embracethecross

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John 8:12 "I am the light of the world."

Sunday, October 30, 2022

Why Do We Celebrate Halloween

 Why Do We Celebrate Halloween? Here's the 

Real History Behind it!

Your favorite spooky traditions

had to start somewhere.

Dressing up in a creative costume, 

gallivanting around in the gathering

dusk to collect the best candy from the 

neighbors and getting together with friends

for a monster ball are all beloved traditions.

But the fall holiday didn't start stateside

at all.  In fact, the history of Halloween 

dates back thousands of years to the Celtic

celebration of Samhain, a hallowed festival

that marked the end of the harvest season and

welcomed in the new year. 

Most scholars agree that Halloween as we know

it originated some 2,000 years ago, when Celtic

people in Europe celebrated the end of the

harvest and the start of a new year in a festival

 called Samhain (pronounced "sow-win")

People also believed they could commune with

the dead more easily during that time, lighting

big bonfires to ward off spirits according to 

The American Folklife Center.

Celtic religion beliefs was closely

tied to the natural world and they worshipped

gods in sacred places like lakes, rivers,

cliffs and bushes. The moon, the sun

and the stars were especially important-the

Celts thought that there were supernatural

 forces in every aspect of the natural world.

Ancient Celtic religion, commonly known as

Celtic paganism, was the religion of the

ancient Celtic peoples of Europe. 

The Celts also believed that the spiritual

communication on Samhain made it

easier for Celtic priest, or druids, to 

predict the future, according to History.

{Druid means: a Celtic priest, magician,

or soothsayer in the ancient Celtic religion.}

To appease the deities, they built bonfires

and sacrificed crops and animals. Villagers

also attended the bonfire ceremonies wearing

animal heads and skins as costumes. 

{Referring deities as their gods or goddess.}

Nowadays, many of us associate bats with

Halloween---and that has its historical roots,

too. The Druids' Samhain bonfires attracted

bugs which, in turn, tempted bats to come enjoy

a tasty meal. In later years, various folklore 

emerged citing bats as harbingers of death or

doom.{ In Nova Scotian mythology, a bat

settling in a house means a man in the family

will die. If it flies around and tries to escape, a

woman in the family will perish instead.}

The Romans conquered most Celtic territory

by 43 A.D. and brought their own fall festivals

with them at that time, according to History.

Their October celebration called Feralia

also commemorated the passing of the dead.

Another holiday, Pomona, honored the 

Roman goddess of fruit and trees. That's 

one reason people often bob for apples 

during Halloween festivities.

{Celtic meaning: Ancient European people 

who are related to the Irish, Scots, Welsh,

and Bretons, or of their language or culture.}

Fast forward a few centuries, and the 

festivals that would become Halloween

evolved. Several Christian popes attempted

to replace "pagan" holidays like Samhain with

their own religious observances. By 1000 A.D. 

All Soul's Day on November 2 served as a time

for the living to pray for the souls of the dead.

All Saint's Day, or All Hallows, honored the

saints on November1. that made October 31

All Hallows Eve, which later became Halloween. 

Despite the new religious focus,

people in Old England and Ireland

continued to associate the end of October with

the wandering dead. They set out gifts of food

to mollify hungry spirits, and as time wore on,

people began dressing in creepy costumes to

go begging for the treats themselves. The 

practice was called "mumming," and looked

pretty similar to today's trick-or-treating. 

The first Halloween--like festivities in America

started in the southern colonies. People began to

celebrate the harvest, swap ghost stories and

even tell each other's fortunes, likely a holdover

from their countries of origin. However, those

early fall festivals were known as "play parties"

at the time.

In the 1700s and 1800s, women performed rituals on

Halloween in hopes of finding a husband. Single

ladies used to throw apple peels over their shoulders,

hoping to see their future husband's initials in the

shapes where they fell. They also competitively 

bobbed for apples at parties, believing the winner

would marry first. and in ritual that just sounds

creepy, some thought standing in a dark room

with a candle in front of a mirror would make their

future husband's face appear in the glass. 

The holiday we celebrate today really started

taking off in the middle of the 19th century, when

a wave of Irish immigrants left their country

during the potato famine. The newcomers brought

their own superstitions and customs to their new

homes, including the jack-o-lantern. But back then,

they carved them out of turnips, potatoes, beets 

instead of pumpkins. 

By the end of the 1800's more communities were

partaking in a more secular (and safer) set of 

rituals. People started holding Halloween parties

that included more harmless games, fall seasonal

treats and fun costumes.

Trick-or-treating skyrocketed in popularity by

the 1950s, when Halloween became a true

national event. Today, over 179 million Americans

celebrate the holiday--and spend about 9.1 billion

annually in the process, according to the

National Retail Federation. 

Many Americans love Halloween wholeheartedly,

but the day isn't a federal holiday. Despite all of the

festivities that happen in the evening, Halloween is

still a work day and most businesses and banks 

follow their regular hours. So if you're rushing home

to answer your doorbell, you're certainly not the 

only one. 

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All Souls Day and All Saints Day