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HOLIDAYS AND CELEBRATIONS

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Welcome to the 'holiday page(s)'!

The origin of the word, Holiday, is holy day.  Of course, nowadays, in the United States, some 'events' which people call 'holidays' are not actually Christian feast days.  But it doesn't mean that they are  harmful or evil.  Unfortunately, some, that do have historic roots in Christianity have wrongly been overly-secularized to the point of detracting from the true focus of its celebration (Christ). This is something that should not be tolerated.  But it still does not mean that all secular symbols and customs are evil either.  We all love snowmen, Rudolph, colored Easter eggs, mistletoe, etc... that simply add to the overall cheer of the holiday.  But they should be given their proper place

As we can all attest, when considering most Christian holidays, secular society has tipped the scale in the wrong direction.  This is why I'm a strong proponent for such slogans as "Keep Christ in Christmas".  As Christians, we need to try and re-focus others on the true meaning of religious holidays along with a basic knowledge of their true origins and history (not the sensationalistic versions), and, most of all, NOT to ever be ashamed of Jesus and His message.   

I plan to offer, on this page, links and information for a variety of celebrations as well as religious Christian observances.

As Easter is the most significant of all Christian holidays, I have created its own page; as well as one to celebrate the birth of Christ, with a Christmas page.  Those page links are found in the index listing on the right of this page. 

SITES WITH INFORMATION REGARDING HOLY DAYS AND FEAST DAYS OF THE CHRISTIAN CALENDAR:

http://www.byzcath.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=290&Itemid=95

Byzantine Catholic Feast Days/Calendar 2007

 

http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06021b.htm

Ecclesiastical Feast Days – Catholic

 

http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/03158a.htm

Christian Calendar

 

All About The Solemnity of All Saints http://www.churchyear.net/allsaints.html

HOLIDAYS: SECULAR(IZED) EVENTS AND CELEBRATIONS

  HALLOWEEN:

Halloween is the top contender for argument as to whether or not Christians should participate in its celebration, and I have to admit that I've heard many decently-presented objections.  And no, it cannot be denied that it does, in fact, have some pagan elements that have been retained from the ancient pagan celebration of Samhain.  But it also has other customs that have been added, over the centuries, to the 'holiday', from other sources (times and places) and cannot be directly linked to paganism.  To attempt to use a long-ago history (which most people don't even think about with any intention) as proof of its being inherently evil, is, I think, overkill. 

I can be pointed out that; if this sort of thinking is to be followed through, the individual (or group) that objects to Halloween (as pagan), should likewise find it difficult to celebrate Christmas and Easter.  For it also cannot be denied that these other two holidays, central to Christianity (Christmas--and the most ancient of all Christian feast days, Easter) also have some pagan elements that have been incorporated into them from very early on.  While most would argue them harmless, such as Christmas trees and colored Easter eggs, they do have a link to Pagan origins, (as does the 'wedding ring').  But none of us, logically, would say these things are evil in and of themselves.  Halloween is, in fact, of Christian origins (see the articles below for further details).  It  was the alternative celebration to that of Samhain, which is similar to what some Christians are doing now (seeking alternative celebrations) to a secularized event.      

Personally, I find October, in general, to be a great time of the year.  I simply love Autumn.  I love the changing leaves and their gorgeous colors.  I love the chilly weather and putting on sweatshirts and jeans.  For me, Halloween has always been an innocent time of fun. I enjoy decorating for Halloween and sharing the fun with neighbors (children and adults) with food and drinks and, of course, treat bags! 

I do not avoid the silly 'fun' of looking at the moon to watch for a fictional witch flying past on her broom, along with her black cat.....nor the ghost lurking in the mist.  I know the difference between a fictional character and, for example, the very real danger of entertaining interest in actual Wiccans.  I don't even mind a good-old-fashioned scary story or movie .......BUT I also set certain limits.  I'm also someone who doesn't appreciate 'dark' or 'ugly' movies.  

 So I actually sympathize with some of the legitimate fears and concerns that others have (I hold some of them too) and don't necessarily condemn them.  I hold objections to many 'excesses' seen, at this time of year or any other.  Perhaps there are a very small percentage of people who actually are involved in something truly 'wicked', on Halloween, but I believe that, for most people (and children), Halloween is just a fun, secular event.  

