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Thread: Is It Okay To Celebrate Halloween?

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    Default Is It Okay To Celebrate Halloween?

    Is It Okay To Celebrate Halloween? For Many Americans, It Is A Time For Blood Rituals And Unspeakable Acts Of Evil

    October 15, 2018 by Michael Snyder



    What I am about to share with you is incredibly disturbing. Every year on October 31st, some of the most horrifying acts imaginable are carried out in dark corners and back rooms all across America. In this article, you are going to read about some of those acts. But for most Americans, Halloween is a supposedly “innocent” holiday that is all about dressing up, eating lots of candy and having fun. When I was growing up, I gladly participated in the festivities too, because I didn’t understand what the holiday was all about. According to the National Retail Federation, approximately 70 percent of all Americans celebrate Halloween, and a total of somewhere around 9 billion dollars will be spent on the holiday this year. But most Americans do not understand that almost all of our modern “Halloween traditions” have their roots in a bloody ancient pagan festival known as Samhain
    The origins of Halloween are Celtic in tradition and have to do with observing the end of summer sacrifices to gods in Druidic tradition. In what is now Britain and France, it was the beginning of the Celtic year, and they believed Samhain, the lord of death, sent evil spirits abroad to attack humans, who could escape only by assuming disguises and looking like evil spirits themselves. The waning of the sun and the approach of dark winter made the evil spirits rejoice and play nasty tricks. Believe it or not, most of our Halloween practices can be traced back to these old pagan rites and superstitions.
    Of course most Americans have never even heard of Samhain, but for those that are into witchcraft it is one of the most important days of the year. The largest witchcraft tradition in America is known as “Wicca”, and if you do a Google search for “Wicca” and “Halloween” you will quickly discover that it is one of the key dates on their “wheel of the year”…
    On the Wiccan calendar, known as the “wheel of the year” it is also the day when the god dies, to be reborn again on the Winter Solstice. Samhain is therefore the day when the veil between the living and the dead is considered thinnest, and is a time to remember people in our lives who have passed away.
    You may not personally know any Wiccans, but the truth is that their numbers are absolutely exploding in the United States. According to one recent news article, there were at least 340,000 of them living in America a decade ago…
    While the US government does not regularly collect detailed religious data, because of concerns that it may violate the separation of church and state, several organizations have tried to fill the data gap. From 1990 to 2008, Trinity College in Connecticut ran three large, detailed religion surveys. Those have shown that Wicca grew tremendously over this period. From an estimated 8,000 Wiccans in 1990, they found there were about 340,000 practitioners in 2008.
    And more recent polling suggests that there are now between 1 million and 1.5 million people that identify as either Wiccan or Pagan currently living in the United States…
    Although Trinity College hasn’t run a survey since 2008, the Pew Research Center picked up the baton in 2014. It found that 0.4% of Americans, or around 1 to 1.5 million people, identify as Wicca or Pagan—which suggests continued robust growth for the communities.
    So we are talking about a very large group of people.

    Many Wiccans and Pagans seek to follow the ancient rituals as closely as possible, but there is one huge problem.
    On Samhain, the rituals would often involve human blood. According to Christian author Bill Schnoebelen, human sacrifice was absolutely essential for the Druidic ceremonies…
    Druids worshiped the sun god, called by names like Bel (Ba’al?) or Chrom. On October 31, they believed that he died and went into the kingdom of the dead, Anwynn. The purpose of Samhain was to insure his return. Even witches admit this involved human sacrifice.

    And according to an article in the Sun, animals and humans were both often “thrown in to huge firepits as offerings”…
    But the reality of Halloween through the eyes of the Celts and Druids is scarier than any horror film.

    According to old documents, in its most primitive guise, Samhain would have featured many sacrifices to the Celtic gods of death, with both animals and humans thrown in to huge firepits as offerings.

    People claimed the ancient Druids ate their first born children on Samhain, or collected the blood of their sacrificial humans in cauldrons and drank it.

    Could it be possible that some people are still conducting similar blood rituals today?

