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This file can be printed for personal use and study. © Reachout Trust - www.reachouttrust.org HALLOWEEN More
detailed notes on Halloween are available for download TIMES PAST The celebration of Halloween on 31 October each year
goes back to the ancient Celtic festival of Samhain. Indeed this is
still the pagan name for the festival that falls around the 31st October,
depending on the moon. There are many different suggestions as to what actually happened on this night, but it appears that many people thought that the barrier between the human world and the supernatural world was broken down. "Central to the festival
of Hallowe'en was the celebration of the dead. The Celtic New Year festival
was known as the celebration of Samhain... The eve of November 1st,
the day on which the old year died, was a very appropriate time to honour
death." - Hallowe'en Treat or Trick, David Porter, 1993,
p.24. This evening has always been associated with the dark
side and evil supernatural realms but we should not imaging from
this that everyone sacrificed babies and the Devil roamed freely and
did whatever he wanted to. "The ancient Celtic (Irish, Scottish, Welsh) festival called Samhain is considered by many to be a predecessor of our contemporary Halloween. Samhain was the New Year's Day of the Celts, celebrated on 1 November. It was also a day of the dead, a time when it was believed that the souls of those who had died during the year were allowed access to the land of the dead. It was related to the season: by Samhain, the crops should be harvested and animals brought in from the distant fields. Many traditional beliefs and customs associated with Samhain, most notable that night was the time of the wandering dead, the practice of leaving offerings of food and drink to masked and costumed revelers, and the lighting of bonfires, continued to be practiced on 31 October, known as the Eve of All Saints, the Eve of All Hallows, or Hallow Even. It is the glossing of the name Hallow Even that has given us the name Hallowe'en The spirits of Samhain, once thought to be wild and powerful, were now said to be something worse: evil. The church maintained that the gods and goddesses and other spiritual beings of traditional religions were diabolical deceptions, that the spiritual forces that people had experienced were real, but they were manifestations of the Devil, the Prince of Liars, who misled people toward the worship of false idols. Thus, the customs associated with Halloween included representations of ghosts and human skeletons -symbols of the dead- and of the devil and other malevolent, evil creatures, such as witches were said to be. - Halloween and other Festivals of Death and Life, Jack Santino, University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, 1994." - Quoted from the Darkside Parlour Web Site. Mrs. Gloria Phillips of Mobile, Alabama gives further background to this festival in an article entitled "Halloween What It Is From A Christian Perspective." "The custom of Halloween is traced to the Druid festival of the dead. At that time the Roman Pantheon was built by Emperor Hadrian in 100 A.D. as a temple to the goddess Cybele and other Roman deities. It became the principle place of worship. Roman pagans prayed for the dead. Rome was captured and the Pantheon fell into disrepair. Emperor Phocas captured Rome and gave the Pantheon to Pope Boniface IV in 609. He reconsecrated it to the Virgin Mary and resumed using the temple to pray for the dead, only now it was "Christianized", as men added the unscriptural teaching of purgatory. In 834 A.D. Gregory IV extended the feast for all the church and it became known as All Saint's Day, still remembering the dead." David Porter also goes on in his book to show that the Druids too regarded Halloween as a sacred time. He quotes on p.26 of his book from The Elements of the Druid Tradition by Philip Carr-Gomm, p.70. "The Druid rites
were
concerned with making contact with the spirits of the departed, who
were seen as sources of guidance and inspiration rather than as sources
of dread
The dead are honoured and feasted, not as the dead, but
as living spirits of loved ones and of guardians who hold the root-wisdom
of the tribe." Many felt that this was also a time when the souls
of the dead revisited their homes, therefore the preoccupation with
ghosts, demons and the like. This led to many feeling they needed to
placate the supernatural powers, especially those controlling nature.
Sacrifices of animals, vegetables or maybe even humans were made to
this end. THE CHURCH The church wanted to divert the thinking and preoccupation
away from these pagan ceremonies and so introduced special services
for All Hallows Eve and 1 November, All Saints Day. This effort however
has largely failed and to most Halloween evening is still very pagan. "Hallowe'en today is part
of a trilogy of celebrations: Hallowe'en, or All Hallow's Eve (observed
on 31 October), All Saints Day (celebrated on 1 November), and All Souls'
Day (celebrated on 2 November). Of these the second and third (sometimes
referred to together as 'Hallowtide') are festivals created by the Christian
church. Hallowe'en however, is a festival whose roots are deep in pre-Christian
religion and which in modern times retains much of its pagan symbolism."