The Church makes a very strong and clear statement which lets us know where that 'line' should be drawn.  It is up to us, as individuals, to make the right choices, to avoid an occasion of sin during Halloween celebrations/parties, or in any other situation.  As a Christian, everyone should see the light of Christ shining brightly forth (like the candle in a jack-o-lantern).  There should be no mistaking, no matter what time of year, that your heart belongs to Jesus. 

With that said, I would state that I certainly do not have any problem with those Christians (Catholic and non-Catholic) who feel like seeking alternatives with Fall festivals/parties and the like).  I do, however, object to those that limit their view of Halloween as something intrinsically evil, or use such a view to bolster and promote anti-Catholic bigotry.  I will quote from apologist Jimmy Akin who suggests: "I just wish that all of these people busily searching for alternatives to Halloween traditions that they feel are no longer appropriate for Christian families would realize that they are reinventing the light bulb. Halloween began as a Christian alternative to the prevailing pagan autumn holidays. Halloween originally was a Christian light struck in the darkness; not the darkness itself.

"The close proximity between Halloween and All Saints Day is actually a coincidence. All Saints Day is the feast that celebrates all of the Christian Saints. The earliest reference to it occurs in the writings of St. Ephrem of Syrus (d. 373), and St. John Chrysostom (d. 407) attached it to a specific day – the first Sunday after Pentecost. The assigning of a day in the Western Church was made at Rome in the 6th century, but it was not firmly established until Pope Boniface IV consecrated the ancient Pantheon in Rome to Christian use on May 13, 609 (or possibly 610). May 13 was the date for the feast until Pope Gregory III dedicated a chapel in the basilica of old St. Peter’s to “All the Saints.” Henceforth, the feast day was celebrated on Nov. 1, receiving universal appointment by Pope Gregory IV sometime before 844."

 

http://www.byzantines.net/moreinfo/allSoulsSaturday.htm  - ALL SOULS SATURDAY

"The Byzantine Church has, since the ninth century, established a special day of prayer for the departed popularly known as "Zadushna Subota" (Gr. Psycho-sabbaton; psyche-soul) which literally translated means Souls Saturday. Since the Synaxarion calls for the "universal commemoration" and prayer for "all the souls departed in the faith," fitingly then, in English, we call these Saturdays—All Souls Saturdays.....

...In the Byzantine Liturgical Year there are five All Souls Saturdays namely, Meat Fare Saturday, the Second, Third and Fourth Saturdays of the Great Lent, and Pentecost Saturday....

....On Pentecost Saturday we commemorate "all the departed souls since Adam" (cf. Pentecostanon). By the Descent of the Holy Spirit, commemorated on Pentecost Sunday, the economy of our salvation was completed. Since the will of God is that "all men be saved" (I Tim. 2:4), therefore the day preceding this Feast is set aside as a day of prayer for all the deceased so that they be included in the salutary work of Christ....."

 

It is simply a good thing to remind everyone, at any time of the year (and to admonish anyone that is involved or tempted by any of the following):

"All forms of divination are to be rejected: recourse to Satan or demons, conjuring up the dead or other practices falsely supposed to 'unveil' the future. Consulting horoscopes, astrology, palm reading, interpretation of omens and lots, the phenomena of clairvoyance, and recourse to mediums all conceal a desire for power over time, history, and, in the final analysis, other human beings, as well as a wish to conciliate hidden powers. They contradict the honor, respect, and loving fear that we owe God alone...All practices of magic or sorcery...are gravely contrary to the virtue of religion (Catechism of the Catholic Church: 2116, 2117)."

I think the efforts of extremists would be better served, instead of searching for evil underneath rubber masks, by recognizing the evil that is right under our noses -- abortion, pornography, unjust wars, etc.--and in the serious examination of our own consciences and need for repentance. 

I'd offer another fitting quote from the 'Smashing Pumpkins' article (the link is offered below, to read in its entirety):

"For Christians, paganism is a dirty word, and it should be. Any religion that denies the One True God in favor of idols or self-worship is a religion to be avoided. But this is all the more reason to bring paganism to the foot of the Cross. Jesus has won the victory over the false gods of the world, and so their practices and traditions should be brought into service for Him. Those who disagree do so in the face of the Scriptural and historical evidence. It's time to let God use whatever means He wishes to further His own glory. Our God is a sovereign God, and He can do whatever He wants."

