Halloween is no longer and evil holiday.
It is a comercial holiday where kids get candy
2006-10-23 13:12:42
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answer #1
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answered by a person 5
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i will understand why they're indignant via issues that are anti-Christian. Anti is a damaging, so this is reflecting on them in an exceptionally damaging way. however the non-Christian stuff they locate offensive because of the fact they're precise and positively everyone else is incorrect, and on each and every occasion they talk they're in simple terms attempting to teach that they are precise, yet whilst people say something that has no longer something to do with Christianity or is against Christianity then they sense persecuted. Like present day Christians interior the Western international have any theory what persecution is. )O(
2016-12-16 13:14:09
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answer #2
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answered by ? 3
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Yes some are, but I wouldn't think the majority are. I went to a catholic school from K-10th grade, and we always celebrated Halloween (and it was called Halloween, not a "fall festival"). We wore costumes to school (in place of uniforms), gave out candy, had class Halloween parties, costume contests (which I won one year with a skeleton type costume that squirted blood out all over the chest bones), and a school wide Halloween carnival complete with haunted house. And there were witch/vampire/ghost and all other kinds of decorations.
Some Christians are against Harry Potter too. Some Christians are just ridiculous.
2006-10-23 13:32:45
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answer #3
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answered by bumbleleigh 4
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Im not, Halloween is just a simple peoples holiday that no longer carries religious significance for normal people.
I think as a Christian living in a country where it is ok to kill your unborn baby and to soon marry the same sex, I can find other things to worry about! These are true horrors and far more scarier than any halloween symbol and theyre REAL!
2006-10-23 13:22:48
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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When I was a child, my parents did not celebrate Hallowe'en because of its history. I allow my little ones to dress up and go trick-or-treating, but their costume must be innocent and decent. When they get older I will never allow their costume to be anything remotely scary or slutty. I also will be wary of any Hallowe'en parties they may attend when they get older, because I really want to protect their innocence. I won't let them watch scary movies like other parents will, either. Eventually I will explain that Hallowe'en has no religious background and it pretty much a throw-away holiday. Meaning, if you don't celebrate it you aren't missing anything real and meaningful. But it is fun, so I won't restrict all of their activities!
2006-10-23 13:17:08
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answer #5
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answered by Iamnotarobot (former believer) 6
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Labatt13,
Not I! I know that Halloween is just as pagan as Christmas. So no complaints here! I have written many things on the subject, I like a GOOD scarey story. I used to be a moderator on Halloweenseries.com
2006-10-23 13:14:05
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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All TRUE Christians shun Halloween, Christmas and Easter because of their pagan roots.
2006-10-23 16:04:47
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answer #7
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answered by LineDancer 7
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I'm a Christian and I don't believe in Halloween. I don't make a big deal about it, but I don't really see the point of it. And also did you know that anti-christians made up Halloween?
2006-10-23 13:16:12
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answer #8
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answered by Lexa 2
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Some people are just misguided like that. They don't realize that Halloween is based in Christianity (meaning that it is just another holiday borrowed from pagans).
Furthermore, they take their own holiday and assume that it's a holiday for Satan. Never mind that the origin involves scaring away evil spirits.
But then, you shouldn't expect reason from a sect that honestly believes in talking, burning bushes and a worldwide flood.
2006-10-23 13:14:17
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answer #9
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answered by Rev Kev 5
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why should they be. it is a holiday that was started by Pope Gregory in an attempt to overshadow the Pagan holiday Samhien.
2006-10-23 14:11:32
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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