{"id":6864,"date":"2019-09-30T04:15:45","date_gmt":"2019-09-30T04:15:45","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/churchedge.com\/illustrations\/index.php\/2019\/09\/30\/halloween-its-creation-and-recreation\/"},"modified":"2019-09-30T04:15:45","modified_gmt":"2019-09-30T04:15:45","slug":"halloween-its-creation-and-recreation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.churchedge.com\/illustrations\/halloween-its-creation-and-recreation\/","title":{"rendered":"Halloween: Its Creation and Recreation"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>Halloween has been a controversial American holiday for conservative Christians for several decades now.  Putting it that way might itself be a surprise for some.  Wouldn\u2019t it rather be the case that Halloween has been controversial for centuries?  If it were really an ancient tradition, whether catholic or pagan, shouldn\u2019t we expect a longer trail of protest, embrace, or at least commentary?  The surprising fact is that nearly all of the festivities and celebrations which are collectively thought of as \u201cHalloween\u201d practices are less than a century old, and their current widespread popularity and cultural force is really only about forty years old.<\/p>\n<p>The classic \u201cfundamentalist\u201d critique of Halloween can be seen here.  We should notice that there has always been a mixture of hysteria with common sense in these sorts of observations.  Basically every claim there about druids and witches is false.  I will explain more about this topic below, but our concepts of paganism, witchcraft, and even Satanism are all modern constructions, made by piecing together some bits of ancient lore with medieval Christian imagery and late 19th century and early 20th century occultism (You can read up on some of this here, though there\u2019s much more to the story).  The only carry-over into Halloween from this stuff is superficial.  Making matters worse, the supposed \u201cpagan\u201d roots of Halloween are still propounded by more mainstream accounts.  As we will see, the real history simply does not support these claims.  However, there are some legitimate points to consider from the fundamentalist critique, namely in the areas of moral prudence.  Once we remove the mythology from the Halloween critique, we still have to deal with the overt sexuality of more recent teenage and adult costumes and the sensationalism of gore.  Holidays have always been known for allowing otherwise good folks to pretend to be bad for short time.  But it is not obvious that Christians can defend participation in this sort of practice simply on the grounds that it is a frivolity.<\/p>\n<p>More recently, James B. Jordan\u2019s \u201cConcerning Halloween\u201d has been getting some widespread attention.  American Vision has posted it online here, and one of the Veritas Press  Omnibus  texts even recommends it for a cultural-apologetic exercise.  A recent video has also taken up Dr. Jordan\u2019s argument and set it to verse.  This sort of turning of the tables has a delightful quality about it, and there is a sort of imaginative genius at work in the article.  Its thesis states:<br \/>\n     The concept, as dramatized in Christian custom, is quite simple: On October 31, the demonic realm tries one last time to achieve victory, but is banished by the joy of the Kingdom.<br \/>\nWhat is the means by which the demonic realm is vanquished?  In a word: mockery.  Satan\u2019s great sin (and our great sin) is pride.  Thus, to drive Satan from us we ridicule him.  This is why the custom arose of portraying Satan in a ridiculous red suit with horns and a tail.  Nobody thinks the devil really looks like this; the Bible teaches that he is the fallen Arch-Cherub.  Rather, the idea is to ridicule him because he has lost the battle with Jesus and he no longer has power over us.<\/p>\n<p>There is certainly something to the point about righteous mockery.  If you turn to the first page of C.S. Lewis\u2019s  The Screwtape Letters , you\u2019ll see two quotes, one from Martin Luther and the other from Thomas Moore, which explain this point quite well.  More than anything else, the Devil is defined by his pride.  However, the claim that this idea serves as the foundation for Halloween lacks any historical support.  The only source Dr. Jordan provides us in the article is the reference to Ray Bradbury\u2019s  Something Wicked This Way Comes , but it is not at all clear how this ties in to any sort of long-standing Christian tradition.<\/p>\n<p>This essay will lay out the development of Halloween over the centuries and evaluate some of the various claims made about its tradition.  While not attempting to dismiss all influence from earlier years, we will argue that these influences are mostly superficial and that the modern holiday known as Halloween is a novel and wholly secular construct.  