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Τετάρτη 26 Σεπτεμβρίου 2012
ON HALLOWEEN
By Bishop Kyrill of Seattle, from Orthodox Life, Vol.
43, No. 5, September - October, 1993.
It will shortly be that time of the year when the
secular society in which we live is preparing for the festival of Halloween.
Because most of us are either newly Orthodox or newly aware of our Orthodoxy,
it is absolutely necessary that we carefully examine every aspect of our
involvement in the world—it's activities, festivals, associations and societies—in
order to discern whether or not these involvements are compatible or
incompatible with our holy Orthodox Faith. This is a difficult task which leads
to some pain when we realize that there are popular organizations and
activities in which we are unable to participate.
Though our schools, our local community organizations,
and all forms of entertainment in television, radio, and the press will share
in and capitalize upon the festival of Halloween, it is impossible for Orthodox
Christians to participate in this event at any level. The issue involved is
simple faithfulness to God and the holy Orthodox Christian Faith.
Halloween has its roots in paganism and continues to
be a form of idolatry in which Satan, the angel of death is worshipped. As we
know, the very foundation of our holy Church is built upon the blood of martyrs
who refused under the painful penalties of cruel torture and death to worship,
venerate, or pay obeisance in any way to the idols who are Satan's angels.
Because of the faithfulness through obedience and self-sacrifice of the holy
martyrs, God poured out upon His holy Church abundant grace and its numbers
were increased daily, precisely at a time when one would have expected the
threat of persecution to extinguish the flame of faith. But, contrary to the
world's understanding, humble faithfulness and obedience to God are the very
lifelines of our life in Christ, through Whom we are given true spiritual
peace, ove, and joy, and participation in the miraculous workings of His Holy
Spirit. Therefore the holy Church calls us to faithfulness by our turning away
from falsehood toward truth and eternal life.
With regard to our non-participation in the pagan
festival of Halloween, we will be strengthened by an understanding of the
spiritual danger and history of this anti-Christian feast.
The feast of Halloween began in pre-Christian times
among the Celtic peoples of Great Britain, Ireland and northern France. These pagan peoples believed that physical
life was born from death. Therefore, they celebrated the beginning of the
"new year" in the fall (on the eve of October 31s' and into the day
of November I*), when, as they believed, the season of cold, darkness, decay
and death began. A certain deity, whom they called Samhain, was believed by the
Celts to be the lord of death, and it was he whom they honored at their New
Year's festival.
There were, from an Orthodox Christian point of view,
many diabolical beliefs and practices associated with this feast which, it will
be clear, have endured to our time. On the eve of the New Year's festival, the
Druids who were the priests of the Celtic cult, instructed their people to
extinguish all hearth fires and lights. On the evening of the festival a huge
bonfire built of oak branches, which they believed to be sacred, was ignited.
Upon this fire sacrifices of crops, animals, and even human beings, were burned
as an offering in order to appease and cajole Samhain, the lord of death. It
was also believed that Samhain, being pleased by their faithful offerings,
allowed the souls of the dead to return to homes for a festal visit on this
day. It is from this belief that the practice of wandering about in the dark
dressed up in costumes imitating ghosts, witches, hobgoblins, fairies, and
demons grew up. For the living entered into fellowship and communion with the
dead by what was, and still is, a ritual act of imitation, through costume and
activity of wandering around in the dark of night, even as the souls of the
dead were believed to wander.
The dialogue of "trick or treat" is also an
integral part of this system of beliefs and practices. It was believed that the
souls of the dead who had entered into the world of darkness, decay, and death,
and therefore into total communion with and submission to Samhain, the lord of
death, bore the affliction of great hunger on their festal visit. Out of this
grew the practice of begging, which was a further ritual enactment and
imitation of what the Celts believed to be the activities of the souls of the
dead on their festal visit. Associated with this is the still further
implication that if the souls of the dead and their imitators were not appeased
with "treats," i.e., offerings, then the wrath and anger of Samhain,
whose angels and servants the souls and their imitators had become, would be
unleashed through a system of "tricks," or curses.
From an Orthodox Christian point of view,
participation in these practices at any level is impossible and idolatrous, a
genuine betrayal of our God and our holy Faith. For if we participate in the
ritual activity of imitating the dead by dressing up in their attire or by
wandering about in the dark, or by begging with them, then we have willfully
sought fellowship with the dead, whose lord is not Samhain as the Celts
believed but Satan, the Evil One who stands against God. Further, if we submit
to the dialogue of "trick or treat," we make our offering not to
innocent children, but rather to Samhain, the lord of death whom they have come
to serve as imitators of the dead, wandering in the dark of night.
There are other practices associated with Halloween
which we must stay away from. As was mentioned above, on the eve of the Celtic
New Year festival, Druid priests instructed their faithful to extinguish their
hearth fires and lights and to gather around the fire of sacrifice to make
their offerings to pay homage to the lord of death. Because this was a
"sacred fire," it was from this that the fire of the new year was to
be taken and the lights and hearth fire rekindled. Out of this arose the
practice of the Jack O' Lantern (in the USA, a pumpkin—in older days other
vegetables were used) which was carved in imitation of the dead and used to
convey the new light and fire to the home where the lantern was left burning
throughout the night. Even the use and display of the Jack O' Lantern involves
celebration of and participation in the pagan festival of death honoring the
Celtic god Samhain. Orthodox Christians must in no way share in this Celtic
activity, but rather we should counter our inclinations and habits by burning
candles to the Saviour and the Most Holy Mother of God and to all the holy
saints.