Let us also remember that, as Christians, we truly have NOTHING to fear.  Nothing at all.  Christ has won victory over evil and death itself!

To follow-up, I'd like to share some links to the (non-sensational) and true history of Halloween and links regarding the holy Christian feast day of All Saints Day!

http://www.theymademeacatholic.com/pagan5.html HALLOWEEN/PAGANISM

the following article, from: http://www.turrisfortis.com/halloween.html

Paganism & Puritanism

by Matthew A. C. Newsome ©2002
the following was written on October 26, 2002

halloween

It happens every year about this time.  Here in the Bible Belt, leaflets and flyers circulate warning Christian parents against allowing their children to participate in the “pagan” festival of Halloween.  One that I picked up recently begins, “Even though on this very night children will be sacrificed in satanic rituals…Millions of Christians will allow…Even encourage… their children to pay respect for the Devil on October 31st.  Who me?  Yes YOU!  If you or your children participate in this Satanic Holy day, while proclaiming to be a follower of Christ, you are deceived!”  All bad grammar is in the original.

The flyer goes on to tell us that Halloween, along with other “common festivals” that Christian people celebrate, has no basis in the Bible.  It warns that, “Christians should have no part in Halloween, Jack-o’-lanterns, Cornstalks, Witches, Skeletons, Ghosts, Costume Parties, or Trick or Treating.  Why?  Because it is not fun or cute but of the Devil.”

Furthermore it gives a history of the origin of Halloween, as an explanation of why we should have nothing to do with it.  It correctly identifies the pagan Celtic festival of Samhain (pronounced SOW-en), but erroneously claims that on this night druids (the Celtic priest class) would travel from “castle to castle” playing trick-or-treat.  The treat demanded was a maiden for human sacrifice.  In return the druids would leave a jack-o-lantern lit with a candle made from human fat, as a charm to ward off demons.  If someone could not make the sacrifice, they would mark the door with a hexagram and the druids would send a demon to kill someone in the castle.  Halloween came to America in the mid-nineteenth century when Irish immigrants came and brought their “pagan customs” with them.

Or so reads the history according to the puritans.  The idea expressed in this account of everyone living in a castle and having a handy supply of maidens to spare betrays an almost juvenile knowledge of the past.  And the portrayal of nineteenth century Irish as “pagan” smacks of anti-Catholic bigotry.  (And if one were inclined it would not be that hard to read the reference to the hexagram as an allusion the Jewish Star of David).  What do we really know about Halloween’s origins, and should it be so avoided by Christians, as the anonymous author of this tract advocates?

Many of the customs associated with the celebration of Halloween do have pagan origins.  That cannot be denied, nor should it be.  But we will discuss the implications of these pagan elements later.  What we, as Christians, should be focused on is the origin of the Christian celebration of Halloween, not any supposed pagan ancestors.  Let’s begin with the very name “Halloween” itself.  It’s usually spelled without the original apostrophe (“Hallowe’en”), so people forget that the name is actually a contraction.  It’s a shortened form of “All Hallows Eve” which is, of course, the evening before All Hallows Day, an archaic name for All Saints Day.

All Saints Day, celebrated on November 1st, is the day set aside in the Catholic Church to recognize all of the saints and martyrs, known and unknown.  Christians have been honoring the martyrs of the faith since the earliest times by celebrating a feast day in their name, usually on the anniversary of their martyrdom.  Many Christians were martyred together, and so of course some martyrs shared a common feast day.  As the number of Christian martyrs increased, especially under the reign of Diocletian, it became impossible to have a separate day to honor each of them.  And as other, non-martyred Christians were recognized as saints and honored with their own feast day, the calendar soon was overflowing!

The Church felt that each saint and martyr should be venerated, and so to avoid any deficiency, appointed a common day for all.  The earliest such celebration was observed in Antioch on the Sunday after Pentecost.  Other places observed such a day at different times during the year from as early as the fourth century.  The November 1 date was first established in the West by Gregory III (731-741), who consecrated a chapel in St. Peter’s Basilica to all the saints, and fixed an anniversary celebration on that date.  Pope Gregory IV (827-844) extended this November 1 celebration to the entire Church.  And according to the Catholic Encyclopedia,  the vigil was celebrated as early as the feast.

