All Hallowed’s Eve
Halloween
is just around the corner. It can pose
some interesting challenges for us as Christians. Some completely shun the holiday because they
say it is the celebration of a pagan festival.
Some don’t give any thought to it and figure it’s just an innocent
opportunity for kids to have fun and ruin their oral hygiene.
Growing
up, that was the approach we took, and there was an innocence to that which I
think was beneficial. However, even since
I was a kid I’ve noticed the character of Halloween change in our society. It has gotten more morbid, and there is a
growing fascination with a darker, even demonic character to the event.
Certainly
this is not true everywhere, and Charlie Brown and his Great Pumpkin still have
a place in the popular culture of Halloween.
But a disturbing trend among kids has been an interest in things like
vampires and the occult, and Halloween has tapped into that recently. That sort of thing is no joke and every parent,
Christian or not, has to be vigilant in protecting their children from such
things.
Add
to that the designation of “Christmas” as a dirty word by secular society, and
it can all become pretty offensive to those of us trying to raise our children
in the Faith. So what are we to do? I can’t give any authoritative answers, but
I’ll share what we have done with some success thus far.
First
of all, we reclaim Halloween as a Christian celebration, All-Hallowed’s
Eve. The following day, November 1, is All
Saints Day, a Holy Day of Obligation, and a day infinitely more important than
October 31, although ignored by the secular culture. We remind the kids how important All Saints
Day is, and that we’ll be going to Mass.
All-Hallowed’s Eve is important in its relation to All Saints Day, like
Christmas Eve is important in relation to Christmas Day. We finish off our celebration by taking the
kids to a cemetery to pray for the dead on All Souls Day, November 2.
Our
kids dress up like saints when they go trick-or-treating. They love telling the neighbors who they
are. Now our kids are young, so they go
out with us. I imagine the challenges will
be multiplied when they want to trick-or-treat with their friends instead. We have a great neighborhood, with many
parents enjoying the evening out with their kids, and of course, ours are
confronted with witches, goblins and haunted houses. We just do our best to explain that different
people celebrate in different ways.
They’re at the age now where they accept that since they are having so
much fun the way we celebrate. Our hope
is that when they are old enough to question what haunted houses have to do
with saints, they will also be old enough to understand that they are Catholics
living in a secular culture, and that the culture will not always do things the
way they do, but that God has called them to be a light in this world. We are hopeful, as just this week our oldest
son responded to a store’s Halloween display by saying, “They don’t know that
Halloween is about God, not spooky things.”
I know that many people have
approached this dilemma with better ideas than we have, and please email me
with any ideas you have. There are a
couple of online resources that may be of help.
You can download pro-life pumpkin cut outs on the Internet to turn your
Jack-O-Lantern into a tool for evangelization.
Also, the web site nightoflight.org has
many resources and ideas for celebrating All-Hallowed’s Eve in a Catholic way.