    Well, according to a Smithsonian article, many pet shelters across America will not adopt out black cats during this time of the year because this “is a time when blood rituals take place”…
    It’s unclear exactly where the superstitions around black cats and bad luck came from, but people tend to eye ancient folkloric traditions like the Druids or associations with witchcraft that arose during the Middle Ages. But being the bearers of bad luck isn’t the only rumor that follows dark-furred kitties into the present. For decades, many animal shelters have refused to adopt out black cats on or right before Halloween out of fear they will be tortured or sacrificed, Kate Knibbs writes for Gizmodo.

    “This is a time when blood rituals take place,” Hedy Litke, director of animal placement at the ASPCA, told K.C. Baker for the New York Daily News in 1999. “Black cats are often sacrificed.”

    And at many shelters, when someone specifically asks for a black cat that automatically raises suspicions
    It’s the week of Halloween, and maybe you don’t know this, but if you suddenly wanted to adopt a black cat, you would probably have a hard time. That’s because thanks to their association with witchcraft, accepted wisdom holds that Halloween is a time when people ritualistically mutilate black cats.

    To test if this really was still accepted wisdom, I contacted some animal shelters near to our Los Angeles office, and they all told me they wouldn’t let me adopt a black cat. One, The Lange Foundation—the type of animal rescue that takes in cats from city shelters before they can be euthanized—was willing to talk to me on the phone and explain: If someone were to call and ask specifically for a black cat, that would trigger the policy. “I would say ‘not today!'” said one of the foundation’s board members, Diana Nelson.

    There are also many Americans that will be drinking human blood this Halloween. One reporter spent five years studying “real-life vampires” in New Orleans and Buffalo, and he found them to be “quite friendly”
    I’ve spent five years conducting ethnographic studies of the real vampires living in New Orleans and Buffalo. They are not easy to find, but when you do track them down, they can be quite friendly.

    “Real vampires” is the collective term by which these people are known. They’re not “real” in the sense that they turn into bats and live forever but many do sport fangs and just as many live a primarily nocturnal existence. These are just some of the cultural markers real vampires adopt to express a shared (and, according to them, biological) essence – they need blood (human or animal) or psychic energy from donors in order to feel healthy.

    Yes, these people really do consider themselves to be vampires and they really do drink human blood. Many of them have added fangs on top of their natural teeth, and apparently the popularity of these groups is surging. Not too long ago, one news organization profiled a popular “vampire club” in Austin, Texas

    Every month the Vampire Court of Austin meets at their private members club – a fetish venue about 15 minutes from central Austin where they hold an official court meeting before relaxing with a drink or a little BDSM on their sex floor.

    Married couple Logan and Daley South founded the court around six years ago to provide a “safe haven” for all the city’s “awakened vampires” and “otherkin” which includes “werewolves, fairies and people who identify with animal spirits”.

    They advise members – who include security guards, property managers, ex-military and actors – on how to drink blood safely and shield themselves from “psychic attacks”.
    But at least that is adults doing things with other consenting adults.

    What is far more evil are the unspeakable things that are done to innocent children every Halloween. The following comes from the testimony of an ex-witch, and what she says happened to her as a child on Halloween is extremely chilling

    We went to the church and what happened next made my blood curdle. I was given candy, but that was just a preclude to the sexual abuse that would happen in a satanic ritual. On Halloween Satanists use young children, such as myself, as sexual idols to worship. Other children receive a far worse fate. Death. I know for some this is more than you can even think to believe, but it is true. I can barely write these words because the pain of the truth is almost more than I can bear. If it wasn’t for the grace and love of Jesus Christ, I would not even be here writing this at all.

    Why would anyone do such sick things to a child? There are a lot of reasons really. Most likely they are acting from what they know; their own sadistic abuse. Satanism doesn’t just all of a sudden show up. It gets implanted and takes roots and grows over time. It starts off small and infects everyone around it who isn’t grounded in Christ and able to see the truth of the evil around them. That is why Satan starts with children. If he can do this to small children, then they will grow up and do it to children themselves. That is what Satan’s plan was for me.