We will then evaluate it briefly as such, giving some rudimentary suggestions regarding Christian participation in Halloween.<\/p>\n<p> Samhain<\/p>\n<p>The pagan predecessor to Halloween is usually found in Samhain, the ancient Celtic festival which celebrated the end of Summer and the beginning of Winter.  It was essentially a \u201cFall Festival\u201d or a \u201cHarvest Festival,\u201d and nearly nothing is known about its particulars with any certainty.  While it certainly included typical pagan religious rites, there is no evidence to suggest any overt fixation on death.  Ronald Hutton has the most accessible treatment of Samhain in his excellent  The Stations of the Sun: A History of the Ritual Year in Britain .  He admits that our knowledge of Samhain is minimal and plagued by anachronism: \u201cTo hazard any guess about the ancient religious significance of Samhain &#8230; therefore, we are left completely dependent upon inferences projected backward from folklore collected in the last few centuries&#8230;\u201d (365).  He concludes rather modestly that the only things which can be reasonably attributed to Samhain are that it was a seasonal festival with bonfires and there was perhaps some thought that supernatural forces were at work:<br \/>\n     Thus, there seems to be no doubt that the opening of November was the time of a major pagan festival which was celebrated, at the very least, in all those parts of the British Isles which had a pastoral economy &#8230; There is no evidence that it was connected with the dead, and no proof that it opened the year, but it was certainly a time when supernatural forces were especially to be guarded against or propitiated; activities which took different forms in different regions.  Its importance was only reinforced by the imposition upon it of a Christian festival which became primarily one of the dead&#8230;\u201d (370)<br \/>\nAs can be seen, Mr. Hutton actually says that the emphasis on the dead originated not with Samhain, but with the Christian practices which were later celebrated on or around the same time of the year.  We can reasonably question how much if at all Samhain actually contributed to the celebration of Halloween.  The scholarly consensus is that the contribution was minimal, mostly amounting to establishing a certain \u201ctone\u201d to the event, but even this could be accounted for by Halloween\u2019s obvious Christian origins.<\/p>\n<p> All Saints and All Souls<\/p>\n<p>Halloween, as its name should make clear, has a distinctively  Christian  genealogy.  Nicholas Rogers, in his book  Halloween: From Pagan Ritual to Party Night  (a title more sensational than its text), explains: \u201c &#8230; [Samhain] did not offer much in the way of actual ritual practices &#8230; Most of these developed in conjunction with the medieval holy days of All Souls\u2019 and All Saints\u2019 Day\u201d (22).  The name \u201cHalloween\u201d is, as is well known, a contraction of \u201cAll Hallows\u2019 Eve,\u201d the night before All Saints\u2019 Day, but we have to take into account the series of All Hallows\u2019 Eve, All Saints\u2019 Day, and All Souls\u2019 Day to form the entire picture.  Each of these days, in slightly different ways, celebrated the Christian departed and established the memorialization of the dead as a key part of Halloween.<\/p>\n<p>All Saints\u2019 Day and All Souls\u2019 Day were relatively late additions to the Christian liturgical Calendar and always held a fairly minor place among Christian festivals.  Thomas J. Talley\u2019s  The Origins of the Liturgical Year  makes no mention of them at all.  As the cult of the saints grew in importance, along with the various feasts for well-known saints, a feast to celebrate \u201call Saints\u201d also arose.   The New Westminster Dictionary of Liturgy and Worship  explains that this first began as a general feast for both known and unknown martyrs somewhere around the beginning of the fifth century.  This earlier form was celebrated in the Spring, and it was only the later Western tradition which moved it to the Fall:<br \/>\n     The first mention of All Saints is found in a feast commemorating the transfer of relics of martyrs from the catacombs to the Pantheon in Rome by Pope Boniface IV and the consecration of that building on 13 May 609.  The date seems to have moved to 1 November after the dedication on this day of a chapel to the Saviour, Mary, the apostles, martyrs and confessors in St Peter\u2019s.  Pope Gregory III (731-41) instructed that a short office of all the saints be recited there each evening.  The feast of All Martyrs and All Saints and of Our Lady was renamed the feast of All Saints in 835. (5)<br \/>\nIt is important to note the date of November the 1st was set in Rome, not in England, Scotland, or Ireland.  