I personally would like to offer $10,000 to anyone who can come up with a question more stupid than “Should Christians enjoy Halloween?”
Though, actually, that’s obnoxious to say. Good Christians (well … adequate Christians) across the country are just now seriously asking themselves that very question. They worry, of course, that Halloween is … I don’t know … too good for dentists? Encourages begging in their children? Will be so much fun for their kids that ever afterwards their kids will hate every day that’s not Halloween, Christmas, or their birthday?
That’s a pretty reasonable fear, actually.
As a kid I was basically insane for Halloween. I could not believe that if all I did was put on one of my dad’s old sports coats, one his 50′s-style grey hats, and smear on my face some charcoal from our barbeque, I was totally qualified to go to people’s houses and ask them to give me candy for free.
Any other day, I’d get arrested for doing that. I’d tried it before. When I was about three, I derived from experiencing Halloween the lesson that if you dressed oddly your neighbors were obliged to give you free candy. So about three weeks after my first Halloween I put back on my Casper the Ghost outfit and mask, and, in the middle of the day, returned to trick-or-treating.
I thought those were the rules: you had to give free candy to little kids who dressed weird and knocked on your door.
The weird thing is, it worked. People gave me stuff. They gave me candy! Well, sort of. Most people didn’t have too much regular candy around. But they gave me Fizzies, or cookies, or half-sandwiches. Whatever. Old pizza. Cigarettes. I remember one old lady gave me some walnuts. I wasn’t all that keen on walnuts I had to break open, but I remember watching them fall to the bottom of my pillow case, and thinking, “Well, it’s food. If I had to, I could actually survive this way.”
Which, looking back on it now, I can see is a pretty disturbing perspective.
One old lady asked me in for tea. Tea! I was like, “Who am I, Alice in Wonderland? Are we supposed to visit? I appreciate your old-time cordial ways, but I’m on a mission. If you wanna give me a couple of sugar cubes, fine. But get on it. I’m busy.”
She was so sweet. I thought how later I’d return to her house and be nice to her. I don’t remember if I ever did. Which means I didn’t. Bummer. (Dear lady up in heaven right now: sorry I never came back to your house to enjoy some tea with you. I should have. You seemed totally nice.)
Anyway, my mom was not thrilled when I came wandering back home with a pillowcase one-third full of weird foodstuffs people had given me. I remember there was half a bottle of pancake syrup in there.
Who gives a kid pancake syrup? People are so weird.
Halloween—actual Halloween, when I was older—was for me always about volume. I could never understand kids I saw on Halloween walking from one house to another. Didn’t they understand the system? And what was the deal with staying on the sidewalk? I could never freakin’ believe how many kids would walk all the way down the walkway to the porch, back onto the sidewalk, and then all the way over to the next house.
Screw that. Unless there was an electrical fence between one house and the other, I was barging straight through. Shrubbery, low fences, parked cars: I didn’t care. It was all about efficacy of access.
By the end of the night, my Halloween costumes were always pretty destroyed: shredded, torn, branches and mud all over them. I usually did look pretty scary by the end of the night. But less in a fun, Halloweeny kind of way than in a Wanted by the Police kind of way.
Here’s how seriously I used to take Halloween night: I carried an extra trick-or-treat bag with me. When my first bag got too full, I’d hide it somewhere, pull out my new bag, and keep going. I didn’t want to be weighed down.
God, I was such a maniac.
I can totally see, looking back, why my friends were never with me throughout Halloween night. We’d always start out together—the old, fun gang, embarking on the frenetic joy that was Halloween night. But then, about twenty minutes into it, I’d basically ditch them for being too slow. And by then they were always happy to see me go; they were already tired of me bitching at them to pick up the pace.
Awful. I was an awful friend.
But the next day, they’d show me how much candy they’d snagged the night before—and I’d be, like, “What?! Where’s the rest of it? I could have gotten this much if I was in a wheelchair. What the hell’s the matter with you? How do you sleep at night knowing this is all the candy you got?”
You know who always impressed me with the quality of her haul? My sister. She was no me or anything, but she always did surprisingly well. And whenever I saw her out there in the dark going from house to house, I never saw her running. I have no idea how she did it.
She probably beat up other kids and took their candy. But that’s really a whole other story.
Once I became a Christian (at thirty-eight and out of nowhere—an experience you can read about here), I started learning all kinds of things about Christians I wouldn’t have suspected in a million years. Chief amongst them was that many of them were Seriously Opposed to Halloween.
My first Halloween as a Christian I went to a function put on by my church—one of those “Safe and Jesus-Centered Hallelujahween!”-type events, done the night of Halloween. The kids there were actually having a good time, running all around, screaming and laughing. The parents were engaged with them, and otherwise talking and being friendly with one another. It all felt so healthy, and happy. We were in a big brightly lit room. From inside the room I looked out a window. But the reflected lights kept me from seeing how dark it was out there.

















