Rather than celebrating the Jewish
festival of Passover, Christians tend to focus on the events of Christ’s death
and resurrection in what has become Easter (though an understanding of both will
enrich one’s faith immensely). Pentecost Sunday has come to be a celebration of
the outpouring of the Holy Spirit in Acts chapter 2 and is less focused on Shavuot
as a celebration of the wheat harvest and Torah.
When it comes to Christmas, the roots of this Christian celebration are not Judaism but rather stem from the winter solstice celebrations of the Roman Empire, and then later, from various Germanic tribes. In this sense, there is some truth to the idea that originally Christmas and some of the pageantry of Christmas finds its origins in pagan celebrations.
But. But where winter solstice marked the darkest dark and the slow turning of the seasons with the promise of the coming of a new sun, Christians subverted this idea and celebrated the coming of a different Son into the darkness of our world. Light and life to all he brings!
Together the various feasts and fasts of the Christian Calendar invite us to orientate our lives around the life of Christ. They even invite us to re-orientate our sense of time around Jesus.
Over time though, secular society does what secular society does, and takes the various Christian feasts, celebrations, and holidays that we have, and slowly but surely commodifies, commercializes, and bastardizes them. In doing so, it’s not just that a particular Christian feast is undermined, but rather that our sense of life being a reality organised around Christ is slowly chipped away at.
We think less of time as a gift, one that allows us the opportunity to simply be - to be with one another, to share life - and to walk a long obedience in step with Jesus. We start see time as a utility and a commodity to be spent – to be leveraged towards maximum productivity. Instead of living in the anticipation of Christ’s coming in Advent, in the celebration of Christ’s birth in Christmas, in the revelation of Christ as Saviour in Epiphany and so on, the framing categories of our life become; work weeks, school terms, university semesters, quarterly reports, annual reviews, the end of the financial year. Ultimately this is anxiety inducing, rather than life giving.
When it comes to Christmas, the roots of this Christian celebration are not Judaism but rather stem from the winter solstice celebrations of the Roman Empire, and then later, from various Germanic tribes. In this sense, there is some truth to the idea that originally Christmas and some of the pageantry of Christmas finds its origins in pagan celebrations.
But. But where winter solstice marked the darkest dark and the slow turning of the seasons with the promise of the coming of a new sun, Christians subverted this idea and celebrated the coming of a different Son into the darkness of our world. Light and life to all he brings!
Together the various feasts and fasts of the Christian Calendar invite us to orientate our lives around the life of Christ. They even invite us to re-orientate our sense of time around Jesus.
Over time though, secular society does what secular society does, and takes the various Christian feasts, celebrations, and holidays that we have, and slowly but surely commodifies, commercializes, and bastardizes them. In doing so, it’s not just that a particular Christian feast is undermined, but rather that our sense of life being a reality organised around Christ is slowly chipped away at.
We think less of time as a gift, one that allows us the opportunity to simply be - to be with one another, to share life - and to walk a long obedience in step with Jesus. We start see time as a utility and a commodity to be spent – to be leveraged towards maximum productivity. Instead of living in the anticipation of Christ’s coming in Advent, in the celebration of Christ’s birth in Christmas, in the revelation of Christ as Saviour in Epiphany and so on, the framing categories of our life become; work weeks, school terms, university semesters, quarterly reports, annual reviews, the end of the financial year. Ultimately this is anxiety inducing, rather than life giving.
Selah
In highlighting this, my point is not
to rally the troops in some vein attempt to fight against the secularization of
Christmas in contemporary society. I’m not trying to organise a “We Say Merry Christmas,
Not Happy Holidays” protest march. My point is both narrower and broader in
scope. Narrower in that my concern is not how secular society treats Christmas
or Easter, only in how we as the Church do. But broader in that if we as
Christians settle for a secular perspective on the various feasts and
festivals, we lose track of time as sacred, and with it the fullness of
Christian vision and theological insight that the Calendar offers as a
discipleship tool. We need a renewed appreciation of the Church's liturgical calendar.
Which brings us to the great Christian
festival of Hallowe'en!