No clear rationale is known for the change, though pragmatic reasons remain the most popular speculations.  The feast of All Souls was fixed in 998, and the three-day festival was complete.<\/p>\n<p>The Cluniac influence on both All Saints\u2019 Day and All Souls\u2019 Day is also significant, as members of that order were known for their \u201creputation for commemorating and interceding in prayer for [their] deceased benefactors\u201d and for the emphasis they placed on purgatory and, later, on indulgences ( Oxford History of Christian Worship  218).  Halloween\u2019s association with the dead, and even ghosts or spirits needing appeasement or aid, can all be attributed to the medieval views of purgatory and the folklore which popularly accompanied it.  The making of \u201csoul cakes\u201d and the practice of \u201csouling,\u201d door-to-door singing in exchange for food or money, seem to have also attached themselves to the feasts of All Saints and All Souls, though it should be noted that these have nearly exact parallels in Christmas practices, especially Wassailing.  Even the famous mischief and misrule so often connected with Halloween has possible antecedents in Martinmas and Twelfth Night.<\/p>\n<p>For all of the spectacular imagery that has been taken from this period of history, the basic components of the Hallowmas celebrations seem to be rather simple: bonfires, almsgiving, the ringing of bells, and general rowdiness on the Eve before.   The Oxford Dictionary of English Folklore  sums the matter up like this:<br \/>\n     From the Middle Ages through to the 19th century, there is no sign in England that 31 October had any meaning except as the eve of All Saints\u2019 Day, when bells might be joyfully rung (as also on Christmas Eve and Easter Eve).  Mournful tolling marked All Soul\u2019s Day, as a call to prayer for the dead. (163)<br \/>\nOne famous component of our modern Halloween can be attributed to the medieval focus on purgatory.  This is the Jack-o\u2019-lantern, though it did not yet have the name and was made out of turnips or gourds.  Probably having an even earlier existence as mere illumination tools, these lanterns were given a unique meaning when the candles inside were said to symbolize the souls in purgatory.  Of course, even this explanation, it should be noted, is largely conjectural on the part of later historians.<\/p>\n<p> Re-forming Halloween<\/p>\n<p>The next major stage of Halloween\u2019s development comes in the Protestant Reformation.  The Celebration of \u201cReformation Day\u201d is not at all a modern phenomena, but dates back to the 16th century.  The Lutheran Church has historically celebrated it as a liturgical feast, and it has been a civic holiday in Slovenia and throughout the western German states for centuries.  The reason for affixing the Reformation to October 31st is that Martin Luther chose that date to write his famous 95 Theses, a critique of the practice of indulgences.  As such, the festival of saints departed and, especially, souls in purgatory was a symbolically powerful occasion.<\/p>\n<p>Reformation Day was never as significant an event in England, however.  This was due in part to England\u2019s unique political identity at the time of the Reformation.  Henry VIII had actually tried to temper some of the more disruptive elements of Hallowmas, though he was not interested in abolishing the entire holiday.  The early English Reformers were united in their opposition to All Souls\u2019 Day and its purgatorial ideology, but it was not until Elizabeth I that the holiday was fully put down.  Even here, this had as much to do with courtly drama as anything else.  Ronald Hutton explains, \u201cQueen Elizabeth\u2019s accession date upon 17 November, representing a Protestant holy day slowly evolved to replace the traditional ecclesiastical rites abolished at the Reformation\u201d ( The Stations of the Sun , 387).  Thus the traditional bells were now rung for an entirely new reason, and the songs and feasts were all in the Queen\u2019s honor.  An even more important national celebration would arise in November for England with their next Monarch.  Guy Fawkes Day would quickly overshadow all of the late October and early November festivities.<\/p>\n<p>Guy Fawkes Day is not very well known in America, but for 300 years it was the predominant autumn holiday for the English.  While possessing many familiar externals: bonfires, dressing up, feasting, and rowdiness, Guy Fawkes Day gave them all a new meaning.  It commemorated the foiling of a plot by a radical Catholic conspiracy to detonate an explosive device at Parliament.  Thus, the festival fires now symbolized neither ancient spirits nor purgatorial fire, but the flames of hell against all traitors and especially the threat of Catholic and European power.  