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My wife asked me what Halloween was abut the other say as our kids are interested. It’s slowly catching on in Australia. I knew it had something to do with All Saints Day but for most of my Christian walk I was told how evil it was. I decided to check it out to tell my kids the truth.
I couldn’t find anything that backed up the occultic claims I’ve heard about Halloween.
It seems Christians have been watching too many horror movies.
Btw my kids didn’t go out.
I’m not convinced it’s all that safe knocking on people’s doors we don’t know.
Um, I’m a Christian… and if they say that “Halloween” is wrong, and bad bad… very bad holiday, then i’ll say “WHAT BOOK CHAPTER AND VERSE DOES IT SAY THAT HALLOWEEN IS BAD??” honestly, if halloween is a sin, then so is being in drama/theatre arts, or being a actress period.You constantly dress up and act like something that you’re not! WHAT ABOUT THE PASSOVER MOVIE? THE GUY THAT PLAYED SATAN? IS HE ACTUALLY GOING TO HELL, B/C HE “PLAYED” SATAN!? i roll my eyes, @ Halloween being something as… “The devil’s birthday.” It is a day where u can dress up as a fictional character… or real one, and get candy. That is it. NOthing wrong with it. My dad is a very Godly person, and he will make me boycott something in a heart beat that may be considered suggestive in the Christian community. But as for Halloween… even he allows us to celebrate it, we just can’t be a dark character/villain, and things of that sort. Friendly-scary costumes are okay, like a spiderweb queen… or the wife on the Addams family. But being a “witch” or “darth vador” (although my brother was that two years ago… <..> ) so we cheated. Nobody’s perfect. I gotta work it. –hannah montana. (she noted a bible verse in her song! How Holy is she!?) -note sarcasm. But anywho yeah, NO dark evil like costumes! and if he participated, he’d would freaking put Bible Verses taped to each candy he’d give out! See Christians, be creative! Bottom line.
Fellow Christians… Celebrating halloween is not a sin. Nothing wrong with it. But How you celebrate it could be sinful!
So, maybe put a Bible verse on each candy you give out! Or make your child dress up in a Good-guy Costume! Or just go to the Fall Festivals! But even if you do dress up in a freaking… idk “witch” costume… ur not going to go to hell…. -___-. Just make sure your not a real witch.
One day I’ll write a short story about this, but when I was still in my charismatic/pentecostal mode, I was guilted into taking on the annual Harvest Fest(the children’s director was new to her post and preferred the role of thorn in my side rather than the lead role), during which we celebrated someone somewhere harvesting their crops. The church was in the north side of the city of Chicago in one of the densest urban neighborhoods in the country. The basement of the church was decorated with gourds and colored corn cobs and hay stacks, no hint of ghosts or goblins until later when we opened the doors to the neighborhood children, hoping our Jesus puppet show would turn the little witches and mummies into soldiers for Jesus. Directing an event of this size — we had 900 children coming thru the church doors — was headache enough, but a good portion of the church believed that even our Harvest Festival was of the devil, so they held an alternative event(which took away many of my volunteers) in the church sanctuary, bringing in a fiery evangelist who preached not too subtly against the goings on in the church basement. Hard to believe now that I was such a smuck! Memories.
I’m a Christian, and I love Halloween! Great writing, John.
This was hilarious! My favorite part of Halloween is that it’s such a community holiday. On all the other holidays, people are together with their families, which is special in its own way, but I love what it feels like to have the whole neighborhood out and feeling like a real community. I think it’s too bad for Christians to feel like they shouldn’t be part of that.
I grew up in a ‘sunday christian’ kind of home. My husband grew up Baptist (hands to your side…not hands in the air Baptist) We always enjoyed Halloween. I remember my parents “checking my candy”. I’m thinking this sounds eerily similar to me “checking the candy” to make sure the chocolate is fresh. Tonight was the first time in 37 years that I haven’t dressed up. I’m thinking that my darling husband made up for it by dressing as a Zombie Preacher. Who does that? So if you are looking for an answer to the question….No. It encourages violence (pushing down children for candy). Gluttony ( I can eat a lot of candy corn and peanut butter cups) among other things. Damn….I can’t wait until next year.
Man, I don’t suppose you have a photo you can share with us of your husband dressed up as a Zombie Preacher?????
Thank you for this. It was delightful.
Ha, ha, Doug Sewell! It’s funny to think of anyone ever disagreeing with me. Good one.
John, I appreciate you … your passion and honesty stir me, even when I disagree.
Just made me laugh out loud.
How would I know? I barely speak English.
wouldn’t it be “les archives” ?