A vigil is a mass that is celebrated on the evening before a particular feast day, in anticipation of that day, and also because the Church traditionally reckons the beginning of a day at sunset of the day before.  So, the vigil for All Saints Day (or All Hallows Day) is All Hallows Eve, a.k.a. Halloween.

What does this have to do with pumpkins and costumes and candy?  Absolutely nothing.  All Saints Day, and its vigil celebration, is there to honor those Christian brothers and sisters that have gone before us, have died in the faith, alive in Christ’s love, and now enjoy the eternal bliss of heaven.  These are those saints known and unknown, recognized and unrecognized.  This includes saints like St. Francis, St. Andrew, St. Patrick, and St. Cecilia.  And it also includes those unrecognized saints such as the devout grandmother, the pious farmer, and perhaps many of the beloved dead in your own family.  And it includes every faithful Christian who died centuries ago and has long since been forgotten by man, but eternally remembered by God.  We honor them all.

It should be noted that this feast in the Church is followed immediately by All Souls Day on November 2, where we remember and recognize the souls of all the dead, saintly or not, and pray for those who may not yet be enjoying heavenly bliss.

It just so happens that this Holy feast happened to fall on the day traditionally celebrated as Samhain in the Celtic parts of the British Isles (notably Scotland and Ireland).  The Celtic New Year began on November 1, and Samhain was the final celebration of the harvest season.  At this time, the pre-Christian Celtic people believed that the otherworld was in turmoil.  The world of the dead was thought to be closest to the world of the living on this night.  People would leave food out for offerings to those beloved departed ones who might visit (the origins of our giving out candy).  To light their way, they would burn lanterns inside of carved out turnips (jack-o-lanterns). Malevolent spirits were also thought to be about, though, and so people would disguise themselves by blackening their faces and hands so that the dead would not be able to recognize them (the origins of wearing costumes).

Any historian can tell you that Scotland and Ireland became Christianized fairly early on.  The conversion of Scotland mostly happened in the sixth century and is credited to such men as St. Columba, St. Ninian, and St. Kentigern.  By the eighth century, when the pagan Vikings began their raids, they came to a land entirely Christian, dotted with chapels and monasteries.

Like other places where it spread, Christianity did not seek to completely suppress the native culture or traditions.  It condemned what was bad and evil in pagan cultures and preserved what was good and true, baptizing it as a part of the universal Christian tradition.  How fitting that the day on which the dead were traditionally reckoned to be closest to the living according to pagan tradition, the Church has set aside to remember those that have died in Christ.

Is there anything wrong with children dressing up in costumes and going around the neighborhood collecting candy?  Leaving alone, for the moment, the question of safety in some neighborhoods today, I don’t think that there is anything in this tradition that is worthy of condemnation.  In fact, one could use it to teach a lesson about generosity.  Is there anything wrong with carving a pumpkin and using it for decoration?  Again, no.  There is nothing evil or wrong with this practice.

In addition to the jack-o-lantern and trick-or-treating, our tract writer also objected to witches and ghosts and cornstalks.  While we may argue the merits for or against a child dressing as a witch or a ghost, one must ask what this writer finds objectionable about cornstalks.  What Christian truth is being attested to by protesting the use of decorative cornstalks in autumn?

Because a particular practice originated in a pre-Christian pagan culture does not, ipso facto, equate that practice with the worship of a pagan deity.  I doubt that the downtown shop keepers who decorate their store fronts with pumpkins and ears of corn have any more intention of idolatry than the child who dons a plastic mask and heads out, parents in tow, to fill his sack with chocolate and hard candy.

While idolatry usually is applied to the worship of false gods it equally applies to the fear of false demons.  And this is the problem with the modern puritans who seem to object to celebrations of any sort.  Although Halloween is the favorite for these holiday prohibitionists, other Christian celebrations that have been accused of being pagan include Easter and Christmas!

Yes, there are some pagan (or more properly speaking, extra-Christian) aspects to the celebration of these holidays.  Nowhere in the Gospel accounts does it tell of a decorated tree at the Nativity.  Nor were there colored eggs at the Resurrection.  But even though Christianity may have adopted pagan forms of celebration, the One we are celebrating is Christ!

