We are about to move from the month of October to
November and there is a sense of time slipping by very quickly. A reminder of
that is in the shops and at the entrance to our houses. They are awash with
ghoulish and macabre Halloween outfits and accessories. Grinning skulls, skeleton costumes and fake
tombstones can be purchased. Witches’ broomsticks and wizards’ wands are
accompanied by various images and symbols marked with an RIP. It’s all very different from the simple
Halloween apples and nuts festivities of my childhood. Rightly so, time moves
on and social habits change.
Halloween has its origins in Celtic times. It was at this
time of the year a celebration of the transition from light to darkness was
ritualised. Our Celtic ancestors also believed that the boundary between our
world and that of the dead was very thin; they believed the spirits of the dead
returned. I wonder if the death- themes in our Halloween celebrations are an
attempt to recapture the spirit of the Feast of All Souls, on November 2, when
Christians remember and pray for their deceased relatives!
We may think Halloween is silly nonsense driven by commercialism
and a waste of money. Children love it and always will. Halloween has a lot to
offer. It can put us in touch with the mystery of life and that some things in
life are often clouded in darkness. It puts us in touch with the struggle
between light and darkness and the struggle between good and evil. Halloween
may have pagan origins but it embraces the Christian message too. It’s a simple
Halloween message that God calms, encourages and reassures us, especially when
we struggle with darkness, evil, mystery and the unknown. Enjoy a happy and
safe Halloween break!
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