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To: CondoleezzaProtege

Halloween started in the Middle Ages as time for caution and reflection (believing that evil is always trying to attack good) on the eve of All Saints Day - one of the most important holy days of the Church.

Halloween wouldn’t exist without the Church, although like everything today, its become completely unmoored from its Christian and spiritual roots.


5 posted on 10/28/2020 10:32:57 AM PDT by PGR88
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To: PGR88
Halloween started in the Middle Ages as time for caution and reflection (believing that evil is always trying to attack good) on the eve of All Saints Day - one of the most important holy days of the Church.

Halloween wouldn’t exist without the Church, although like everything today, its become completely unmoored from its Christian and spiritual roots.


Halloween started when the Church encountered the Celts and needed to borrow some of their holidays to help convince the locals to convert. Hence, Samhain, the end of summer / harvest festival.

Most Christian holidays have roots that go back to pagan/ancient stuff.
St Valentine's Day? Pope trying to get rid of a Roman fertility party.
Christmas? Roman party of Saturnalia, the winter solstice.
Yule logs, Christmas trees, mistletoe - all come from when Christmas later collided with the Nordic tribes.
Easter - while most of this holiday is Christian-originating, much of the associated stuff like the Easter Bunny, painted eggs, etc is pulled from elsewhere (German/Persian for those two).
St Paddy's Day - This one is primarily Christian, it's pretty much a victory over Irish paganism holiday. But again. symbology like the shamrock or leprechaun is definitely not Christian origin.
26 posted on 10/29/2020 10:17:32 PM PDT by Svartalfiar
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