Halloween was my all time favorite holiday! I loved it. I loved being able to be out after dark. I love the safely scarey stuff. I loved the costumes and of course I loved the candy. That is until I got to be about 10 and my mom brother and I all became “born again” watching the 700 club. Then Halloween was placed in the pile of stuff that no good Christian should ever have anything to do with. I mean to flirt with the darkness like that might even be inviting demonic oppression or possession right? Yeah, I actually believed that.
So, at the ripe old age of 10 I hung up my trick or treat bag and retired to staying home on Halloween. I answered the door and gave candy to other kids who no doubt were innocent of the dark evil they were participating in. (Blissfully unware – lucky dogs!)
So glad that’s over. At least I get to relive it with my kids. I took both of them out dressed as a ninja from my favorite manga (gasp! no good Christian reads comics or manga either), my older girl was a Pokemon (demon) and my little girl was a vampire (oh God, we are all so going to hell).
I wish I could say that I laugh at this stuff now. I kinda do. I kinda don’t. This stupidity robbed me of a lot of good stuff from my childhood. Of course, they also robbed me of a lot of cool stuff that should have happened during my teenage years and young adulthood, but that’s a different story for another time.
Ahahaha… haha…
I’m celebrating Halloween by dressing up in male drag and going to a party hosted by a gay man with activities including “music, drinking, dancing, drunk dancing, and drinking”.
Yep, very Christian.
Just kidding. I love Halloween, just because the world turns upside-down for a weekend and everyone can get out of themselves and have fun. I’m aware that Halloween does have a dark side, and it is a time to be cautious in our revelry, but I’ve never understood why people are so anxious about their kids dressing up in costume and getting candy. If a kid wants to be Dracula for Halloween, that doesn’t mean he’s going to turn into a Satan-worshiping goth who believes that he really is the Prince of Darkness. It means he wants to be in a scary costume. Period.
I say, dress up, stay safe (parents, chaperone the trick-or-treating children), and HAVE FUN.
Sonja: Perfect. Perfectly said.
Pancake syrup had me in tears… and then the great candy corn debate. Thank you for that.
PS: I look forward to Easter every year because of the Cadbury Creme Eggs. So I understand the once-a-year candy crazies. I literally eat probably a full dozen of those things every spring. I should just go to the store with an empty egg carton and fill ‘er up.
I don’t understand the ending of this story! What does the last sentence mean?
Yeah, me too. Glad I wasn’t the only confused soul!
I adore Halloween and the Dia de los Muertos and All Saints/Souls days. Many American Christians behave as though their denomination is the end all to Christianity and that the way we practice Christianity *is* being Christian, rather than culturally American.
The thing that galls me is when people say “But dressing up/jack’o'lanterns/tricks are symbols of a pagan holiday!” So’s that fir tree you bring in your house at Solstice and the eggs/rabbits at Eostre.
At our Christian school we had to dress up as Bible characters. No cross dressing allowed (of course)……and since it was rather frowned upon to pick the (uh-hem) “women of questionable morals” and they didn’t teach us about the kick-ass girls like Judith……it made the choices fairly slim. Mary, Ruth, Mrs. Noah…..
My friend Mary went as a lion once.
But, man, what a costume it would have been to carry in the head of Holofernes.
I did Halloween as a farm kid but it was limited because mom or dad had to drive into town for it. Those were days when parents didn’t feel like they had to hover over their kids for safety. It was small town enuf to let us loose with a set time to return to a designated location.
By the time I was a teen, we kinda grew out of it and I haven’t really believed in it since. I shared it with my sons a few times, but didn’t make a big deal of it and they got over it after a few years too. But I remember when I was older my year younger bro and Dad and I went around the neighborhood to Dad’s friends trick or treating with highball glasses with ice in them. Now THAT was a hoot…especially after a few houses.
I regard death as something evil. Necessary evil, but evil all the same and as a young father (now single gay and 67), if I’d known about the focus today on all the horrors we see on the TV and video stores I would have said, “No way!!” Today I’m just appalled by all the gratuitist visual slasher and horror crap children are exposed to even just walking around the video store, let alone letting them watch it. Hell, mom had to take me out of the old time theater 60 years ago when the lion showed up in the Wizard of Oz. Now they think it’s entertaining to see people cut up with chain saws!!! I remember my nephew laughing uproariously when someone’s head got chopped of. Well, he became a tame photographer so I guess it didn’t totally warp him.
So, tho on the one hand I’m appalled by it all today, I have to say I very much like the TV show THE WALKING DEAD. The premise is preposterous of course. Rotting muscles can’t possibly support movement and rotting eyes can’t possibly see and what happens to all that flesh they devour…..never mind. I have a theater degree and understand the idea of suspension of disbelief. Indeed, all theater and movies depend on that. But I like TWD for the drama, the development of interpersonal relationships and what I regard at the metaphor it is for good against evil, our better natures doing battle with our worst. There is some seriously good drama going on in that show.
