Christians
Should Celebrate Halloween
By
Brother Rabbi Dani’el
Rendelman
Emet Ministries
ravemet@comcast.net
MEMBER
OF BNAI YAHSHUA SYNAGOGUES
WORLDWIDE
Every
year around this time Bible
believers begin to struggle
with the issue of Halloween.
Simply listen to this week’s
Sunday sermon at many churches
and you’ll hear about the
evil history of this holiday.
Or just visit your local
Christian bookstore and
you’ll find several volumes
about the wickedness of
Halloween and how people
who call themselves “Christians”
should not celebrate this
day that children relish.
Many believers decide not
to celebrate this festival
because of the holiday’s
paga n roots and glorification
of witchcraft and evil.
So, kids are not allowed
to go trick-or-treating,
yards are not decorated,
and costumes are forsaken.
While other religious groups
tell their people to simply
ignore the festive holiday
altogether.
But,
after much research into
this subject, and reading
several books about the
origin of Halloween, I have
come to a startling conclusion
that is only logical. Christians
should celebrate Halloween.
Yes, they should not withhold
this day of ghosts and goblins
from their children. You
see, promoting Halloween
stops Christians from becoming
hypocrites and frees them
from following the truth
of their own words.
Does
Halloween have its roots
in false worship? Yes it
does. Does the Bible speak
against believers acting
like pagans? Yes it does.
Is Halloween a high holy
day of Satanism and Wicca?
Yes it is. Are there scriptures
against celebrating Pagan
holidays? Yes, there are.
Just
a little research and scripture
searching reveals these
facts. Yet, most people
do not stop long enough
to question whether or not
what they are doing is right.
Halloween does have its
ancestry in the worship
of the Druids and Celts.
And everything from bobbing
for apples, to dressing
up in costumes, to carving
a jack-o-lantern has pagan
roots and can be traced
back to false worship. Regardless
of these facts and the evilness
of the day, Christians should
celebrate Halloween and
even churches should encourage
their members to have a
merry time on All Hallows
eve. This is of course,
unless Christians are willing
to forsake all pagan holidays
and practices. With false
worship and paganism, it’s
all or nothing. You simply
can’t pick and choose as
you wish.
Quite
frankly, the question is
not should a believer observe
Halloween. The real question,
the real issue at hand is
- “should a believer keep
pagan holidays and pagan
actions?”
Do
you agree that Bible believers
are to obey the scriptures
and “not go in the way of
the pagans?” Do you have
the same opinion of the
Bible writers that Christians
are to be set apart and
different? If so, then more
than just Halloween has
to change. Otherwise, you
are doing nothing more than
saying one thing and doing
another -rejecting one pagan
holiday while accepting
other pagan holidays. I
believe the Bible says that
a “double minded person
is unstable in all their
ways.” So, don’t tell your
children not to celebrate
Halloween if you are going
to allow them to open presents
on December 25. Don’t prohibit
your kids from trick-or-treating
if you allow them to commemorate
Easter. And don’t attend
Halloween parties or “harvest
festivals” if you send roses
on Valentine’s Day. Doing
so would blend truth with
falsehood, light with darkness,
and send mixed signals to
everyone around you.
The
truth is that just as Halloween
has its roots in paganism,
so does Christmas, Easter,
Sunday worship, and most
holidays on the religious
and secular calendars. Just
open up an Encyclopedia
or do a simple internet
search on ‘pagan holidays’
and you’ll find that millions
of Christians around the
world celebrate days and
celebrate in ways that not
only are embedded in evil
but are staunchly opposed
by the Bible itself.
To
Sunday worship the Bible
says, “Six days shall you
labor and do all your work,
but the seventh day is a
Sabbath.” Sunday is the
first day of the week, not
the seventh. To worship
on this day and not keep
the seventh day Sabbath
clearly breaking one of
the Ten Commandments.
And
just a little research reveals
that Christmas is probably
more pagan and evil than
Halloween. Besides the obvious
Santa Claus issue, most
Christmas traditions have
their roots in false worship
including the date of December
25, the mother and child,
and even having a Christmas
tree. To decorating a tree
for any purpose whatsoever
the Bible says in Jeremiah
10:2, “Do not learn the
ways of the pagans or be
terrified by signs in the
sky, though the nations
are terrified by them. For
the customs of the peoples
are worthless; they cut
a tree out of the forest,
and a craftsman shapes it
with his chisel. They adorn
it with silver and gold;
they fasten it with hammer
and nails so it will not
totter.” This verse clearly
states that it is wrong
to have Christmas tree.
Please notice that if it
is wrong in the eyes of
Almighty then good intentions
do not give sanction.
So,
are you willing to give
up the evil holiday of Christmas?
What about Lent or Easter?
If not, you might as well
dress up with your children
and trick-or-treat together.
Yes,
Christians should celebrate
Halloween, unless they are
willing to forsake all paganism
and accept the truth of
a Biblical culture rooted
in Holy Days and not holidays
and a Hebraic heritage full
of Biblical customs and
traditions. Its sad to say,
but the culture of Christianity,
for the most part, is no
different than that of the
world. To this the Bible
is clear that believers
should be set apart and
“in the world but not of
the world.” Yet most Christians
have accepted worldly holidays
with pagan worship and rejected
Biblical festivals with
true worship. What about
you? Are you serious enough
about your faith to abandon
pagan practices for Biblical
worship? Or are you unwilling
to reject wicked actions
for Biblical truth? The
choice is yours.