALTERNATIVES?
As Christians, we have plenty of reason to celebrate. While the
world around us focuses on activities honoring fear and death, we
can celebrate the One who brings life. The following ideas might
help you celebrate October 31 in a way that's joyful for you and
your family:
1.
Celebrate All Saints' Day
Protestants shy away from honoring saints. Their reluctance generally
is based on a fear that the honor will cross the line into worship
or prayer to saints. We are to worship and pray to no one but God.
However, there is a good biblical basis for looking to those who
have faithfully followed God in the past: Hebrews 11 has a roll
call of believers who have set examples for us. But in his Letters
to the Corinthians, Paul makes it abundantly clear that he and other
saints are only servants, men and women like ourselves who are following
God. And it is God and God alone to whom we look in our worship
and prayers.
But
with nearly 2000 years of church history, we can well remember many
faithful believers whose lives can encourage us in our walk with
the Lord. That can include not only famous figures from the church's
history, but also the saints we have known personally-people in
our own family and in our own church who are now with the lord.
While the Celts trembled at the thought of their departed kin returning
on Samhain, we can celebrate Halloween and All Saints Day by joyfully
recalling our own departed saints. (Christians from many Protestant
traditions may want to recall that October 31 is also Reformation
Day, celebrating Martin Luther's beginning the Reformation by posting
his "Ninety-five Theses" on the church door.)
2.
Have a different kind of party
You can have a fall harvest party, an All Saint's Day party, or
simply a costume party. Have children (and maybe adults too) dress
up as biblical characters and/or figures from Christian history.
Or find some other positive theme. Some Christians plan a "Fools
for Christ" party (see I Corinthians 4:10). This involves costumes
and craziness, but none of the traditional symbols of death and
witchcraft. Whatever you choose, avoid the usual Halloween symbols
in decorations and activities. The way to "celebrate the dead"
is by honoring God's saints, already in heaven, part of the body
of Christ of which the living saints are a part.
3.
Hold a Bible study on what God says about the occult and witchcraft.
This might be especially good for teenagers, since they are probably
coming into frequent contact with influences of this type. This
may sound farfetched to you, but in recent years there has been
an amazing growth of witchcraft and Satanism in the U.S. Some New
Age cultists are attracted to many aspects of witchcraft, especially
the ideas of tapping the "powers of the universe" and
of controlling our own destinies.
4.
Use trick-or-treating as an opportunity to tell others about the
love of Jesus. Most Christian bookstores carry small pamphlets
about the Lord- designed especially for children on Halloween. These
could be taped to candy and dropped into each trick-or-treat's bag.
5.
Gather for a prayer and praise meeting. During this night when
Satanists and witches covens meet to cast their spells and perform
grotesque rituals, it seems appropriate for believers to gather
to praise the one and only God. Praise God for His victory over
death, Satan, hell and all evil. (Recall Paul's words in Romans
16:20: "The God of peace will soon crush Satan under your feet.")
And pray for all the people who don't know that Jesus Christ wants
to give them peace with God and eternal life.
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