For those who celebrate Halloween.

Anonymous
Knock, Knock, Knock..... You open the door and there stands one or more children standing in some sort of costume, highly excited and all screaming at the top of their lungs...."TRICK or TREAT", with out knowing the meaning of what they are saying or doing.
As an adult, do you know what Halloween represents? Most people are ignorant of what Halloween is all about and for that matter don't care. I grew up trick or treating like most kids in America and never knew what it was all about. We even had a haunted house in the attic of the little country CHURCH I attended!!!! I was like most kids in the fact that all I wanted to do is get as much candy as I could and would do what I had to do to get it!! Including fighting with my brothers and sisters to be the first at the door....Every year I was the devil. I had the most evil, horrible, grotesque, rubber mask that was ever made. I had a pitchfork and my precious mother even sewed me a long pointed tail on my red suit.
We all have stories to tell of Halloween, but do you really know what it is all about?? If all you know of it is what I have described above, you may want to read a little further and find out more info about what you are celebrating. Now if you are a pagan you know exactly what it is, if a Christian you are involved in something God forbids and if you just a "good ole boy or girl" you don't care

Where did it begin?
It began over 2000 yrs ago with people known as the Celtics. They lived in what is today England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales. This was also the beginning of the Celtic new year, a time to give thanks to the sun god for the harvest.
What is it all about?
Halloween, All saints day, All hallows eve or All souls day is a festival. It was held to honor the Samhain the so called "lord of death". It was a Druidical belief that on the eve of this festival Samhain, lord of death, called together the wicked spirits that within the past 12 months had been condemned to inhabit the bodies of animals.
It was a pagan belief that on one night of the year the souls of the dead return to their original homes, there to be entertained with food. If food and shelter were not provided, these evil spirits would cast spells and cause havoc toward those failing to fulfill their requests.
Sacrifices were offered on this night to the dead spirits because it was thought they visited their earthly dwellings and former friends.
There was a prevailing belief among all nations that at death the souls of the good men were taken possession of by good spirits and carried to paradise; but the souls of the wicked men were left to wonder in the space between the earth and the moon, or consigned to the unseen world. These wandering spirits were in the habit of haunting the living...But there were means by which ghosts might be exorcised.
To exorcise these ghosts, that is to free yourself from their evil sway, you would have to set out food and provide shelter for them during the night. If they were satisfied with your offerings, they would leave you in peace. If not, they were believed to cast an evil spell on you.
In modern day Satanism and Witchcraft covens, this is the day when Satan himself comes to "fellowship" with his followers. Many changes have occurred over the centuries, but one thing ha stayed the same, the practice of giving an "offering" has stayed the same. Oh we do it under the name of fun but what is the real meaning? Is it still the same as in the old days? I say the answer is YES.
Anonymous
You've got it all mixed up. Halloween is a way to make fun of those old customs, not celebrate them.
Anonymous
Christmas trees were a pagan tradition. So what? Christianity borrowed tradition from local religions since its establishment. The purpose was to allow conversion without upending the entire social system.

But if you are into that kind of thing, I suggest you play some Led Zeppelin records backwards. They must be stopped!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:You've got it all mixed up. Halloween is a way to make fun of those old customs, not celebrate them.


What do you mean by "not celebrate" ??????????
I guess you don't celebrate Halloween,you just "go with it"?
OMG.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:You've got it all mixed up. Halloween is a way to make fun of those old customs, not celebrate them.


What do you mean by "not celebrate" ??????????
I guess you don't celebrate Halloween,you just "go with it"?
OMG.


Uh, what?
Anonymous
No one shouts "trick or treat" at the top of the lungs anymore. In fact, I usually have to force them to say it in order to get candy. So I guess we're safe.
Anonymous
So the children who go around trick or treating are representing the devils and ghost, and by giving them food, we are freeing ourselves of the evil sway of the ghosts and devils they respresent?

Sounds good to me!

I plan to get twice as much food i.e. candy to hand out this year. Begone ye evil ghosts and bad omens! I need all the luck and help I can get.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:So the children who go around trick or treating are representing the devils and ghost, and by giving them food, we are freeing ourselves of the evil sway of the ghosts and devils they respresent?

Sounds good to me!

I plan to get twice as much food i.e. candy to hand out this year. Begone ye evil ghosts and bad omens! I need all the luck and help I can get.




Anonymous
Why would spirits need food and shelter if they are not of the physical? People on the other hand...
Anonymous
If demons come to my house, the last thing I want to do is get them all hopped up on snickers bars and skittles.

But just to see if OP is right I will put some holy water in a spray bottle and see if some of the runts dissolve when I squirt them.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:If demons come to my house, the last thing I want to do is get them all hopped up on snickers bars and skittles.

But just to see if OP is right I will put some holy water in a spray bottle and see if some of the runts dissolve when I squirt them.


Anonymous
As a kid growing up Catholic, Halloween for me was the eve of All Souls Day, when we pray for the dead in purgatory. I always thought it was odd that non-Catholics celebrated it.
Anonymous
Someone has quite a bit of time of their hands today.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:So the children who go around trick or treating are representing the devils and ghost, and by giving them food, we are freeing ourselves of the evil sway of the ghosts and devils they respresent?

Sounds good to me!

I plan to get twice as much food i.e. candy to hand out this year. Begone ye evil ghosts and bad omens! I need all the luck and help I can get.



Anonymous
I'm pagan (not wiccan or a satanist) and I celebrate Samhain and it is NOTHING like you described. It is a day to honor ancestors who are no longer alive and to honor the final harvest of the year before moving into a period of darkness (winter). And as another poster mentioned, Christmas and Easter, among other holidays, originated as pagan celebrations that Christians adapted so that they could continue to celebrate the holidays they loved and still call themselves "Christian." My son will be dressing up as Elmo for Halloween and I will take him trick or treating and teach him about the REAL meaning of Samhain.

As you are a Christian, I would urge you to follow the teachings of Jesus and find some compassion for others who may not be, think, or believe like you. There are many pathways to God, but we are all children of the Divine.
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