Thursday, September 18, 2014

Why I Don't Celebrate Halloween

Fall is my very favorite season.  I love the colors, cooler temperatures, the mountains, and the feeling of the air. I love pulling out favorite sweaters, and wearing cute boots. I adore being able to cook hearty soups, and bake bread, and I just love the harvest foods, and abundance of it all.  I love decorating my house with pretty squashes, colored leaves, and fall flowers. I think there is little prettier than a field of pumpkins with all the leaves gone, and brown, and just the beautiful squash ready to store for winter.

But every year I hesitate before buying pumpkins to fill with potted mums because it means decorating with a pumpkin, and people think it means I am making jack-o-lanterns. I am not. Not because I don't like pumpkins, as I clearly do, but because it is so important to me to live my faith, and to never, ever leave room for confusion in anyone's mind what I believe and that I believe it to my core.

Phil 4: 8 Finally, brothers and sisters, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things. 9 Whatever you have learned or received or heard from me, or seen in me—put it into practice. And the God of peace will be with you.



I find it completely impossible to read this passage, and the many others like it, and reconcile celebrating a holiday that has nothing to do with nobility, purity, loveliness or praiseworthiness. Halloween is filled to the brim with darkness, violence, fear, and death. I know the history of it, and have read all the fear mongering books which contain truths as well. I also know that Samhain is a big holiday among witches and Wiccans. It is a pagan holy day, similar to how I feel about Resurrection Sunday which I also don't call Easter for the same reasons.



It is not a Christian holiday and I have heard all of the arguments: We can reclaim it for Christ. What? How do you claim death, violence, darkness, and a pagan holy day for Christ if there is nothing there to claim it for? Easter is a good example of what I mean here. I do not celebrate the pagan holiday for Oestre. I celebrate the resurrection of my Savior. Christmas is another. I do not celebrate Yule. I celebrate the birth of my Savior. Who cares if the days are near each other? Since no one knows when Christ was born it doesn't matter to me if we celebrate it mid winter or mid spring. We do know when He was resurrected.

Halloween just does not have anything to redeem or anything to celebrate. As a Christian I should be celebrating life, joy, peace, patience, faithfulness, goodness, purity, love, truth, nobility, and light. I don't find any of that in Halloween.

We have a big drawer full of costumes, and in fact we have costume parties as often as we can get away with it!  I have no problem with kids eating candy now and then, and I certainly don't have a problem with fall fun, corn mazes, bobbing for apples, ginger snaps and apple cider, or with dressing up for fun.

I have a big problem with dressing up on October 31st.  I want to make it crystal clear who we are, and what we believe and if I can just choose to compromise it for the sake of my kids being given a bagful of candy, then it must not mean much to me to begin with.  How would anyone ever know the difference between Jesus and the rest of the world if there isn't a difference?

I never want to think I made that compromise for the sake of doing what everyone else is doing, because parts of it are frankly fun.  I know most don't agree with me here.  I wrote this because I decided I don't care who disagrees and I don't care who writes nasty things to me to defend celebrating Halloween.  Do whatever you want to as for me and my house we will serve the Lord.  Joshua 24:15




Tuesday, September 9, 2014

I am about to talk about a taboo topic. Yes I am.

Topics open for discussion go through trends I have noticed.  Back in the late 70's it was suddenly okay to talk about girls getting sexually abused, too late for my sister, it turns out, who had to hide the fact that the school custodian sexually molested her for 2 years in the boiler room.  Then in the 80's it was okay to talk about boys getting molested as well.  Too late for a few who had already had to hide their shame of being abused by someone else.

It got to be okay to talk about being gay, and then after the movie The Burning Bed women could finally get help when they were being beaten up by their husbands.  Breast cancer can be discussed openly and without shame, and we can talk about suicide and find ways to prevent tragedy instead of families suffering with the shame of someone else's actions again.  We used to hide alcoholism in families and not talk about it, and children were embarrassed by a drunken parent instead of being able to ask for and get help.

But, there is one thing we never talk about.  Never.  So I am taking a deep breath and plunging in anyway.  All of the victims I listed above...it was not their fault.  And yet those who were first to speak out had to overcome deep and profound shame by being victimized.  I  personally know some victims of the abuse I want to discuss, but, I won't give you their names, because just as before, it takes time for it to be accepted enough to not be embarrassed by being a victim.  And frankly it is dangerous for them.

It is domestic violence against men.  Husbands who are being beaten and hurt on a regular basis by their wives.  Men who suffer in silence because it is not *manly* to admit a girl beat you up, even if that girl weighs 200 lbs and you have been taught your whole life to not hit a girl.  Ever.  Men who, in self-defense, end up with battery charges against them because she presses charges when he has to get her off of him or face even death.  Men who have scars, black eyes, bruises, and broken bones, but suffer in silence because no one believes them when they do tiptoe in and try to talk about it.

The statistics are shocking.  1 in 10 men has suffered serious physical abuse by a live-in partner on a regular basis, and more than 1 in 4 (28,5%) at some point in their lives.   There are no well known programs, no doctors who ask at visits, no brochures placed in bathrooms, no ad campaign to educate victims on how to get help.  Men go to work and no one knows that the night before he was beaten and his life threatened.

                                

According to the National Domestic Violence Hotline,  aside from the beatings other signs of abuse include:

  • Telling you that you can never do anything right
  • Showing jealousy of your friends and time spent away
  • Keeping you or discouraging you from seeing friends or family members
  • Embarrassing or shaming you with put-downs
  • Controlling every penny spent in the household
  • Taking your money or refusing to give you money for expenses
  • Looking at you or acting in ways that scare you
  • Controlling who you see, where you go, or what you do
  • Preventing you from making your own decisions
  • Telling you that you are a bad parent or threatening to harm or take away your children
  • Preventing you from working or attending school
  • Destroying your property or threatening to hurt or kill your pets
  • Intimidating you with guns, knives or other weapons
  • Pressuring you to have sex when you don’t want to or do things sexually you’re not comfortable with
  • Pressuring you to use drugs or alcohol
Typically the abuser uses any means possible to isolate the victim from his (or her) support system, but in the case of men, our society does much of the secret-keeping for the abuser by making it so shameful for a man to admit or have anyone believe.  Do not be deceived.  It is not just a low income problem or a problem in drug communities.  It is not just a problem for other people.  I promise you, that right now, this very minute, you know a man who is a victim, and needs help.  If he leaves it is likely that the charges she has filed against him will prevent him from getting custody of his children who then would be left with an abusive mother.  Maybe she doesn't abuse them and takes all her anger out on him.  But...can he count on that, knowing what she is capable of?  Would you?  So he stays.  His life is a nightmare and he can't wake up.

We need to talk about this.  We need to be more aware and make others more aware.

We need to end the silence so we can end the nightmare.

If you need help call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 800-799-7233
www.thehotline.org