Should Christians Be Celebrating Halloween?
Looking At Halloween from the Bible's Perspective
Looking At Halloween from the Bible's Perspective
Ancient Druids. Many Christians celebrate holidays, such as
Halloween, without thinking about their origins or true meaning. It is
impossible to separate Halloween from the Druids because they originated the
"holiday." For several hundred years before Christ, the Celts inhabited
what are now France, Germany, England, Scotland and Ireland. Celtic priests
were called Druids. These people were eventually conquered by the Romans.
Information about the Celts and Druids comes from Caesar and the Roman
historians, Greek writings from about 200 B.C., and very early records found in
Ireland. Greek and Roman writings about the Druids dwell heavily on their
frequent and barbaric human sacrifices. The ancient Irish texts say little
about human sacrifices, but detail the Druids' use of magic to raise storms,
lay curses on places, kill by the use of spells, and create magical obstacles.
Human Sacrifices. Davies, however, a 16th century writer who
traced his family lineage directly back to Druid priests who fought against
Caesar, clearly describes the human sacrifices of his ancestors and the secret
sacrifices still performed regularly by the Druids of his time. By 47 A.D.,
Rome finally defeated the Druids in Britain and outlawed human sacrifices. The
few remaining Druids went underground. Today a growing group of people claiming
to be of direct Druid descent still practice their religion, including human
sacrifice. Those in England still perform ceremonies at Stonehenge.
November 1st was the
Celtic New Year. October 31st was
celebrated by the Druids with many human sacrifices and a festival honoring
their sun god and Samhain, the lord of the dead. They believed that the sinful
souls of those who died during the year were in a place of torment, and would
be released only if Samhain was pleased with their sacrifices.
Monks Fascinated By
Druids. Irish records tell of
the fascination the Catholic monks had with the powerful Druids, and Druids
soon became important members of their monasteries. Pope Gregory the Great
decided to incorporate the Druids' holiday into the church. He made the
proclamation, "They are no longer to sacrifice beasts to the devil, but
they may kill them for food to the praise of God, and give thanks to the
giver of all gifts for His bounty." Pope Gregory III moved the church
festival of October 31st to November 1st and called it All Hallows or All
Saints' Day. Pope Gregory IV decreed that the day was to be a universal
church observance. The term Halloween comes from All Hallows Eve.
The founding fathers
of America refused to permit the holiday to be observed because they knew it
was a pagan holiday. Halloween was not widely celebrated in the U.S. until
about 1900. In the 1840's there was a terrible potato famine in Ireland which
sent thousands of Catholic Irish to America. They brought Halloween with
them. The modern custom of going from door to door asking for food and candy
goes back to the time of the Druids. They believed that sinful, lost souls
were released upon the earth by Samhain for one night on October 31st while
they awaited their judgment. They were thought to throng about the houses of
the living and were greeted with banquet-laden tables. People greatly feared
these spirits and thought that the spirits would harm and even kill them if
the sacrifices they gave did not appease Samhain. They carved demonic faces
into pumpkins or large turnips, placing a candle in them to keep the evil
spirits away from their homes.
The tradition of bobbing for apples and giving out nuts came from a Roman addition to the Druidic New Year's eve. The Romans worshiped Pomona who was the goddess of the harvest. They combined their harvest festival to Pomona with Halloween. Very little archeological evidence of the Druids has been found, but there is excellent agreement between the Roman and Irish documents. Both clearly state that the knowledge of the Druids was never committed to writing but passed from generation to generation by oral teaching. This was to protect their secrets. In his writings, Davies indicates that he came under much persecution by his family for putting in writing his information about Druids. The same is true today. Nothing is put into writing. The Druids continue on secretly with much the same traditions. The widespread problem of harmful substances such as razor blades, drugs, poisons, needles, etc. being placed in the Halloween treats here in America is no accident. Testimonies of several ex-Satanists show that these children killed and injured by the "treats" are sacrifices to Satan (or Samhain). Satanists throughout the world continue to perform human sacrifices on Halloween.
Is this something you want YOUR child to participate in?"
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