Under the pantheon of the Roman gods,
and in the folk religions of the early Celts and Germanic peoples, festivals
were held that marked the seasons. I’ve already mentioned winter solstice. The
autumn festival marked the end of the harvest and the beginning of winter. For
the Celts this festival was known as Samhain (summer’s end).
These festivals were religious in
nature in that as well as marking the season, they were also a liminal time
where people imagined the boundary between this world and the otherworld thinned
– fairies and ghosts and the souls of the dead could travel between the
dimensions. With the souls of the dead supposedly able to return during these kinds
of festivals, they became an occasion to consider death, to consider the
under-world, to set a table for ancestors whose ghosts would return to visit
their homes.
Traditions varied, and traditions
evolved – one tradition included dressing as the dead or dressing as characters
from the underworld and going door to door to collect treats or do mischief. This
practice mimicked the idea that the gods were temperamental and couldn’t be
trusted – you better make good sacrifices if you want a good harvest –
otherwise they’ll give you nothing but mischief. Another was to carve pumpkins (originally turnips) into scary
faces to scare off evil spirits.
The
Christian Church looked at all of this and thought, we can do better than this,
we’ve a new understanding of death, of what it is to confront death, in the
light of Christ. The principalities and powers have been defeated, death is not
the final word, the grim reaper is not in charge. And God is not a god of
mischief, God is light and life and in him there is no darkness.
And so, the church inaugurated a different
festival (as early as the year 609, and then it has evolved from there). Not a one-day
festival, but a three-day festival known as All-Hallowtide. A festival designed
to sit alongside or exist as an alternative to the various existing festivals
of the dead and subvert them in Christ. Hallow means saints, thus we've All Saints Time, and it is a chance to consider and face the reality of death and fear of death we
often carry. It is also a chance to remember those who have passed away, saints
known and unknown. The three days are October 31st, November 1st,
and November the 2nd.
October 31st – Hallowe’en: All Saints Eve, Hallow Eve, Hallow Evening. This
day was an invitation to prayer, to renew one’s baptismal vows in the face our
fear of death – I’ve already died in baptism, it is no longer I that lives but
Christ that lives in me – and was a chance to reflect on our eternal hope in Christ: neither death nor Hades (literally the god of the underworld) are in charge and they do not have the final word in the face of death.
November 1st – Hallow Day: All Saints Day. A time consider the capital “S”
Saints and martyrs of church history and to consider their lives as exemplars
to us in our own journey. Not celebrity Christians to follow but faithful
saints in the truest sense.
November 2nd – All Soul’s Day. An opportunity to consider the lower-case “s”
saints who’ve influenced our lives but have passed away over the course of the
last year – friends, family, church members. And then more broadly, those who have influenced our lives but have passed away in years gone by.
All-in-all a chance for the Christian to face death, and, in doing so, to recognise that God is sovereign over
death, faithful even in death, and that death has been unmasked as a false god.
Romans 8:35-39What shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall
trouble or hardship or persecution or famine or nakedness or danger or sword? (You could say; shall any
sort of mischief come between us and God? No way!) As it is written: “For your sake we face death all day long;
we are considered as sheep to be slaughtered.” (I’ve been baptised, it is no longer I
that lives but Christ that lives in me!) No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him
who loved us. For
I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, (or fairies, or zombies, or
scary pumpkins, or mummy’s wrapped up in toilet paper, or trick-or-treators
dressed as the Kardashians) neither our fears for
today nor our worries about tomorrow (especially about death, even though
we try not to talk about in our modern world, we try and sweep it under the rug,
the business of morticians and undertakers) –
not even the powers of hell can separate us from God’s love. No
power in the sky above or in the earth below, nor anything else in all creation (not even a zombie apocalypse),
will be able to separate us from
the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.
Allhallowtide (All Saints Time) with Hallowe’en, All Saints and All Souls, is a chance to cultivate a proper sense of Christian hope and perspective in relation to death – to remember that death is not the final word! Jesus is the resurrection and the life, our promise of eternal life. The story is not over and in the fullness of time, all will be made well, all will be restored, all will be renewed, every tear will be wiped away – and in the resurrection will be re-united– we will gather to break bread together once more.