These customs easily spilled over into English nationalism of all sorts, with many more effigies being burned than simply that of Guy Fawkes.<\/p>\n<p>Nicholas Rogers illustrates how the Fifth of November managed to absorb Halloween within the English world:<br \/>\n     As a night of high spirits and youthful rascality, and as a ritual of social reversal, Guy Fawkes Night eclipsed Halloween in England, as it would in Australia and New Zealand, where it was sometimes called Danger of Mischievous Night.  Given the close proximity of the festivals, which fell within five days of one another, it was predictable that some of the souling rituals of Halloween would spill over to the Fifth of November.  In Southrepps and other places in Norfolk, the turnip lanterns that traditionally symbolized souls in purgatory were much in evidence on Bonfire Night.  In Lincolnshire, some of the fire rituals commonly associated with Halloween were transferred to the Fifth of November.  Celebrants threw stones into the bonfire and on the following morning discerned their future from the way they were placed.  In Yorkshire, Lancashire, and Derbyshire, thar cakes or parkins, usually made out of treacle and oatmeal, formed part of the festive fare.  These were clearly reminiscent of the soul cakes distributed at Hallowtide, even though they were made of sweeter and heavier ingredients. ( Halloween  37)<br \/>\nGuy Fawkes Day was always partisan and violent.  When brought over to the New World, it mainly contributed to the history of mischief associated with Halloween, and it gave the festivities an unstable character.  Something else would have to replace this stage in Halloween\u2019s history, and that something else would, ironically, be the return of the Celtic tradition and the revival and reinvention of the name \u201cHalloween.\u201d<\/p>\n<p> Romanticism and the Invention of Tradition<\/p>\n<p>Most explanations of Halloween note that the holiday obtained particular prominence in North America thanks to Irish and Scottish immigrants.  The assumption is usually that these immigrants were bringing over a longstanding \u201cCeltic\u201d tradition, that of Samhain, souling, and guising.  When we look closer at this period of history, however, what we find is not so much an ancient and partially pagan tradition reasserting itself on new soil, but rather the invention of a socio-political identity and culture.  This Pan-Celticism was itself just one facet of the larger Romantic movement which looked to history (and at times historicism) to re-create long-lost customs and communities as a means of combating the onslaught of modernity.  Eric Hobsbawm\u2019s  The Invention of Tradition  is dedicated to explaining how the Victorians created so much of what we now considered to be traditional, and one essay in that collection, \u201cThe Highland Tradition: The Highland Tradition of Scotland\u201d by Hugh Trevor-Roper, explains how much of what we think of as \u201cCeltic\u201d culture was actually constructed by the English nobility, particularly Prince Albert and his court.  Imagery and artifacts that had localized identities, such as the tartan and the bagpipes, were universalized as ancient \u201cCeltic\u201d markers.  Whereas the Scottish Lowlanders had traditionally looked down upon these things, viewing them as befitting a lower social class, all \u201cCelts,\u201d whether Irish or Scottish, Protestant or Catholic, were now unified and understood to be in a way pre-modern and anti-imperial.  This carried over into North America, as well, and before long a \u201cCeltic\u201d culture was firmly established, even if it had tenuous connections with the actual history.<\/p>\n<p>The most well-known literary figure of this movement of Celtic Romanticism is Robert Burns, and the most relevant of his works for our purposes is the poem \u201cHalloween,\u201d with its reference to fairies and historical allusion to Robert the Bruce.  Rather than merely a residual folk tradition, this sort of \u201cHalloween\u201d was a highly stylized intellectual and cultural creation.  No doubt, much of what Burns described, the fortune-telling rituals and belief in supernatural beings, had been common enough folk practices, but once he worked them into his poems, a new and portable \u201cHalloween\u201d culture was created.  (It is worth noting that a similar \u201cinvention\u201d occurred with Christmas at exactly this time.  See Ronald Hutton\u2019s argument in  Stations of the Sun  112-12 and then Mark Connelly\u2019s response in  Christmas: A History  1-99.)<\/p>\n<p>This version of Halloween took root in Canada and the American Northeast, at times in the form of ethnic celebration.  \u201c[T]he Caledonian Society\u2019 observed Halloween with an annual concert of Highland reels, jigs, ballads, and the poems of Robbie Burns\u201d (Rogers,  Halloween  51).  This sort of cultural emphasis spread throughout North America, and it predictably became more universalized:<br \/>\n     [I]t is clear that Halloween was being adapted to the urban milieu of North America in which a conspicuous minority of Irish immigrants congregated.  Judging from the accounts in the  New York Herald , \u201cfireside games\u201d abounded, with Scottish and Irish immigrants humorously reenacting the contests and fortune-telling of their forebears and dressing up for the occasion.  \u201cThe forests and dells of the United States are too cold and tramp-infested to be thickly populated with fairies and witches,\u201d remarked the  Herald  with amusement in 1878, \u201cbut American ingenuity has devised an acceptable substitute, so if any one failed to see dancing fairies and witches innumerable last evening, it was because he did not make a tour of the parlours of his acquaintances.\u201d (Rogers,  Halloween  53)<br \/>\nOther supposedly \u201cCeltic\u201d features now incorporated into Halloween were guising, mumming and souling, various apple games, roasting nuts, indoor and outdoor fires, and the famous jack-o\u2019-lantern, only now made out of the North American pumpkin.  Some of the elements of our modern Halloween can be identified here, though they would still undergo considerable change.  The \u201cguising\u201d of the time was a precursor to modern dressing up, but it would have been considerably simpler, mostly made up of carnival masks, burlap sacks, or imitation-historical garb.  The emphasis on the supernatural, especially witches and spirits, did factor into this period, but it should be clear that it was understood as harmless and domesticated, much like the idea of a chubby elf who could fly around the world with magical reindeer.  This was understood to be good-natured make-believe, but the attempted connection to a mythical tradition did open itself up to the inevitable blurring of the lines between fantasy and reality.<\/p>\n<p> Spooks, Pranks, and Trick or Treat: The Modern Halloween<\/p>\n<p>As interesting as the history we have laid out so far proves to be, it really only provides the embryonic stages of the modern Halloween.  During the turn of the 20th century and especially after the first three decades, Halloween underwent another dramatic transformation, becoming fully modernized, secularized, and commercialized.  In 1898, Martha Russell Orne wrote a pamphlet titled  Hallowe\u2019en: How to Celebrate It , which attempted to organize and universalize festive practices.  She explained how Halloween should be \u201cgrotesquely decorated,\u201d and she encouraged Jack-o\u2019-lanterns to have \u201ca demon-like expression given to the features\u201d (quoted in Lisa Morton,  Trick or Treat: A History of Halloween  69-71).  This emphasis on horror incorporated features from the growing literary genre, taking cues from Washington Irving and Edgar Allan Poe, and later Bram Stoker and Mary Shelley.  Bats and black cats soon became permanent Halloween symbols.<\/p>\n<p>This emphasis on darkness was not really connected to any medieval customs, though it would be easy enough to create bridges between memorials for the dead and literary horror.  Still, it was mostly controlled, with the classic imagery appearing on popular postcards and many of the games and parties being hosted by schools or community groups.  The final transformation came when these elements combined with the tradition of pranking and hooliganism that had accompanied many holidays but especially Halloween.<\/p>\n<p>A general rowdiness had tended to accompany every major holiday over the years, particularly on the various \u201ceves\u201d before.  Though mostly forgotten today, Christmas was once famously decadent, complete with carousing and vandalism.   Mardi Gras , still known for being raucous, is itself the \u201ceve\u201d of Lent.  Halloween was no exception, and elements like Guy Fawkes Day and the celebration of primitive \u201cCeltic\u201d culture only added to its wild character.  Lisa Morton writes:<br \/>\n     Not everyone saw Halloween mischief as simply the fun-loving but ultimately harmless sport of young boys.  As pranking became more widespread, it became more of a problem.  Simply disassembling a gate\u2013in fact, the name \u201cGate Night\u201d replaced Halloween in many areas\u2013was one thing, but disassembling the gate and then moving it into the centre of town where it might be piled in the middle of Main Street with dozens of other gates was more troublesome.  In the 1920s, Halloween pranking spread into the rapidly expanding major urban areas, and became out-and-out vandalism.  