In the ancient Celtic rite divination was also
associated with this festival. After the fire had died out, the Druids examined
the remains of the sacrifices in order to foretell, as they believed was
possible, the events of the coming year. Since this time the Halloween festival
has been the night for participation in all kinds of sorcery, fortune telling,
divination, games of chance, and in latter medieval times, Satan worship and
witchcraft.
In the days of the early Celtic Church, which was
strictly Orthodox, the holy Fathers attempted to counteract this pagan New Year
Festival which honored the lord of death, by establishing the Feast of All
Saints on the same day (in the East, the Feast of All Saints is celebrated on
the Sunday following Pentecost). As was the custom of the Church, the faithful
Christians attended a Vigil Service in the evening and in the morning a
celebration of the Holy Eucharist. It is from this that the term Halloween
developed. The word Halloween has its roots in the Old English of "All
Hallow's Even," i.e., the eve commemorating all those who were hallowed (sanctified),
i.e., Halloween.
The people who had remained pagan and therefore
anti-Christian and whose paganism had become deeply inter-twined with the
occult, Satanism, and magic, reacted to the Church's attempt to supplant their
festival by increased fervor on this evening. In the early middle ages,
Halloween became the supreme and central feast of the occult, a night and day
upon which acts of witch craft, demonism, sorcery, and Satanism of all kinds
were practiced.
Many of these practices involved desecration and
mockery of Christian practices and beliefs. Costumes of skeletons developed as
a mockery of the Church's reverence for holy relics; holy things were stolen,
such as crosses and the Reserved Sacrament, and used in perverse and
sacrilegious ways. The practice of begging became a system of persecution
designed to harass Christians who were, by their beliefs, unable to participate
by making offerings to those who served the lord of death. Thus, the Western
Church's attempt to supplant this pagan festival with the Feast of All Saints
failed.
The analogy of Halloween in ancient Russia was Navy
Dien (old Slavonic for "the dead" was "nav") which was also
called Radunitsa and celebrated in the spring. To supplant it, the Eastern
Church connected this feast with Pascha and appointed it to be celebrated on
Tuesday of the Saint Thomas' week (the second week after Pascha). The Church
also changed the name of the feast into Radonitsa, from Russian
"radost" joy. Joy of Pascha and of the resurrection from the dead of
all of mankind after Jesus Christ.
Gradually, Radonitsa yielded to Pascha its importance
and became less popular in general, but many dark and pagan practices and
habits of some old feasts of Russian paganism (Semik, Kupalo, Rusalia and some
aspects of the Maslennitsa) survived till the beginning of our century. Now
they are gone forever, but the atheist authorities used to try to revive them.
We can also recall the example of another "harmless" feast—May
i", proclaimed "the international worker's day." That was a
simple renaming of a very old satanic feast of Walpurgis Night (night of April
30th into the day of May Ist)—the great yearly demonic Sabbath during which all
the participants united in "a fellowship of Satan."
These contemporary Halloween practices have their
roots in paganism, idolatry, and Satan worship. How then did something that is
so obviously contradictory to the holy Orthodox Faith gain acceptance among
Christian people?
The answer to this question is spiritual apathy and
listless-ness, which are the spiritual roots of atheism and the turning away
from God. In today's society one is continually urged to disregard the
spiritual roots and origins of secular practices under the guise that the
outward customs, practices and forms are cute, fun, entertaining, and harmless.
Behind this attitude lies the dogma of atheism, which denies the existence of
both God and Satan and can therefore conclude that these activities, despite
their obvious pagan and idolatrous origin, are harmless and of no consequence.
The holy Church must stand against this because we are
taught by Christ that God stands in judgment over everything we do and believe,
and that our actions are either for God or against God. Therefore, the customs
of Halloween are not innocent practices with no relationship to the spiritual
world. But rather they are demonic practices, precisely as an examination of
their origins proves.
Evil spirits do exist. The demons do exist. Christ
came into the world so that through death He might destroy him that had the
power of death, that is, the Devil. (Heb 2:14). It is imperative for us to
realize as Christians that our greatest foe is the Evil One, who inspires
nations and individuals to sin against mankind, and who prevents them from
coming to a knowledge of the truth. Unless we realize that Satan is our real
enemy, we can never hope for spiritual progress for our lives. For we wrestle
not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers,
against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness
in high places. (Eph 6:12).
Today we witness a revival of satanistic cults; we
hear of a satanic service conducted on Halloween night; everywhere Satan
reaches out to ensnare as many innocent people as possible. The newsstands are
filled with material on spiritualism, supernatural phenomena, seances,
prophecies, and all sorts of demonically inspired works.
It is undoubtedly an act of Divine Providence that
Saint John of Kronstadt, that saintly physician of souls and bodies, should
have his feast day on the very day of Halloween, a day which the world
dedicated to the destroyer, corrupter, and deceiver of humanity. God has
provided us with this powerful counterpoise and weapon against the snares of
Satan, and we should take full advantage of this gift, for truly Wondrous is
God in His saints.
Orthodox Heritage Vol. 10, Issue 09-10
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