| Dear Rev. Know-It-All,
I am worried. My next door neighbor who
is a member of the First Church of the Separated Brethren with Signs and
Wonders Following says that I should not allow my children to dress up
and go trick or treating on Halloween. It will lead them into occult practices
and they will end up demon possessed and burning in hell. Is this true?
Yours sincerely,
Mrs. Holly Weyan

Dear Holly,
I suspect that forbidding trick or treating
to children might have the opposite effect. I've met your neighbor's children
and believe me I've been tempted to reach for the Holy Water a few times.
Remember that forbidden fruit is sweetest. Children tend to develop a morbid
interest in the things that their parents forbid most vehemently. Instead
of saying no and hiding in the basement waiting for the apocalypse, perhaps
you can encourage your children to dress as super-heroes and even saints.
Halloween is a way to laugh at our own
fears. It is a sort of whistling past the cemetery. I would not forbid
moderate Halloweenieness (Yes, a new word. You heard it here first.) to
children. I would forbid it to adults. Halloween has become an adult holiday,
with all the attendant debauchery and drunkenness. An unhealthy fixation
on things occult seems to be growing, not on the part of children but on
the part of parents and older siblings. It is as if parents are refusing
to grow up.
I hold myself and my fellow clergy responsible,
in part.
There is a natural awareness of and hunger
for supernatural reality. The modern church, in it's wholesale neglect
of supernatural reality has sent people elsewhere for explanations of the
invisible dimension of their lives. I think it is far more dangerous
for adults and older teens to focus on the morbid and occult movies costume
parties and what is up with the current popularity of sex vampires?
We Catholics are the possessors of supernatural
realities: resurrection, and spiritual warfare and the casting out of demons.
These thing really happen in the Catholic faith. It may sound odd, but
compared to the Holy Sacrifice of the Mass, the idea that vampires drink
blood seems a demonic parody. We have the real thing. Hollywood is just
mocking us. In the past few decades, many have tried to reduce the faith
to a sort of self help movement of meetings and committees and snazzy ceremonies.
The pastor of St. Odillo's in Berwyn, Illinois
makes the point that the struggle in the church is not between so called
liberals and conservatives. It is between those who believe in supernatural
reality and those who don't.
We have neglected supernatural things at
our own peril. The result appears to be that Halloween, once a harmless
night for children to indulge in harmless fantasy and high fructose treats
is fast becoming a sort of a "pagan Christmas." The message of the real
Christmas is, "Be not afraid!" as the angels said to the shepherds. The
message of the new paganized Halloween is, "Be afraid, be very afraid!"
This bathing in terror is really dangerous for children and adults alike.
So my suggestion is that you let your kids
trick or treat and laugh at the fake stuff, making sure they know it's
fake. Let me suggest a simple rule of thumb. If it gives you a bit of a
fright and then makes you laugh it's probably okay. If it leaves you quaking
with fear and causes nightmares it is best avoided all together. Grown
ups should act like grown ups and make it a children's holiday once again.
And don't be the kind that passes out apples and granola bars. Pop for
the good stuff, like Almond Joys and Reese's peanut butter cups.
This year I think I'm going to dress up
as a priest.
Yours,
Rev.
Know-It-All
PS:
As for the scary movies, "Abbot and Costello meet the Werewolf" is probably
okay. All the dreck that's coming out of Hollywood now, I would keep off
limits to children. If you think it will give them nightmares don't let
them watch it. And certainly don't let them watch anything you haven't
seen it first.

The
Question Was
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Is it OK to let
the kids go out for Halloween? |
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