So don’t let anyone condemn you for what you eat or drink, or for not celebrating certain holy days or new moon ceremonies or Sabbaths. For these rules are only shadows of the reality yet to come. And Christ himself is that reality. Don’t let anyone condemn you by insisting on pious self-denial or the worship of angels, saying they have had visions about these things.
Halloween is always a big deal around our house. I love seeing my kids in cute costumes and seeing other kids running around the neighbor in their costumes. I love candy. I love eating my kids candy. I loved when my kids were too small to eat candy and I got to eat all of it. I love to buy too much Halloween candy so there is plenty left over afterward.
Many followers of Christ choose not to celebrate Halloween, and that is OK. I certainly don’t hold it against them. There are many aspects of the holiday that are negative. Many people use it as an excuse to dress too provocatively. I am not a big fan of ugly witch costumes, or pentagrams, or things squirting blood. Many of those things are tasteless decorations if anything else.
What I do take issue to is when followers of Christ say they don’t celebrate the holiday BECAUSE it is a pagan holiday. The truth is, EVERY day of the year is a pagan holiday of some kind. It is a fact of history that Christmas is taken from the pagan holiday of Saturnalia, when Romans would spend seven days celebrating the God Saturn; and their was much wickedness associated with it. Easter is taken from a pagan holiday which celebrated the feast of the fertility goddess Ishtar, from whose name the word Easter is derived. The fertility goddess celebration makes the skimpiest Halloween costumes look like traditional Amish garb atcompared to a rip-roarin fertility festival.
If people wish to not participate in Halloween because of some of the things it represents that is OK, they just shouldn’t take their personal choice and turn it into a condemnation or a way to look down upon others. Certainly some of the things Christmas and Easter have come to represent are not all that great either; but, one of the great opportunities taht comes from being a committed Christ-follower in the world is that I can be an example of everything that is good, about any day, any event, any celebration.
Of course, it is important to temper any freedom you have been given within the broader context of loving otehrs so much that you put their needs above your own. In Romans 14:21, Paul exhorts us not to use our freedom to cause your bother to fall. I try not to make a big deal about Halloween, or having a beer or glass of wine, or whatever it is, around people that it would completely offend, or cause to go down the wrong path. My freedom should never be an excuse to harm someone.
I need to take the time to carefully discern every situation I am in, and carefully and lovingly look to the best interests of those around me.