This is, of course, what ultimately matters.  G. K. Chesterton remarked, when atheists accuse Christianity, or when Protestants accuse Catholicism, of adapting pagan practices, that “they may as well accuse us of having pagan legs!”  Of course Christianity has adapted some old pagan practices.  All human cultures were at one point pre-Christian and pagan.  These people were, for the most part, seeking the truth as best they understood it.  While they did not have the benefit of The Truth, Christ, they were generally looking in the right direction.  In the light of Christ, what was wrong and false about the old ways were abandoned, and what was good and true in them was kept and preserved.  The Catholic Church has always acknowledged this.  Christ is the ultimate measure of the truth.

It does not follow that everything pre-Christian must therefore be abandoned.  We should follow the example of Pope Boniface IV, who in the early seventh century consecrated the Pantheon (the greatest pagan temple in Rome) to the Blessed Virgin Mary and all the martyrs.  He could have torn it down, as a pagan thing to be shunned.  But instead he consecrated this beautiful and majestic triumph of architecture to Christian usage, and our culture is all the richer for its preservation.

The problem with Halloween is not that it has elements of pagan origin.  The problem is that we have forgotten that these traditions only survive at all because the Church has preserved them, blessed them, and allowed them to survive in the cultures that observed then in association with its feast of All Saints.

This does not make it a satanic holiday, but a secular holiday (but then again Christmas and Easter are secular holidays for the majority of Americans these days, so why should we expect Halloween to be any different).  While secularizing a sacred holiday is a shameful denial of God’s glory, attributing it to Satan is giving the devil more than his due.

But this has always been the tendency of the more puritanical sects.  The Puritans in the Old World began by abandoning the veneration of the saints.  And the Puritans in the New World ended up persecuting accused witches.  Even though their intentions may have been based in Christian virtue, no one today believes Christ was truly served by the Salem Witch Trials.  Nor is He being served with tracts like this one.  Spreading shameful lies and half-truths about our ancestors abducting maidens for human sacrifice, burning candles made from human fat--and scaring small children by telling them they might be sacrificed in a Satanic ritual--not only is deceitful, but harmful.

God is Truth.  Therefore God is not served by twisting or hiding the truth, even if you do it in His name.

If you are Catholic, go to Mass on All Saints Day, or its vigil.  If you belong to a Protestant denomination that does not observe this ancient feast, try to make an effort to remember those Christians who have gone before you.  And if your kids want to dress up in costumes with their friends and go trick-or-treating, let them.  Carving a pumpkin can be enjoyable family time, and get the kids (and parents) away from the television for an hour or so.  Bake a pumpkin pie.  Roast the pumpkin seeds.  Bob for apples.

The point is, if you remember Christ and point your heart towards God, these seasonal celebrations become a holy thing.  I’d advise our puritan holiday-bashers to spend less time searching for demons, and more time living for Christ.


See another great article, here:

http://www.envoymagazine.com/backissues/2.5/story1.html

“Smashing Pumpkins” – Brian Paul

 

 


 

Christians and Halloween: Should Christians Celebrate Halloween? by David Morrison http://www.ancient-future.net/halloween.html

 

http://www.jimmyakin.org/2005/10/reinventing_the.html

IS CATHOLICISM PAGAN?

CAN CATHOLICS CELEBRATE HALLOWEEN?

THE CHURCH IS PAGAN! (Phatmass Apologetics): http://www.phatmass.com/directory/index.php/cat/265

http://www.catholic.com/thisrock/1998/9809fea2.asp Taking Back Our "Holy" Halloween, By Katherine Andes

http://socrates58.blogspot.com/2006/02/is-catholicism-half-pagan.html

Is Catholicism Half Pagan? (Dave Armstrong)

 

FROM:  http://phatcatholic.blogspot.com/

 

"There is much confusion about the origins of Halloween, and about what the Church celebrates on and around this day. Sometimes it can be a little difficult to make sense of it all. As a result, I offer the following links to articles and other resources that will help you to learn more about these holidays, and to defend them against the oh-so-typical charge that Catholics are pagans (in case you're wondering, we're not). I say Protestants just don't know how to throw a party like we do! (evidence here)

All Hallow's Eve

All Saints Day

All Souls Day

Halloween: Its Origins and Celebration

Smashing Pumpkins: Halloween

Ghosts, Hauntings, and Things that Go "Bump" in the Night

Catholic Education: All Hallow's Eve

Ideas for Sanctifying Halloween

Halloween: Reclaim the Celebration of All Saints

Halloween, All Saints, and All Souls Day

Taking Back Our "Holy" Halloween

Halloween, High Street, and Holy Witnesses

Halloween's Origins

Halloween Word Origins

Holiday Hysteria

Pulling the Plug on the Halloween Habit

Reinventing the Hallowheel!

