A colleague/new friend of mine asked me to join her and her family doing a "Halloween" themed booth at a local park for kids to do a kind of trick-or-treating along a trail of booths put on by other local community businesses. It would involve dressing up in a costume and exposing my children to the Halloween holiday (more than walking into a Wal Mart and seeing all the costumes and decorations).
Our family hasn't "done Halloween" for a very long time. I don't know if the older kids even remember ever celebrating it. For me, it was one of those things that seemed to be a "no brainer". Christians and Halloween were diametrically incompatible. Halloween means "dark creatures", candy, doing mean things to people... right? I'm not into those things. Yet, is that what Halloween is all about?
My mother's absolute favorite holiday was Halloween. She would decorate the house in orange and black, cute little decorations that sat on the TV, icky spider webs in the windows, and she herself had the most hideous hunchback mask and costume she'd greet the kids at the door in - scaring the pee out of unsuspecting little children who'd come to the door to trick-or-treat. Most Halloween evenings she'd go out after we children were all home safely to go to some party with her friends. My mom loved practical jokes, and one of her favorite was to leave recycled manikin body parts that her Red Cross friend, Wanda, gave her in unusual places to shock her friends. I have great memories of wider family members finding "someone" (pillows, a wig, hands and feet sticking out of their blankets) sleeping in their beds and getting creeped out about it.
I too enjoyed Halloween until I became an adult. Trick or treating was great to get all that junk in a pillowcase, canvasing the entire town of Towanda, Kansas in a single night. We knew where to go for most the likely score of big candies, who had the best decorations, etc. We knew the rules about "porch lights" and strangers, and it seemed to us a time of fun.
When I was a young mother, I lived in north central Illinois and was a part of a community of Mennonites. They didn't do Halloween. They had another set of traditions called "Lantern Festival" in which the children and adults made lanterns out of cans and candles, sang songs in the meadow in front of the common building, had a small bonfire, came in for hot chocolate and popcorn treats, remembered the dead who had influenced them in life. We shared with one another and our fellowship was sweet. The children went home with a bag of treats for their parents to distribute to them appropriately. This was usually done on October 31, so there really was no room in our lives for Halloween.
Around that same time, I think I put myself "above Halloween". Sure, it was okay for other people, but we don't do Halloween. It was the first of many changes in our choices of lifestyle that separated us from our friends and neighbors. The next was Christmas, the food choices we made, Easter, and the list goes on and on.
Last year, I realized that not celebrating Christmas separated us unnaturally in our culture from our families and some of our friends. It cut out a season of lights, songs, sharing of meals, giving gifts, and so forth. It left a distinct black hole in our lives. Celebrating the Biblical holidays is nice, but it doesn't fit in our culture, and I'm not sure God is asking us to give up our gentile culture and to separate ourselves from our friends - Christians and unbelievers alike - at this time or (maybe ever?) until He comes back.
Maybe when He returns, all things will be put as it should be. Everyone will celebrate Sabbath in a beautiful way that includes fellowshipping together - not hiding out from society. Everyone will live in huts for 8 days in the fall celebrating Sukkot (Feast of Tabernacles), remembering the children of Israel and how Yeshua came and "tabernacled among us". It sounds wonderful. Yet, today in 2013, it doesn't work out quite so nicely.
This year we are going to put up a Christmas tree, wrap presents, eat a special Christmas dinner and hang out with our family playing games. We don't believe that Jesus was born on Christmas day, or that Santa Claus is going to come to every house and magically enter through chimneys bringing toys and gifts for the good children. We do believe in family and gift giving, Jesus coming to the earth as a gift to us and that He is the light of the world, giving to the poor, and getting together with friends. Christmas is a wonderful gift, and maybe, just maybe, God doesn't intend for us Gentiles to give it up quite yet.
But what about Halloween? I've never seen any redeeming qualities of it until now. Yesterday I pondered my friend's invitation to join her, her family, and other coworker friends at the booth and asked the Lord to lead me in this. What did He think about it? I came across a blog on the topic that has me thinking. If I can overlook the origins of Christmas for the redeeming qualities it possesses, perhaps there is some good in Halloween that we can open ourselves to: opening our doors to our neighbors, sharing our friendship and time to get to know one another and find a common ground. It doesn't mean that I need to decorate our home in orange and black or a have witch's pot sitting on my television (and really, I think there are a lot of cute Halloween decorations which have these themes, and I am not offended if you do it). This year, we just might find that for the sake of finding a common reason to hang out with new friends, that donning costumes (that any other day of the year we find appropriate to play in), standing in a booth passing out toys to children of our community and building memories is worth overlooking the origins and history of yet another extraBiblical holiday. Honestly, I thought I'd have anything to do with Halloween again, but hey, I think it's going to be fun!
My name is Carol. I am a mom, wife and small town medical provider. Our family is committed to following the Lord as He leads us. We come from Methodist, Mennonite, Messianic Gentile and other Christian experiences. Ours is a mismatched, odd-looking faith, but meaningful to us as we strive to follow the Spirit's lead. Our arms are open to all with love and acceptance. Our family is not a neat cookie cutter anything, and our life looks messy most of the time, but we struggle on with hope.
Saturday, October 26, 2013
Friday, October 25, 2013
A Trip to Kauai, Hawaii!
My dear daughter, Ciara and I went to Hawaii for a medical conference October 12-18. I learned about pediatric topics in the mornings until 12:30 and she did her homework in the hotel room. |
Kauai has beautiful wild cocks roaming all over. Look close in this pic - you'll see a male and female and a clutch of young ones. |
Near our resort was a neat formation of rocks and right off of them sea turtles came in to feed. |
We watched two being buffeted about by the waves and feeding near the shore. |
Down the road was this lava formation where the water would come up under it and spray out of two holes in the rock bed called "Spouting Horn" |
We loved all the different variety of trees. Around where we live here in Alaska there aren't nearly as many... |
This alley of trees is delightful |
Our first night in Hawaii |
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