Author: John Stonestreet
Every year around this time, the ritual begins anew. The weather cools off, the leaves change color, and Christians start arguing about Halloween.
Many people love this night. It gives them an excuse to host parties, kick off the holiday spending season, and provide economic stimulus for the dental industry. Others use it as an excuse to flirt with things much darker than plastic skeletons and creative jack-o’-lanterns. Too many adults use Halloween as an excuse to throw out common standards of modesty.
What is the history behind Halloween? What’s all the decoration and tradition really about? Is there something spiritual behind the ghoulishness?
When I was a kid, a series of comic-book-style tracts went around claiming that Halloween was a pagan holiday called Samhain, when ancient druids used to carry out human sacrifice under a full moon. That story, as even modern pagans who love Halloween admit, is mostly made up.
The very name “Halloween” means “holy evening.” It was a throwback to when European Christians prepared for the Feast of All Saints on November 1st. A few years back, Kirk Cameron urged Christians to make the most of Halloween’s Christian origins, and to throw “the biggest Halloween party on [the] block.” Not only is it a great way to make fun of the devil, he argued, but it offers Christians a wonderful opportunity to proclaim Jesus’ victory over sin and death to our neighbors.
Our Christian forebears might have agreed. In his book, For the Glory of God, historian Rodney Stark argued that Christians in the early centuries of the Church frequently reacted to pagan practices like fortune-telling, alchemy, and even sorcery, by not taking them seriously. Augustine, for example, myth-busted astrology by pointing out how twins born under the same star sign were often very different in personality. St. Boniface taught that “to believe in ‘witches’ is un-Christian.” Pope Gregory the Great even advised a missionary to Britain to destroy idols but to re-purpose pagan temples for Christian worship.
A few years ago, Steven Wedgeworth offered another perspective in an article at The Calvinist International. After providing a helpful overview of the history of Halloween, he concluded that though there are echoes of paganism and Christian re-purposing in Halloween, the holiday of today, especially the costumes and trick-or-treating, is a recent invention. Like the commercialized secular Christmas, Halloween as we know it has more to do with department stores than druids.
No matter what day it is, Paul’s instructions in Philippians 4 should guide our celebrations. Christians should think on “whatever is true, honorable, just, pure, lovely, and commendable.” Axe-murderer get-ups and sexually provocative costumes fail that test. Also, Christians should consider Paul’s teaching on meat sacrificed to idols in 1 Corinthians 8. Idol worship is always wrong, but eating meat sacrificed to idols is a matter of conscience.
If you are unable to participate in Halloween with a clear conscience, there are plenty of things to celebrate this time of year, from Reformation Day to All Saints Day, to the beauty of fall’s changing colors, to, as always, the sovereignty of God and the victory of Christ over everything. If you expect trick-or-treaters at your door on Halloween, you can always put on a wool tunic and nail 95 Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups to your door.
When it comes to the spooky stuff, just remember, as Paul Pastor wrote at Christianity Today, that “monsters should point us to God.” “No story worth listening to,” he wrote, “lacks a villain. And no villain worth fighting lacks monstrosity.” No story has more monstrous villains or darker darkness than the story told in Holy Scripture. We have an enemy, an enemy of our souls, and the evil we face is not just “out there,” but is also in our own hearts.
The Christian message, at this and every time of the year, is that evil does not have the final say, either in the world or in our own hearts. Evil is a real foe, but because of Jesus Christ, evil is a defeated foe. So, fear not.