Where
Did Halloween Come From?
Do
you know that Halloween was introduced into the professing Christian world
centuries after the death of the Apostles, yet it was celebrated by the pagans
centuries before the New Testament Church was founded!
How
did Halloween come to America? Here is the intriguing answer from history: “The
American celebration rests upon Scottish and Irish folk customs WHICH CAN BE
TRACED IN DIRECT LINE FROM PRE-CHRISTIAN TIMES” — from paganism! “Although
Halloween has become a night of rollicking fun, superstitious spells, and eerie
games which people take only half seriously, its beginnings were quite
otherwise. The earliest Halloween celebrations were held” — not by the inspired
early Church, but — “by the Druids in honor of Samhain, Lord of the Dead, whose
festival fell on November 1.” (From Halloween
Through Twenty Centuries, by Ralph Linton, p. 4.)
Far
from being Christian, this festival is an old pagan holiday, masquerading as
though it was one of the customs of the Church. And yet professing Christians
allow their children to get into the spirit of this pagan custom!
The
Encyclopedia Americana states about
Halloween that it “is clearly a relic of pagan times.”
Now
notice what the authoritative Encyclopaedia Britannica says about Halloween:
“It long antedates Christianity. The two chief characteristics of ancient
Halloween were the lighting of bonfires and the belief that this is the one
night in the year during which ghosts and witches are most likely to wander
about. History shows that the main celebrations of Halloween were purely
Druidical” — from the pagan Druids of Northwest Europe — “and this is further
proved by the fact that in parts of Ireland October 31 is still known as OIDHCH
SHAMHNA, ‘Vigil of Saman.’ “ Saman or Samhain was the pagan lord of the dead
among the Druids.
So
Halloween was celebrated among the pagans long before Jesus was born in
Bethlehem. This pagan holiday, however, was not celebrated alone among the
Druids. It was also a Roman festival! The Britannica continues: “On the Druidic
ceremonies were grafted some of the characteristics of the Roman festival in
honour of Pomona held about November 1, in which nuts and apples, representing
the winter store of fruits, played an important part.”
Notice
the widespread pagan custom to celebrate this season of the year.
Why Halloween Was Celebrated
Now
comes the shocking truth from history as to why this holiday was celebrated!
Here are the plain facts as written in THE BOOK OF HALLOWEEN, on page 10, by
Ruth Kelley: The pagan Druid priests “taught the immortality of the soul, that
it passed from one body to another at death . . . . They believed that on the last night of the
old year (October 31) the lord of death gathered together the souls of all
those who had died in the passing year and had been condemned to live in the
bodies of animals, to decree what forms they should inhabit for the next twelve
months. He could be coaxed to give lighter sentence by gifts and prayers.”
“On
the New Year, their sins being expiated, they were released to go to the Druid
Heaven.” (From Halloween Through Twenty
Centuries, p. 5).
Halloween
was celebrated to preserve in the minds of the people the false doctrine of the
immortality of the soul — that the dead are not really dead. Almost all heathen
nations had days in honor of the dead — days originally instituted to
commemorate the death of Nimrod (Genesis 10:8-10) whom Semiramis, his
wife, said was still alive.
Now
let us understand the meaning of the word “Halloween.” It is the eve of Allhallows
or Hallowmas or All Saints’ Day — and as such it is one of the most solemn
festivals of the [Catholic] church.” (From page 3 of Linton’s Halloween Through Twenty Centuries.)
Halloween
is the evening of Allhallows or All Saints’ Day, which falls on November 1.
Since in ancient times, the days were customarily reckoned as beginning at
sunset, Halloween was merely the evening celebration in anticipation of the
great day of November 1, dedicated to the lord of the dead!
Who Was the “Lord of the Dead”?
You
will remember that shortly before his crucifixion, Jesus was questioned by the
Sadduces about the resurrection. In order to prove that there would be a
resurrection from the dead, Jesus told them: “But as touching the resurrection
of the dead, have ye not read that which was spoken unto you by God, saying, I
am the God of Abraham, and the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob? God is not
the God of the dead, but of the living,” Matthew 22:31-32.
Notice
the meaning of Jesus’ answer. Since the patriarches are DEAD, and since God is
ONLY the God of the living — because the DEAD serve not the Lord (Psalms
6:5, 115:17) — then there must be a resurrection of the DEAD in order that
they might live again and that God might be their God.
