Trick or….Bible: Christians Coping with
Halloween
What
are Christians supposed to do with Halloween: a day which has become a
cavalcade of non-Christian symbolism: ghosts, witches, black cats, and evil
spells?
For
many, the long-standing answer was to close the curtains, turn off the porch
light and stay home.
But
some Evangelicals have been looking for a different approach.
For
example, there’s “Jesus
Ween,”
an attempt by a Canadian pastor to offer a “Christian alternative” to
Halloween. The idea is simple: instead of wearing a costume, wear white (the
color of righteousness); when someone greets you with “Trick or treat,” respond
with “Jesus Loves You”; and if you want to drop candy in the bag, feel free,
but drop a small Bible in that bag while you’re at it.
Ultimately,
the pastor seems to be quietly working for a re-brand of the day, from
Halloween to “World Evangelism Day,” recognizing the potential in a day when
going door to door and speaking to strangers is not only permitted, but
expected.
According
to the website: “There is no better day
to choose. October 31st presents us with a unique
opportunity to spread the gospel….You don’t even have to go out of your way;
people will come to your doorstep, anyway.”
The
whole thing has “Ned Flanders” written all over it.
Maybe
that’s why it seems to be having trouble catching on, even among Christians
with a hexed—I mean, vexed—relationship to Halloween.
The
movement began in 2002, and the organization’s website, www.jesusween.com, doesn’t appear to have been updated since
2012.
But
it’s still worth talking about, and not because it fits with the famililar
“Ain’t those Evanglicals kooky?” meme.
More
recently, actor Kirk Cameron urged Evangelical families to
approach Halloween, not quite as “Jesus Ween,” but along similar lines:
You
should have the biggest party on your block, and you should have the reason for
everyone to come to your house and before anyone else’s house because yours is
the most fun…Halloween gives you a great opportunity to show how Christians
celebrate the day that death was defeated, and you can give them Gospel tracts
and tell the story of how every ghost, goblin, witch and demon was trounced the
day Jesus rose from the grave….
For
Cameron, the festivities all have their origin in popular celebration of Jesus’
resurrection and atonement, and it’s high time that Christians reclaimed that
connection.
What’s
more likely is that Halloween began as a Christian appropriation of the Celtic
pagan holiday of Samhain, which marked the end of the harvest season, and asked
for the protection of the spirit world in order to survive the coming winter.
The
Church began shifting its liturgical calendars as early as the 9th century in order to get
its arms around the day, and to re-present it as the triple holiday of All
Hallows Eve, followed by the Feast of All Saints, and then the Feast of All
Souls.
So
it’s neither a new anxiety, nor a new response, for Christian communities to
eye the season warily and to try to shoo everyone back into their seats.
This
shouldn’t be much of a surprise. After all, “lightening up” has really never
been the Church’s thing.
Not
for nothing, many would say that it’s a perennial challenge for Christians to
reconcile the claims (and cultural narratives) of faith and those of their
surrounding communities in any age.
In
that sense, when Kirk Cameron or the Jesus Ween proponents offer
constructive proposals for what to make of the holiday, they’re only the latest
examples of a venerable Christian tradition.
Indeed,
so much of the work of faith is the process of trying to do just that.
In
this case, what is it about evil and death, and perhaps the temptation to
mayhem, that the Church’s story can’t quite manage to contain? And what
should faithful people do about it?
The
broader cultural narrative of modern Halloween continues to engage this
question.
So
many communities have tried to de-fang Halloween by trick-or-treating only in
daylight, or in explicitly self-contained environments like shopping malls or
blocked off streets with an army of adult supervision, lest any genuine evil
intrude.
It’s
an odd thing to try to control a holiday that emphasizes our lack of
control, and to keep evil pleasantly fictional by insulating ourselves from the
fact that it is not.
As
a father, I’m all for it.
But
as a pastor, I’m not sure that a well-intentioned reminder of the love of Jesus
and the power of his Word, dropped in my toddler’s goody bag, would entirely
allay my fears.
The Word I need is the grace to live with the
tension.
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