Although the simple pranks of the past\u2013switching shop signs, or flinging a sock filled with flour at a man\u2019s black coat\u2013were still practised, so were far more destructive activities, including breaking windows tripping pedestrians and setting fires.  In 1933, during the height of America\u2019s Great Depression, destructive Halloween prank-playing was so virulent that many cities dubbed that year\u2019s celebration \u201cBlack Halloween.\u201d  Vandalism was now described as the work of \u201choodlums\u201d rather than mischievous boys, and included sawing down telephone poles, overturning automobiles, opening fire hydrants to flood city streets and openly taunting the police.  Local governments that were already struggling economically were overwhelmed, and many considered banning Halloween altogether. (Morton,  Trick or Treat  75-76)<br \/>\nNicholas Rogers supports this description:<br \/>\n      &#8230; the conventions of rascality that invigorated turn-of-the-century Halloween took a long time to die.  While youngsters would dress up in fancy costumes and masquerade in the streets, visiting houses for various treats, their older brothers would indulge in a different kind of devilry.  As the  Star  quite casually reported of one small town east of Toronto: \u201cHallowe\u2019en spirit held full sway in Whitby last night.  Many a citizen found his veranda furniture hanging from spikes on telephone poles, while a number of gates were removed and steps taken away.\u201d  On a typical Halloween spree in interwar North America, fences were destroyed, signs and gates moved, roads barricaded, trolley cars immobilized, street lighting smashed, and outhouses tipped over.  One eminent historian of Canada assured me that in his more youthful days in the 1930s he turned over as many as fourteen outhouses in one night of Halloween pranks.  (Rogers,  Halloween  78)<br \/>\nAs a result, there began a concentrated effort to suppress this sort of civil disorder.  It was this, more than any other supposed tradition, that accounts for our modern celebration of Halloween:<br \/>\n     All manner of clubs and societies went out of their way to provide alternative events for Halloween.  Lions, Rotarians, Kiwanis, religious groups, high schools, boys\u2019 and girls\u2019 clubs, women\u2019s institutes, the Imperial Order of the Daughters of the Empire, and even the Sons of the American Revolution all rose to meet the challenge of rendering Halloween safe and sane during the interwar years.  (Rogers,  Halloween  81)<br \/>\nThis sanitization and domestication of Halloween also explains its most-famous component: trick or treating.  Whereas guising and pranking certainly offer some ancestral contributions, the modern practice is highly controlled and actually involves almost no \u201ctricks.\u201d  Lisa Morton again explains:<br \/>\n     While it\u2019s tempting to draw connections between the New World\u2019s institutionalized begging ritual and earlier, Old World traditions such as the masked house-to-house performances of the Grulacks or the Strawboys, Guy Fawkes begging or souling, trick or treat probably sprang out of more recent antecedents.  In new York City, Thanksgiving, now celebrated in the USA with a traditional turkey dinner on the fourth Thursday of November, was compared in the 1870s with Guy Fawkes Day.  It had become a rowdy festival of of thousands of boys organized in crews (similar to the Guy Fawkes crews who still parade in Lewes each year), who were rewarded with gifts of money.  Costumed children were also recorded going from house to house begging food.  (Morton,  Trick or Treat  78)<br \/>\nSimilar practices arose at Christmas and Halloween, and as the Halloween festivities began to become more orderly and supervised, trick or treating took on its modern form:<br \/>\n     By the 1930s, the phrase in connection with Halloween and costumed children seemed to be working its way down through the northern USA, as states like Oregon reported that \u201cyoung goblins and ghosts, employing modern shakedown methods, successfully worked the \u201ctrick or treat\u201d system.\u201d  One of the first national mentions of trick or treat appears in an article of 1939 entitled \u201cA Victim of the Window Soaping Brigade?,\u201d which both refers to \u201ctrick or treat\u201d as \u201cthe age-old Halloween salutation\u2019 and makes it plain that the practice was a method of subverting rowdy pranking.  Still, it wasn\u2019t until after the Second World War\u2013when rationing was over and luxuries like candy were once again readily available\u2013 that trick or treat finally spread throughout the entire USA.  (Morton,  Trick or Treat  79).<br \/>\nHalloween remained mostly a children\u2019s holiday until the late 1970s when Hollywood took up the imagery and customs, and the holiday exploded in popularity.  