Laughing at Satan

Great Tips for Halloween Fun

What the Halloween Hullabaloo Says about Our Culture

Have fun everyone! Be holy!"


fun links:

www.apples4theteacher.com/holidays/halloween/kids-costumes/clever-costume-creating-for-halloween.html

http://howstuffworks.com/kids-halloween-costumes.htm/printable

http://www.craftsolutions.com/crafts/HalloweenCostumesToMake.asp

http://funschool.kaboose.com/fun-blaster/halloween/printables/halloween-printables.html?

http://familyfun.go.com/printables/season/specialfeature/halloween-printables-ms/

http://www.razzledazzlerecipes.com/halloween/games1.htm


ALL SAINTS DAY AND ALL SOULS DAY

http://www.crossroadsinitiative.com/library_article/277/Importance_of_the_Saints_Bernard_of_Clairvaux.html

SAINT BERNARD ON ALL SAINTS

 

http://www.crossroadsinitiative.com/library_article/278/Death_St._Ambrose.html

SAINT AMBROSE ON THE CHRISTIAN MEANING OF DEATH

http://www.crossroadsinitiative.com/library_article/281/Holiness_for_All.html

HOLINESS FOR ALL

 

http://www.crossroadsinitiative.com/library_article/66/Purgatory_and_Prayers_for_the_Dead_.html

PURGATORY AND PRAYERS FOR THE DEAD

 

 

http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/01315b.htm

All Souls Day

 

http://www.americancatholic.org/Features/SaintOfDay/default.asp?id=1186

Feast of All Saints

  

http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04171a.htm

The Communion of Saints

 

All Saints Day and All Souls Day activities at the 'Catholic Mom'website!:

www.catholicmom.com/halloween.html

IDEAS FOR SANCITIFYING HALLOWEEN: www.catholicmom.com/2007_lesson_plans/all_saints.pdf

MOM TO MOM, HALLOWEEN TREATS: www.catholicmom.com/lynn.13.htm AND www.catholicmom.com/lynn.12.htm

CATHOLIC COLORING GOSPEL PAGES (HALLOWEEN)

www.catholicmom.com/coloring_pages_2006.htm

www.catholicmom.com/ft002.htm

These were a couple suggestions, I found on the Internet, to incorporate something ‘holy’ into the secularized Halloween of today:

 “On my computer, I made up little strips that said: "Thank you for the treat. My family and I will be praying for you and the souls of your dearly departed loved ones during the month of November. Happy All Saints Day and happy All Souls Day!" I varied the message slightly for the second child. The children had fun the day of Halloween cutting up their messages, rolling them into tiny scrolls, and tying them with pretty satin ribbons....."

"On the giving-out-treats part of the evening, I hand out candy along with stickers, purchased from a Christian supply store, with messages such as "Jesus loves you." One year, as we were returning from trick or treating, we were behind a little boy whose mother was berating him with foul language. The boy ran ahead to our house where a friend was giving out treats. When the child returned, he was elated—literally jumping for joy as he showed his sticker to his now docile mother. "Look, Jesus loves me!" he said. My children, who had been stunned by the earlier bad language, quietly observed everything, and I know it made an impression upon them.”


Note:  A disclaimer.  I enjoy Halloween a lot.  It's a time for fun and boundless creativity, but I do have my limits for what I find to be in good taste and what I avoid.  We cannot deny that some costumes and movies are grotesque and 'dark', and should be avoided.  Further, as of late, I've been rather horrified at where "adult" costumes (for young girls and women especially) have been moving in the past few years......as if 'adult' MUST refer to completely immodest and outrageously 'sleezy'.  We should help keep the more innocent Halloween we've grown up with, from becoming something that is offensive or immoral, by choice of viewing, costuming and/or behavior.    

 


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