Fun, Fanciful or Frightening

I find that Hallowe’en is a funny time for many people – funny in the sense that they don’t quite know what to make of it. Even Christians can get themselves tied up in knots over how to react to it because it should be a Christian festival, originally a vigil on the eve of All Hallows or All Saints Day. However, vigils are not too popular these days.
Hallowe’en seems to have been taken over by all sorts of people, in large part for commercial purposes. For children, dressing up and going ‘trick or treating’ has replaced the ‘penny for the guy’ tradition of this time of year, a custom that gave them the same sort of excuse to have fun and ask strangers to make a contribution to their collecting tin. Some parents are unperturbed by the fancy dress and scary masks being worn, whereas other adults wonder if they have serious effects on young minds. And some older minds may feel threatened by knocks on the door as the dark nights lengthen.
It must be admitted that there is a great emphasis on the gruesome and grotesque, the gory and the ghostly, in films shown on TV, in the cinema and those available on the various media outlets. It is an emphasis which highlights the darker side of human nature and the evil forces which seek to exploit it.
Perhaps, as Christians, we should reclaim Hallowe’en by emphasising the fun side rather than the fanciful and frightening. Martin Luther said, ‘The best way to drive out the devil, if he will not yield to the texts of Scripture, is to jeer and flout him, for he cannot bear scorn.’
The reason for that is that he demands to be taken seriously. When we laugh at him,
we undermine his pride, demean his self-esteem and deflate his ego for we remind him that ‘his infernal rebellion against God is in reality an absurd farce.’
St Paul tells us that, for the Christian, ‘ours is no struggle against enemies of flesh and blood, but against all the various Powers of Evil that hold sway in the Darkness around us, against the Spirits of Wickedness on high’ (Eph.6.12 [20th Ct NT]). All Saints Day celebrates those who have engaged in this fight on the side of the Lord. We should include humour in the ‘armour of God’ that St Paul recommends we put on for this fight (Eph.6.13-18). As World War II proved, it works wonders for our morale and doesn’t do too badly either in demoralising the enemy.