Adults increasingly participated in dress-up parties of their own, and the commercialization grew exponentially.  More recently the horror elements have increased, though they have also taken on a camp element, most notably in the ubiquitous zombies.<\/p>\n<p> Conclusion<\/p>\n<p>And so as it turns out, Halloween is a subversion and transformation of dark ritual.  Only it isn\u2019t a Christian transformation of ancient paganism, but rather a modern secular domestication of youthful energy and rebellion.  While there are several elements from earlier traditions involved in the modern Halloween, they are pieced together in new ways and given meanings quite distinct from their predecessors.  As such, this must influence the Christian opinion of Halloween more so than fears of ancient paganism or medieval Catholicism.  The question is not directly liturgical, but is rather moral, and especially has to do with social prudence.<\/p>\n<p>The Christian Halloween is simply All Saints Day and, for Protestantism, Reformation Day.  Understood rightly, these two are not different holidays, of course, but rather one and the same, as the great Protestant Reformers are themselves saints whom we commemorate.  To continue this religious tradition is wholly appropriate and needs no further accommodation to other manufactured \u201ctraditions.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Additionally, the question of participating in secular Halloween festivities should be answered by addressing the reasonable societal reception of those festivities and the kind of community being formed by them.  If dressing up and trick or treating is simply a neighborhood event involving parents and children, understood as mere recreation with no larger significance, then it may well be harmless enough.  As it inevitably evolves and constructs communities and identities in new ways, however, it does take on a new sort of power, and even if not understood as occultic, it is, in a way, spiritual, as it knits together the collective psyche.  It will therefore need to be critically engaged.  The prioritization of gore cannot be vindicated merely by an appeal to unseriousness.  Christians must retain their valuation of life, even when at play.  And the clearest moral danger in today\u2019s Halloween is the immodest and lewd features that are continuously growing in popularity.<\/p>\n<p>If our application is somewhat inconclusive, it is only because a proper evaluation of Halloween must begin with a proper understanding of it.  That is what we have tried to do in this essay, by bringing to light the historical narrative and the very recent birth of the secular holiday.  Superstition, especially of the reactionary Christian variety, is always unhelpful, and that is true for both the angry and friendly varieties.  We have shown that the modern holiday, while incorporating various elements of recreated ancient paganism, medieval Christianity, early-modern Reformation and nationalism, and Celtic Romanticism, is nevertheless an entirely modern construct, coming into its own in postwar North America.  This is our Halloween.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Halloween has been a controversial American holiday for conservative Christians for several decades now. Putting it that way might itself be a surprise for some. Wouldn\u2019t it rather be the case that Halloween has been controversial for centuries? If it were really an ancient tradition, whether catholic or pagan, shouldn\u2019t we expect a longer trail [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[2515,2514,214,2513,2518,1848,1255,1961,2519,2449,2512,2517],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.churchedge.com\/illustrations\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6864"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.churchedge.com\/illustrations\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.churchedge.com\/illustrations\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.churchedge.com\/illustrations\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.churchedge.com\/illustrations\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=6864"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.churchedge.com\/illustrations\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/6864\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.churchedge.com\/illustrations\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=6864"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.churchedge.com\/illustrations\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=6864"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.churchedge.com\/illustrations\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=6864"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}