Between Two Worlds: A Mix of Theology, Philosophy, Politics, and Culture



Monday, October 23, 2006

Halloween Reflections

7 comments | Permalink
It's a tradition: (1) Halloween is almost upon us, (2) Tim Challies writes on the issue; and (3) I link to Tim's reflections.

Seeing no good reason to break with the past, I'll once again quote from Tim at length:

I am guessing my neighbourhood is all-too-typical in that people typically arrive home from work and immediately drive their cars into the garage. More often than not they do not emerge again until the next morning when they leave for work once more. We are private, reclusive people who delight in our privacy. We rarely see our neighbors and rarely communicate with them. It would be a terrible breach of Canadian social etiquette for me to knock on a person's door and ask them for a small gift or even just to say "hello" to them. In the six years we have been living in this area, we have never once had a neighbor come to the door to ask for anything (except for this time). Yet on Halloween these barriers all come down. I have the opportunity to greet every person in the neighbourhood. I have the opportunity to introduce myself to the family who moved in just down the row a few weeks ago and to greet some other people I have not seen for weeks or months. At the same time, those people's children will come knocking on my door. We have two possible responses. We can turn the lights out and sit inside, seeking to shelter ourselves from the pagan influence of the little Harry Potters, Batmans and ballerinas, or we can greet them, gush over them, and make them feel welcome. We can prove ourselves to be the family who genuinely cares about our neighbours, or we can be the family who shows that we want to interact with them only on our terms. Most of our neighbors know of our faith and of our supposed concern for them. This is a chance to prove our love for them.

The same contributor to the email list concluded his defense of participating in Halloween with these words: "One night does not a neighbor make (and one night does not a pagan make), but Halloween is the one night of the year where the good neighborliness that flows from being in Christ is communicated and reinforced. We are citizens of another Kingdom where The Light is always on."

The truth is that I have several convictions regarding Halloween. I despise the pagan aspects of it. I am convicted that my children should not dress as little devils or ghosts or monsters. But I am also convicted that there could be no worse witness to the neighbours than having a dark house, especially in a neighbourhood like ours which is small and where every person and every home is highly-visible. We know that, if we choose not to participate, the neighbors will notice and will smile knowingly, supposing that we feel too good to participate. We have nothing to fear from our neighbours or from their children. So my children will dress up (my son as a police officer and my daughter as a princess) and we will visit each of our neighbours, knocking on their doors and accepting their fistfuls of candy. Either my wife or I will remain at home, greeting people at our door with a smile and a handful of something tasty. If the kids are deemed too old to trick-or-treat, they'll be forced to sing a song to merit any handouts. Our door will be open and the light will be on. And we trust that the Light will shine brightly.

My encouragement to you today is to think and pray about this issue. I do not see Halloween as a great evangelistic occasion. I do not foresee it as a time when the people coming to your door are likely to be saved. But I do think it is a time that you can prove to your neighbors that you care about them, that you care about their children, and that you are glad to be in this world and this culture, even if you are not of this world or this culture. Halloween may serve as a bridge to the hearts of those who live around you who so desperately need a Savior.


7 Comments:

Blogger Mark D. Smith said...

Right on. Good stuff.

10/23/2006 11:15:00 AM  
Blogger debbiewimmers said...

Why not buy tracts to put in with the candy?

10/23/2006 01:04:00 PM  
Anonymous Robert Cain said...

A slippery slop of conformity to not only a secular, but deeply demonically rooted practice such as Halloween, begs the question of when the line will be drawn for a people who claim Christ. Christians have capitulated to all forms of practices in America which do not bring glory to God no matter how hard we try reasoning them through to a conclusion that says we are being salt and light by participating in such practices. It must become clear to all, that the time has come for all who claim Christ to return to a day when men are sifted through the Word of God in how they will live, instead of sifting the Word through them.

By not participating and treating it like yesterday and tomorrow men will see we are living a life that does not conform to the standards man has set forth, but live a life permeating with an ongoing sanctification through God. This is what brings my neighbor to question the life he sees as different and sometimes offensive to his nature. We must remember that the sinner is at enmity with God and should feel discomfort because of it. I suggest a reading of a sermon by Spurgeon, How Saints May Help The Devil.

Have we become so callus to the spiritual battle around us that when we see little children dressing as the devil, the arch enemy of God and man, the very one who is devouring millions of souls, that we do not cry out with loud voices, fall on our face and mourn with anguish for our Savior to crush this enemy who is sifting the life out of our children’s souls.

When I read this article I see part of the problem is we see our unsaved neighbors as being shut in and reclusive and act ourselves like we expect them to act differently. When was the last time, Christian that you purposed to break the so called etiquette and go borrow something from your neighbor or just stop by and say hello or take some treat to them on a regular basis because your kids wanted to give them some cookies they made or some soup your wife made. Why when a new family moves into a neighborhood do we wait until the so called opportunity of Halloween to introduce ourselves and become neighborly.

I cry out that we are sifted through a worldly perspective that knows not how to share the Glorious Gospel unless it be on the terms of the unregenerate!

Christians have a clarion call to set the standard and the pace by which the world must conform or parish!

10/23/2006 01:34:00 PM  
Blogger mh said...

Hmmm...

Thanks JT (and Tim)!

Debbie, isn't the tract thing a bit like leaving a tract for a waiter? And do you see a problem with that? I have been a waiter and watched what happens when my unsaved waiter friends are left such a "tip," even if there is money too. It's honestly a BAD testimony if you ask me. "Tract-ing" people usually does nothing but set their resolve against the impersonalism and elitism of what they perceive as "Christianity."

10/23/2006 01:40:00 PM  
Blogger Eric J. Hansen (Spot) said...

Loved the article, but I do struggle with whether it's worth it for my two little girls (both about 2 yrs old) to see images which will surely serve to frighten them (e.g., a 10 yr old neighbor girl was a dead bride with blood all over and a ripped-up dress. She was also holding a knife and even came with a sad, gaunt look on her face). Any comments for a family like mine wanting to take advantage of the opportunity but NOT at the harm of the little girls God has entrusted me?

10/23/2006 09:35:00 PM  
Anonymous Anonymous said...

1. Is the culture card beginning to be over played?

2. You can never go wrong with a gospel tract.

10/24/2006 08:20:00 AM  
Anonymous Mark said...

Justin,
I really appretiate this article, my wife and I were just talking about this last night as we walked throught our nieghborhood and seeing all the decorations, why people feel a need to decorate lavishly for holloween is another topic all together. We are due our first child this december and are really not sure what to do about things like holloween and santa claus but I think that Tim Challies said it well.

10/25/2006 11:47:00 AM  

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