Or maybe it’s just because Andy Lincoln is soooooo gorgeous!!!!
As a kid, I did Holloween. It was different for my 5 kids. We attend a quite conservative “mega-church” with a Christian school that was against Holloween but not so much so that if you wanted to dress your kids up and have them go out, you had the option with no condemnation and they also had ” Halloween alternatives” for church /school kids. It was no big deal.
My kids actually liked dressing up and just handing out candy and/or scaring kids as they came to the house. They would go out sometimes but they really didn’t like it all that much because I always made sure my wife bought the GOOD candy and not that gawd awful candy corn. Since my wife bought the good candy to hand out, we had enough “left overs” for my kids, we had the best candy anyway!!
The wife and I never made a big deal over Holloween (either fun or evil), since we didn’t they didn’t. Also when my kids were at the Holloween age, not that many kids came by our house so they assumed it must not be that big of a day if only a dozen or so kid groups came by the house.
Most people (even Christians) associate October 31st with Holloween, but there is even a more important historical event that occured on that date. Does anyone know what that was? Even secular historians list it as one of the most significant events in history over the last 2000 years.
Reformation Day, as anyone who grew up with Halloween alternatives knows.
Ding….ding…..ding….ding, you win a bag of delicious candy corn (from last years Holloween)
I used to like you, Brian W. But that was before you said that you don’t think candy-corn is insanely delicious.
I guess you won’t like me anymore, John.
Never did like it myself.
Oh, goody, I’m still John’s favorite – because I LOVE candy corn! I could eat it til my teeth hurt.
Can anyone say “sugar addiction?”
i buy those mellocreme (sp?) pumpkins at halloween because you can’t find them any other time. i find them even more addictive than candy corn.
I like the “Indian corn” candy corn – the kind with the chocolate tips.
Of course, pure gold for a kid is going to that rich person’s house where they give away whole, big Hershey bars.
they used to sell the “fall mix” which had chocolate mellocreme cats, and maple(?) fall leaves as well as the pumpkins … that stuff was the best.
Candy corn is one of the best things in this world.
I just wish it wasn’t made with honey; I can only eat so much without getting a headache and sore throat.
Oh, you just have to plow through that phase of it, straight into that sort of buzzing pre-diabetic coma fun part, where basically your whole whole head is numb and you can’t hold a pencil.
i think only the good kind is made with honey? maybe get the cheap kind? but i am not sure…
LOL!! Yea, I just hated that stuff when I was a kid. For one of my kids first Holloweens, my wife bought that stuff and even my kids hated it, yuk…I knew there must be some people that like it, cuzz they sell so much of it.
Oh, so it’s a genetic defect. Sorry I called everyone’s attention to it. It must be so difficult for you, living with that.
yea, we all have our faults and short comings, yours is you like candy corn…..
BWAHAHAHAHAHAA!!!! Brian, the hilarious side emerges. Touche.
candy corn is good in coffee.
You – you don’t like candy corn? What is this blasphemy???
BAN WORTHY COMMENT.
BAN WORTHY!!!!
I KNEW HE WAS A LOST SOUL.
Despite coming from a very conservative background where movie theatres and secular music was off limits, my parents thankfully never had a problem with Halloween (as long as we didn’t dress in any evil costumes like witches and such of course). But I remember when I was in grade 7 and my father had gotten out of the ministry. We were living in a town where my dad had pastored a couple of years before but the the new pastor in town was against Halloween. It didn’t seem to bother any of the other parishioners but his 3 daughters were not allowed to go trick-or-treating. His youngest told me that I was worshiping the devil, but his oldest was my best friend. As the town was fairly small and I knew that I would need to share my loot with my less privileged best friend, I actually covered the whole town twice that year; Once in costume and once out. Fortunately for my friend, her parents odd objection to Halloween (it was the first time I had come across this since up until that point my dad was also my pastor) didn’t extend to her not being able to enjoy my ill gotten booty.
I loved Halloween because I loved candy of course (what kid doesn’t) and I was pretty miserable the first year that I decided I was too old to go trick-or-treating. I still love buying different packages of the marked down candy after Halloween and mixing it all together in a big bag to fake the experience
I’m SO relieved that we don’t ‘do’ Halloween in Australia. My children really don’t need the official sanction of bailing up complete strangers and asking them for candy. They’d never stop.
I was Casper one year, too!
Childlike innocence? More like childlike laziness!
Kids should stop whining for free candy hand outs. If they would just quit going to elementary school and get real jobs they could buy their own candy.
this is so funny!
Celts!
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