Allhallowtide (All Saints Time) with Hallowe’en, All Saints and All Souls, is a chance to cultivate a proper sense of Christian hope and perspective in relation to death – to remember that death is not the final word! Jesus is the resurrection and the life, our promise of eternal life. The story is not over and in the fullness of time, all will be made well, all will be restored, all will be renewed, every tear will be wiped away – and in the resurrection will be re-united– we will gather to break bread together once more.
And thus, we say; “where oh death is
your sting!?!” Not because the pain of losing a loved one is not real, is not
heart-breaking, is not without its own kind of sting. We say, “where oh death is
your sting!?!” because death is not, ultimately, that which destroys but that
which will itself be destroyed. The love of God will conquer sin and death –
and resurrection life will prevail.
Which brings us to the problem of
Light Parties, (or at least the potential problem of Light Parties – they are
really good for little kids). The problem is that secularism triumphs when christians decide that we need an alternative to the Christian festival of
Hallowe’en. Especially if the reason
for it is a fear of rubber masks, face-painting, toilet paper, and cobwebs made
out of cotton wool – the ghouly and ghostly get-up of Hallowe’en. Secularism
wins when we decide that we can’t face death with our kids – and the cartoonish
representations of death that come with it – and declare faith and hope and the
victory of Christ in all things. Secularism wins when we celebrate Jesus as the
Light of the World but only with glow sticks in the sanctuary.
Hallowe’en is an opportunity (with our
slightly older kids – the ones that have moved on from Bob the Builder) to,
paradoxically, through the use of masks, actually un-mask and disempower the
various “boogeymen” that creep into our imaginations (as children – and as adults)
and fill us with fear. Especially the fear of death.
We’ve a chance to face these fears – through
the dressing up and running around, through the putting on and then the taking off
of masks, kids get the chance to expose various monsters as make belief. And then, in conversation with parents to recognise that “there is a light that shines in
the darkness, and is not overcome,” and “there is a power greater than death and
it is Jesus.”
A Christian participation in All Hallow’s Eve, All
Saints Eve, Hallowe’en (even the “trick
or treating” part of it) and
also All Saints and All Souls day is not some sort of compromised glorification
of the occult – rather – it is a good time for us to allow death and other things
that scare us into our celebrations and conversations, especially with our
kids, in order to then unmask them and speak of the life and power of Jesus
Christ. When all the masks are taken off we can have conversations about things
that scare us, about death, about the power of Jesus. We let the light shine in
the darkness – and it is not overcome.
And then after that, we follow this up with All Saints Day. “You know how people dressed up yesterday as monsters and mummies and Harry Potter characters and Star Wars characters and different super-heroes – do you know who the real superheroes in life are?” “Nope.” Well let me tell you about Francis of Assisi, or Mother Teresa or your Grandmother and how she loved Jesus and loved people… They are the kind of super-heroes that God thinks are pretty cool. And then you follow that up with All Souls Day and a conversation about a loved one who’s died, and our hope in Christ of resurrection life and the renewal of all things. Death isn’t the final word.
And then after that, we follow this up with All Saints Day. “You know how people dressed up yesterday as monsters and mummies and Harry Potter characters and Star Wars characters and different super-heroes – do you know who the real superheroes in life are?” “Nope.” Well let me tell you about Francis of Assisi, or Mother Teresa or your Grandmother and how she loved Jesus and loved people… They are the kind of super-heroes that God thinks are pretty cool. And then you follow that up with All Souls Day and a conversation about a loved one who’s died, and our hope in Christ of resurrection life and the renewal of all things. Death isn’t the final word.
Rather than let secularism subvert Halloween, we leverage Halloween as a Christian opportunity to subvert fear and death!
**I don’t really have a problem with Light Parties. They have their place. Especially with little kids. Have a blast whatever you do! I’m just trying to make a point. We don’t need to have a problem with Halloween either, if we have the conversations with kids that the festival invites. That said, the whole candy from strangers practice is weird.**