Halloween, when
bone fires became bonfires and why a drunk named Jack is
lighting your porch. Americans spend more money on candy at
Halloween than they do at Easter. How did this Celtic
festival infiltrate our modern culture? Fr. Neil, a Scottish
priest shares history and insite.
Celtic Festival:
Since the early centuries, Celt's celebrated "Samhain," a
festival meaning summer's end. This day fell on the 31st
October and the Celtic people believed that time almost
stood still. The farmers would go from door to door and
collect food and drink for the celebration that evening.
This is the origin of trick or treat. If the family
contributed to the feast, they would have the blessing for
the year ahead, if not, a curse would follow. This tradition
came from Ireland and similar practices took place in the
north of Scotland, Wales, and Brittany where the Celts
lived.
Animals were slaughtered for the Samhain feast and their
bones were thrown onto the fire as sign of gratitude to
mother earth. This is where we get the phrase bonfires,
literally bone-fires.
This Samhain was a contest between the God of Summer and
the God of Winter for the Goddess of the earth. They
believed that the sun might never return when the winter
arrived, each family would take a light for the house fire.
This was a sign of their unity. We do something similar at
the Easter vigil when each candle is lit from the Paschal
candle. It symbolizes our unity in Christ and recognizes him
as the light of our life.
"Look Mom, I'm Your Dead Uncle"
This night was also the night when the dead could come
back and visit their loved ones or their homes. The Celts
would leave food out for them to help them on their way. The
children would dress in garish costume and try to frighten
the adults, claiming to be dead relatives.
The Celts also believed that many spirits were evil and
came to harm the people, so they hollowed turnips and carved
faces on them and placed hot coals inside to scare away evil
spirits. When the Irish came to America, they brought this
tradition with them. In time, the turnip became less popular
and the pumpkin took over. But, there is a more significant
meaning to "Jack O' Lanterns" We'll come back to that.
Apples, Peanuts, then Toothaches
When the Romans conquered the Celts the nature of the
feast changed. Roman customs of drinking cider and eating
apples and peanuts were added. This eventually became what
is known as "bobbing for apples." In Scotland and Ireland
children still play those games and often come home with
apples and peanuts especially from the older people in the
community. Candy has been a more recent addition.
Jack, the Selfish Man
So, what about Jack? Well, tradition tells us that he
spent his time drinking and never did a selfless act for
another human being in his life. The devil came to claim his
soul one evening and when Jack was drunk. Jack challenged
the devil to change himself into a shilling (about 5 cents).
Because of an old injury, Jack's hand was shaped like a
cross and the devil was trapped by his challenge. The devil
came back a year later, and Jack tricked him again.
It didn't do much good, because Jack died anyway and
hiked to heaven. But because he never did one single act of
kindness in his whole life, heaven didn't want him. When he
got to hell the devil was so mad at being tricked, he didn't
want him either. Jack was in the cold with nothing to light
his way. The devil threw him a piece of burning coal that he
put into an old turnip and made it into a lantern. He
wandered the earth, a poor lost soul. Halloween is the night
Jack would come to warn people not to be like him.
The moral of the story was very powerful among Irish
children. The lanterns are reminders that they should not be
selfish or you might end up like Jack. I suppose the story
has lost some of its impact in contemporary Western culture:
no one is afraid of anyone like Jack. Movies make us numb to
the horrific and spooky.
But what about Harry?
Movies like Harry Potter at one level are fun. However,
on another level they can be dangerous. They honor witches
and wizards and implicitly teach that sorcery is acceptable
to the Christian. It is not acceptable! This obsessive
preoccupation and morbid fascination with superstition leads
us away from God. This was why in 837AD Pope Gregory IV
moved the feast of All Saints from May 13th to November 1st.
He hoped to draw our attention away from the pagan towards
the spiritual.
Halloween can be fun, but you must understand that there
are other forces at work that night. You can deny the evil,
but that doesn't change the fact that it is real. Keep the
horror freaks out of Halloween. Scream masks and other
images like that undermine the beauty of the human person.
They undercut the dignity we share as brothers and sisters
in faith who should be building a community of love and
forgiveness. Anything that evokes terror and spreads fear
cannot be good in the mind of God.
The Celts say, "What you honor you become." The choice is
clear. Let's keep it simple, let's keep it fun. Let kids
dress up as Saints or Spiderman or something fun. We are
called to be children of the Light, not of the dark.
If Halloween means Holy night, then make it a Holy night.
Whatever you do this Halloween be safe and remember that
God gives us the Church to protect us from the influence of
evil. Have a bonfire with some friends and drink some hot
chocolate. Share about ways you need to be more like Christ
and less like Jack. Pray a special rosary around the fire
using the Mysteries of light, praying for all those caught
up in the occult. Pray for all who practice witchcraft that
they maybe delivered. Baptize this time of the year using
your imagination.
Come to Mass on All Saints and give thanks for all who
give their lives to God. Speak to your Youth Minister about
ways you can honor your Catholic faith with other teens.
Remember how good you are and not on how bad you might be.
-Fr. Neil
Fr. Neil McGarity recently returned from Scotland to
become the associate pastor of St. Timothy in Mesa, Arizona.
He's as funny as his head is bald. Legend has it, Fr. Neil
drove a ball over 300 yards in a LIFE TEEN golf tournament,
circa 2002.
See this article at:
Halloween, a Holy Night?