Well my family is Christian and we still dress up and go trick-or-treating because its fun. We dont like worship satan or do anything bad we just dress up and go get candy and its really fun as long as you dont get into the weird stuff...
2006-09-29 04:39:29
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answer #1
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answered by Anna 3
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Take care of your children the best way you know how. You seem to be a good ,caring mother so i congratulate you on that. There aren't enough of us who take part in our children's lives now a days. As for Halloween...It is technically a pagan holiday but now a days i hardly think that dressing up like an astronaut or a monster and getting candy from the neighbors was what the pagans had in mind. There is no ritual here that goes against Gods laws.
2006-09-29 04:40:48
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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Orthodox christians may not celebrate Halloween or all hollows eve. For them additional prayer is required to ward off evil. Lamen such as myself, can dress up like a goblin or a ghost to fool the evil spirits which allegedly come out on that day. The idea is; if you look like them, they'll be confused and won't try to get at you so to speak. American society likes to have fun. If you take your kids to church, and dress like angels, or you put your kid in a devil suit and walk around your neighborhood collecting candy, it's just for fun. It has no religious impact on any of us. Unless you believe you can raise the evil spirits on that day, no matter what you do to have fun is alright as long as you pray and accept the Christ Jesus as your Lord and Savior the son of the one true God in Heaven. Have fun, try not to break God's rules, and don't worry about it. You are saved, you are faithful, and you are loved. If you feel remorse, or guilt, pray to be forgiven, and don't do it again. Simple.
2006-09-29 04:44:59
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answer #3
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answered by sory I offended 2
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Halloween -- or extra appropriately, All Hallows E'en (nighttime), is a on the whole pagan ritual inspite of the reality that it reaches into Christianity, so it continually surprises me at the same time as Christians shun the vacation. at the same time as it has change into secularized with toddlers trick-or-treating and they and adults dressing up in costumes, its roots are pagan and Christian. in reality, very few human beings comprehend the origins of Halloween, so right here's somewhat heritage: Halloween, celebrated each and each 3 hundred and sixty 5 days on October 31, is a mixture of historic Celtic practices, Catholic and Roman non secular rituals and eu human beings traditions that blended at the same time through the years to create the vacation all of us understand on the on the spot. Straddling the line between fall and wintry climate, a lot and paucity, and existence and death, Halloween is a time of party and superstition. Halloween has lengthy been considered as an afternoon at the same time as the useless can go back to the earth, and historic Celts would mild bonfires and placed on costumes to stay away from those roaming ghosts. The Celtic vacation of Samhain, the Catholic Hallowmas era of All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day and the Roman competition of Feralia all prompted the overall vacation of Halloween. contained in the 19th century, Halloween began to lose its non secular connotation, transforming into a extra secular community-depending youngster's vacation. inspite of the reality that the superstitions and ideology surrounding Halloween would have advanced through the years, because the days advance shorter and the nights get less warm, human beings can nevertheless look ahead to parades, costumes and sweet treats to usher contained in the wintry climate season.
2016-11-25 02:26:47
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answer #4
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answered by ? 3
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Should Christians celebrate Christmas Eve?
Why not? Halloween is simply the eve of All Souls Day. It sounds to me like you are celebrating in a very responsible way. Have at it!
2006-09-29 04:42:59
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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We do Harvest Festival at our church, too. Fun and games and contests. The kids can dress any way they like as long as it's not scary.
All year long we teach our children not to go to strangers' houses, not to take candy from strangers, etc. so I don't understand why we make it ok one night a year. It's a conflicting message.
2006-09-29 04:47:41
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answer #6
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answered by dbackbarb 4
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Halloween is for children to have fun.
While the idea of Halloween was derived from the Pagan Samhain, they are not the same thing nor are they observed on the same day. Samhain is a cross-quarter observation and this year it falls on November 7th.
Have fun, enjoy the goodies and the fellowship.
Blessings )O(
2006-09-29 04:44:25
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answer #7
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answered by Epona Willow 7
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The word itself, "Halloween," actually has its origins in the Catholic Church. It comes from a contracted corruption of All Hallows Eve. November 1, "All Hollows Day" (or "All Saints Day"), is a Catholic day of observance in honor of saints.
So, I say if you want to celebrate your religious rite, enjoy it. Study it's origins & get back to basics. The activities you've described sound as if your chosen church has actually done this, and I applaud them.
I pray you stay out of the Pagan Samhain, though. We Pagans have our own rites which happen to coincide by date, but not by practice. Too often, Pagans are blamed for everything evil, while the Christ-based faiths adopt our celebrations and call them their own.
2006-09-29 04:50:27
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answer #8
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answered by kaylora 4
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i think it is perfectly fine as long as it is a celebration of of life and not death. We have All Saints Day at that time and also All Souls Day so I think it is a good idea. The word Halloween is made from Hallowed (Holy) and evening.
2006-09-29 04:37:05
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answer #9
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answered by Midge 7
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There's no reason Christians shouldn't. Halloween is entirely their own holiday-- it only exists because long ago the Church stole Samhain, a Pagan holiday, and some of its traditions in order to make it easier to convert Pagans. As long as you're calling it Halloween and not Samhain, it is really a Christian holiday.
Maybe I should clarify, because many of you still don't seem to get it.
Halloween was MADE by Christianity, taken from Celtic and Gaelic Paganism. If you don't celebrate it, that is your choice, but if you say it is a day made by the devil, you are insulting your own church.
Also, the original intent of the masks was to blend in with evil spirits so that they would not hurt us. Most of the traditions of Samhain are built around driving off or protecting oneself from evil spirits.
2006-09-29 04:35:24
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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