    Needless to say, Satanists absolutely love Halloween. The following paragraph originally comes from the official Church of Satan website…

    Satanists embrace what this holiday has become, and do not feel the need to be tied to ancient practices. This night, we smile at the amateur explorers of their own inner darkness, for we know that they enjoy their brief dip into the pool of the “shadow world.” We encourage their tenebrous fantasies, the candied indulgence, and the wide-ranging evocation of our aesthetics (while tolerating some of the chintzy versions), even if it is but once a year. For the rest of the time, when those not of our meta-tribe shake their heads in wonder at us, we can point out that they may find some understanding by examining their own All Hallows Eve doings, but we generally find it simpler to just say: “Think of the Addams Family and you’ll begin to see what we’re about.”
    And on page 96 of the Satanic Bible, Anton LaVey penned the following words…
    “After one’s own birthday, the two major Satanic holidays are Walpurgisnacht (May 1st) and Halloween.”
    So is it okay to celebrate Halloween?

    No, it is not. The following is what Deuteronomy 18:9-13 says in the Modern English version
    When you enter into the land which the Lord your God gives you, you must not learn to practice the abominations of those nations. There must not be found among you anyone who makes his son or his daughter pass through the fire, or who uses divination, or uses witchcraft, or an interpreter of omens, or a sorcerer, or one who casts spells, or a spiritualist, or an occultist, or a necromancer. For all that do these things are an abomination to the Lord, and because of these abominations the Lord your God will drive them out from before you. You must be blameless before the Lord your God.
    Unfortunately, most Americans will choose to celebrate Halloween once again this year, because they don’t want to miss out on “all the fun”…

    http://endoftheamericandream.com/arc...e-acts-of-evil
    ”The trouble with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people's money.” - Margaret Thatcher

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  3. #3
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    Why would we desire to celebrate death when we have abundant, eternal Life in Jesus?
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    two very good and truthful answers,...............myself the only man made holiday I recognize or celebrate is Thansgiving Day..........as a vet I do not even celeabrate veterans day or memorial day and as for christmas lets not go there

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    Quote Originally Posted by Samuel Adams View Post
    All "holidays" not of the feasts referenced in Scripture are rooted elsewhere.

    All of them.

    Some are just more overt than others.
    Yup! Lev 23:2 "...‘The appointed times of יהוה, which you are to proclaim as set-apart gatherings, MY appointed times, are these..."
    "The one who says he stays in Him is indebted to walk, even as He walked." 1Jn 2:6

    Without Torah, His walk is impossible - it's Rome's walk without Torah.



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    I pretty much agree with the earlier posts. Just going to share something local that surprised me.

    In the mayor's announcement that Beggar's Night would be on Wednesday, October 31, instead of our years' long tradition of the Thursday before the 31st, he also told the uninformed (like me) that this is because our little town is now part of MORPC, and their recommendation for all member communities is to have the little kiddies out going door-to-door on Halloween night.

    Maybe I've had the tin foil hat off for too long and some crazy's getting in here, but I can't help wondering which member(s) of MORPC are the witches or satanists that want all the children in the region active and costumed on that, their night of nights. Also thinking children whose parents let them out on that night are more vulnerable to any chanting, cursing, and conjuring that is focused their way.

    But it's probably nothing like that. MORPC folk are probably all good Christians and this is just a coincidence. More of life turns out that way than not, I'm learning. Still can't stop thinking it, though.

    There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves punishment, and the one who fears is not perfected in love. We love, because He first loved us. -- I John 4:18-19


    Whoever derides their neighbor has no sense, but the one who has understanding holds their tongue. -- Proverbs 11:12.

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    If you’re concerned that Christmas has become too commercialized and far away from its original intent, you cannot possibly think Halloween isn’t in the same boat.
    "So you're saying that accepting gambling tips from the Devil could have a downside?"

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    You mean "Witnessing Day", when we dress up and hand out treat bags filled with candy, toys and Bible tracts to children who come to our door? Some of the candy has Bible verses on it, and so do some of the little toys.
    It's a great day, we hope to hand out at least 70. Some years we've gone over 100.

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    Some people are determined to bleed all the fun out of the world and make sure that everything is serious all the time. Have at it, I guess. I enjoy Halloween.


  10. #10
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    Well ... sure.

    Just don't be doin no spooky stuff.

    O.W.


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