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Christians and Halloween
11 Reasons Why Christians
Absolutely Should Not Celebrate Halloween
JAMIE MORGAN
Many
Christians celebrate Halloween. Some churches and pastors even do.
I
recently saw a church advertising they were having a Zombie Run. Seriously?
God's House? This pastor does not celebrate Halloween and neither does her
church.
In a spirit of full disclosure,
when I was a brand-new believer, I allowed my son to go trick-or-treating. Part
of the reason was because my husband was not yet saved and insisted we do.
The
other part was because I didn't see the harm in it. After all, many Christians
I respected did it, so as a new Christian I justified that it must be OK.
Right? Wrong!
As I grew closer to the Lord and
gained more knowledge of His Word, I began to feel convicted about Halloween. I
had thoughts like:
o God
is a God of life, but Halloween focuses on death. Should I celebrate a holiday
where people decorate their front yards with tombstones?
o The
Scriptures tell us to put away deeds of darkness (Romans 13:12)
and that light has nothing in common with darkness (2 Corinthians
6:14). Is celebrating a dark holiday something a child of the light
should be doing?
o I
had been delivered from fear and panic attacks and knew that fear comes from
the enemy. Should I participate in a holiday that has fear as its very
foundation?
o Witchcraft
is clearly detestable to the Lord (Deuteronomy 18:10-13). Shouldn't
something that glorifies witchcraft (just take a walk through the Halloween
store) be detestable to me as well?"
o Halloween
is a sacred, high holiday for Wiccans (the official religion of witchcraft). Is
this a holiday Christians should celebrate alongside Wiccans?
o Is
it cute when we dress our kids like the devil (or witches, ghouls, scary
characters, etc.)? Isn't it, well, demonic?
o What
if my child dresses in a wholesome fireman costume? Romans 16:19 says that we
need to be wise to what is good and innocent of evil. If I let him participate in
Halloween, even while dressed as a fireman, aren't I sending him a mixed
message by allowing him to participate in a celebration of evil?
o The
Lord said in 2 Corinthians 6:17, "Come
out from them and be separate ... Touch no unclean thing ..." Doesn't
God want His children to be set apart from the world and from sin and evil?
Aren't we supposed to be peculiar people?
o My
extended family thinks it's ridiculous that we not allow our son to dress up
for Halloween. Should their opinions matter to me more than God's? Shouldn't
pleasing God be my utmost concern?
o If
there is even a question in my heart and mind that it might be wrong, shouldn't
that be my first clue? Why would I continue to do so with even a lingering
thought that it is wrong?
o Does
Halloween bring glory to God? No! It glorifies the devil! Nuff said.
So as a new believer, saved only
two years, I responded to the conviction of the Holy Spirit, repented of
displeasing the Lord and put a stop to Halloween.
And
as a pastor, after observing firsthand the amount of destruction that the enemy
brings into peoples' lives when they give him a foothold, I am even more
convinced I made the right decision to close the door to the enemy and on this
evil holiday.
Setting
aside a day to celebrate evil, darkness, witchcraft, fear, death and the
demonic brings disdain to God. Period.
A
Christian celebrating Halloween would be like a Satan worshiper putting up a
nativity scene at Christmas while singing, "Happy
Birthday, Jesus!"
The
two just don't go together. Jesus has nothing in common with Satan (2 Corinthians 6:14), and neither should we.
So,
what did we do instead? Hide in the basement with the lights off? Hustle the
family out of the house? No, darkened homes are the enemy's victory! Where does
your light shine the brightest ... in the darkness!
Halloween is the one day a year
when neighbors come to your door expecting to receive something. So give them
JESUS!
Our family chose to give God the glory and the devil a
black eye by reaching out to our neighbors with the gospel of Jesus Christ! "You are the light of the world ... let
your light shine among men that they may see your good deeds and glorify your
Father in heaven" (Matthew 5:14-16).
So stop justifying why it is fine
to celebrate this demonic, worldly, evil holiday. There are no muddled lines or
gray areas about it.
A
committed follower of Jesus Christ should not celebrate Halloween.
Jamie Morgan is the pastor of Life Church (Assemblies of God)
in Williamstown, N.J., and the Life House of Prayer (24/7 prayer).
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