- Porter, pp.22/23. We need to be aware that this evening is special to
a great number who practice Witchcraft and Satanism. Many witches will
give testimony to the fact of what happens at Halloween is very special
to them and indeed how much they enjoy it. You can also notice that every year around the third
week of October informative articles by witches begin to appear in local
newspapers. It is an evening where those in Witchcraft gather,
and through various means, seek to release supernatural power. The particular
'brand' of Witchcraft will determine where the power will be used to
effect. We hear stories that it is directed against churches and families
and in a small number of cases this could be true. Nevertheless, whichever
way the power appears to be directed, clearly it is not from God and
consequently, it is often a night for much evil activity in the spiritual
realms as well as on earth. DEVELOPMENT Halloween has developed over the years. In some countries
it is used as a commercial enterprise and in other countries hardly
celebrated at all. The fact of the matter is, that whatever the 'outward'
signs are, the witches will be using Halloween as part of their celebrations,
because of its pagan and occult roots. As we point out in our various publications on the
Occult, there is a vast difference between Wicca - 'White' Witchcraft
- and Satanism. Consequently Halloween celebrations will mean different
things to different covens, but the link with the occult will be very
clear. "Yet there are much stronger
survivals in modern Hallowtide. Ancient rituals are being recited today
much as they were a thousand years ago, and gods and spirits are being
worshipped who were worshipped in the West before the birth of Christ.
Some groups actively worship the devil; others (the majority, in fact)
claim to repudiate satanism and to devote themselves to caring for the
planet and for their fellow human beings. Some regard Christianity as
a recent religion, of little enduring worth; some regard themselves
as in amiable co-existence with Christianity; others hate Christianity
and would destroy it if they could. For all these, Hallowe'en is a special
occasion in a way that other traditional festivals are not." -
Porter, p.31. Whatever the dangers and questions about Halloween
a poll in 1999 showed it to be more popular than ever. "A third of the people surveyed in a new Gallup poll said they believe in ghosts, three times the number who said that two decades ago. One of five said they believe in witches, twice the rate of the late 1970s. Almost nine of 10 people in the new poll said they have no objections to Halloween on religious grounds... Two-thirds of American parents in the poll said their children will go out trick-or-treating, slightly more than in 1978. More than four out of five parents say their children will wear costumes this Halloween... The telephone poll of 1,005 adults taken Oct. 21-24 had an error margin of plus or minus 3 percentage points." - Associated Press INVOLVEMENT SCHOOLS, YOUTH GROUPS, ETC. There has been some turning against the intense celebration
of Halloween in schools. Some Local Education Authorities recommend
that the subject be kept low-key and others that if it is mentioned,
the dangers of the occult realms must also be mentioned. However there
are still many who take the opportunity to highlight, sometimes unintentionally,
the occultic realms. "Hallowe'en is being shunned by schools who say it is too frightening for children. Staff at schools such as Gavinburn Nursery in Glasgow have decided not to celebrate the event on October 31 for fears that it will give youngsters nightmares... The nursery is not the only one to take a hard line. The adjoining primary school and some church schools will also give the occasion a miss. St John and St Francis School in Bridgwater Somerset, says the festival is not part of the Christian calendar and therefore not something it marks." TRICK OR TREAT This common practice, associated with Halloween, was introduced by the Irish immigrants in America and at first was quite malicious. As it developed down the years it very often turned into harmless pranks. Much today is still harmless, but there is also an element of the destructive and malicious that has come back in. PARTIES Many Halloween parties are harmless on the surface and we must not think that demons are waiting to strike at every fancy dress party. However, we do have to realise that again the themes of most of the parties are a preoccupation with the evil supernatural realm. REACHING OUT IN THE CHURCH PRAYER This is essential as we approach Halloween. Arrange
special prayer times to include: Awareness
that we are against principalities and powers not people. Seek the Lord
to rebuke these powers in your area. That there maybe a positive witness of the Lord to
teachers, scout troop leaders etc. That there
will be a lack of involvement of schools, etc., in Halloween. Protection of local children. That no one is drawn into the occult as a result. Many will
arrange a night or half night of prayer on the 31st itself. PRAISE PARTY We do not recommend that Christians just hold a party on the 31st, as this could confuse children into thinking it is a Halloween party. There is scope however to hold a party, that exalts the Lord Jesus and gives a positive message, as well as allowing kids to have fun. Such a time is also an outreach evening and may keep other kids off the streets that night. INDIVIDUALLY AT SCHOOL First, we do need to have a regular participation in school life. If we just go once a year to complain, then we will often be dismissed as cranks. However, if we have been involved with the life of the school over the year, our feelings are noted more readily. We should not go in as 'raving evangelical loonies' but present a careful argument that shows the possible dangers of Halloween. Underline the fact that we seek to provide a safe environment for our kids at school and so it is not appropriate to teach our children that experimentation with the occult world is okay. If however they feel they must talk about Halloween, ask them to also warn of the dangers. TRICK OR TREAT Trick or Treat boils down to 'blackmail to prevent vandalism' and we would suggest is not healthy for Christian children to be involved in it. We should also, where possible, encourage our friends and neighbours not to allow their children to do it either. Not only do we have the preoccupation with the occult but also the danger of talking to and taking sweets from strangers. We should also consider how we might frighten some young or old people with gruesome costumes. The evening might also produce another way of building a bridge to preach the gospel. Take care of the elderly who live alone in your neighbourhood on Halloween. OWN CHILDREN Understand that it can sometimes be difficult for your children with peer pressure and activities at school, etc. Do take time to explain the dangers to them and not just say 'NO!' It will of course help if there is a Praise Party or similar event being run in your locality. |