To
make the resurrection possible, “Christ both died, and rose, and revived, that
He might be Lord both of the dead and living,” Romans 14:9. Observe that Jesus became the lord or master
of the dead because through His resurrection He gained the keys of the grave
and death (Revelation 1:18) and will resurrect the dead so they may live
to serve Him. But from whom did Jesus
gain these keys? Who had prior mastery
over the dead?
Paul,
in the book of Hebrews, speaks of “him that had the power of death, that is the
devil,” Hebrews 2:14. So the
devil, Satan, was lord or master of the dead!
Among
the heathen Druids, Samhain or Saman, the lord of the dead, was Satan! To this
day people still celebrate with frolicking fun a wild night in honor of the
devil! Paul says that the heathen who thought they were worshipping the true
God were actually serving demons (Gal. 4:8). Young people today who set fires
on Halloween are not serving God.
But
if Halloween is merely the evening in honor of the devil, how did the day —
called Allhallows or All Saints’ Day — come to be celebrated in the professing
Christian Church?
The Origin of All Saints’ Day
The
first of November, celebrated among the pagans in honor of Samhain — Satan — is
today celebrated in hundreds of churches “to honor all the saints, known and
unknown, and according to [pope] Urban IV, to supply any deficiencies in the
faithful’s celebration of saints’ feasts during the year,” (Catholic
Encyclopedia).
How
did the veneration of saints, supposedly alive in heaven, come to be celebrated
on a day in honor of the devil?
“.
. . The Church, feeling that every martyr should be venerated, appointed a
common day for all.”
Notice,
what once was a memorial for each martyr on different days became a general day
in honor of the dead who were believed to be alive in heaven. “Gregory III
(731-741) consecrated a chapel in the basilica of St. Peter to all the saints
and fixed the anniversary on November 1 . . . . Gregory IV (827-844) extended
the celebration on 1 November to the entire Church. The vigil (Halloween) seems
to have been held as early as the feast itself.”
Notice
that the celebration of Halloween, the eve of the day, is as old as the
celebration of All Saints’ Day in the Catholic Church. On page 6 of his book,
Ralph Linton says of this holiday, “All Saints’ Day was introduced into the
church calendar because the year was not long enough to make it possible to
dedicate a special day for each spirit of the Catholic Church . . . . That the day chosen was one already
associated in the popular mind with a thronging of spirits of the dead which
was quite in line with church policy of incorporating harmless pagan folk
ideas.”
Protestants
continued the celebration of Halloween partly “since it was on this day, in
1517, that Martin Luther posted his epoch-making ninety-five theses on the door
of the castle church at Wittenberg” which started the Protestant Reformation.
“He chose Halloween night because he knew that the townsfolk . . . would be
coming to the church that night.” (Halloween, pp. 9-10.)
Origin of “Trick or Treat”
Do
you know where the common Halloween prank of children knocking on doors and
shouting “trick or treat” originated?
Linton
says: “. . . certainly it comes from pagan times.” In Ireland up to the turn of
the century, it was customary to have a procession “led by a man in a white
robe wearing a horse-head mask.” (“The horse was sacred to the Sun God,” says
Linton, “which indicated that this custom was a survival of a Druid rite.”) The procession levied a contribution
from the farmers in the perverted name of what probably was an old Druid god.
Unless the procession was “treated liberally with gifts, the farmers were
“tricked” with the threat of a curse that would ruin next year’s crops!
This
traditional custom of having processions at Halloween is further derived from
another unusual practice. Wealthy churches during the Middle Ages, copying the
ancient Greek and Roman religious processions, paraded the relics of patron
saints. The poorer parishes could not afford to buy relics so they used
caricatures of their patron saints. “Those who were not playing the parts of
the holy ones also wanted to get into the procession and so dressed up as
angels or devils. The Allhallows procession around the churchyard eventually
became a gay and motley parade (from page 103 of Halloween Through Twenty Centuries).
The
present day “trick or treat” is but a continuation of these degenerate and
absurd customs which came out of paganism and have been labeled with Christian
names.
Is
it any wonder that children and adults wantonly damage private property — on a
day originally dedicated to Satan, the Destroyer?