All Hallow's Eve

Today is All Hallow's Eve (the day before All Saints Day) usually shortened to Halloween.

I can tell because the items themed for ghosts, witches, monsters and horror have started to be replaced in the shops with material themed for Christmas

I was told as a child that this time of the year was originally a great Pagan festival which was co-opted by the early Christian church.

In medieval times there was an important three-day festival called "Allhallowtide" in the Christian calendar, but it would be easy to conclude that the only thing from either the pagan festivals which were once held at this time of year or that Christian festivals which retains any significant impact on the popular consciousness are the name "Halloween" for the first day of that festival and a humorous "celebration" of ghosts, witches and demons which are essentially a parody of the way medieval Christian propagandists depicted the previous pagan festival.

However, when you start looking into the historical evidence it rapidly becomes clear that things are a bit more complicated.

Judeo-Christian traditions commemorating the dead actually go back thousands of years, pre-dating the life of Jesus and going back to the Old Testament (See 2 Maccabees 12:42–46.) Different Christian traditions commemorate the dead in different ways and on different dates although all of them do something to commemorate the departed and most of them have such a commemoration about this time of year.

In terms of pagan rites, there was indeed an ancient Celtic festival marking the Autumn equinox, on 1st November, known as Samhain.

To Catholics, who do not believe that most of those who eventually get to Heaven can go straight there, having to go through a process called "Purgatory" first, Halloween was a vigil before the main feasts of All Saints' Day on 1st November, when the saints in heaven are commemorated, and All Souls' Day, usually on 2nd November (in some countries and traditions it is put back a day to Monday 3rd November when the second day in November is a Sunday) is a day for prayer for all the dead including those who are not yet in heaven and may be in Purgatory on their way there. In some countries the Catholic church also refers to All Souls' Day as the Day of the Dead.

Allhallowtide is the combined festival consisting of all three days.

The Church of England, like many protestant denominations, does not have the same doctrines around Purgatory but does pray for the dead on All Saints' Day and All Souls' Day
without making the same theological distinction between the two.

Most human cultures have had some sort of celebration to mark both Solstices and both equinoxes -even if it's only fiddling with our clocks to change between British Summer Time and Greenwich Mean Time (although now we mostly use phones to tell the time and they change automatically). Most cultures have also had some form of commemoration of the dead.

I am not sure I still buy into that "The Catholics set it up this way to sabotage the pagans" narrative but I do think that elements of both have entered into the peculiar modern tradition of Halloween.

The biggest shame is that over the past 20 years we have ditched the traditional British "Penny for the Guy" for an unfortunate imported version of the American "Trick or Treat" practice. In the USA it's only very small children who take part in "Trick or Treat" with their parents or older siblings watching from a safe distance so it doesn't have the appearance,  as it often can in this country when teenagers call on pensioners, of demanding money with menaces.

To anyone reading this who is remembering loved ones who have died over the next three days, I will remember both you and your loved ones in my prayers.





































("All Souls' Day" / Day of the Dead by William-Adolphe Bouguereau)

Comments

Anonymous said…
What's "Penny for the Guy" got to do with Halloween?
Jim said…
to me halloween was all about getting rid of evil spirits (kind of like me really) before all saints day.

but then what is evil anyway,
there is reason to the rhyme,
with no evil there could be no good,
so it must be good to be evil at times.

Jim said…
To the anonymous poster, I think Chris was referring to penny for the jackalantern, which was a Halloween tradition.

Penny for the guy, was more about bonfire night, though certainly in my lifetime (im 42) it was never really so big. A guy to put on the bonfire was usually an afterthought to be honest.
Chris Whiteside said…
Making Jack O'Lanterns was an Irish and then British tradition at Halloween, and "Penny for the Guy" which was an English tradition for the period leading up to bonfire night therefore overlapped with Halloween, without being directly connected to it.

There wasn't really room for more than one tradition involving kids collecting money from people or making things in the same relatively brief stretch of the calendar, and hence I suspect that the rise of "Trick or Treat" may have been a factor in the decline of both Jack O'Lanterns and "Penny for the Guy."

Having said that, they might have died out anyway - IIRC neither was very strong when I was a boy and I've a decade and a half on Jim.

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