Into the Fire

Passionate thoughts about the world of writing and the Power of God

 

If you're a Christian and you celebrate Halloween, liberty gives you that opportunity. I don't celebrate it, endorse it, appreciate it, like it. Not Halloween. Not Trick or Treat. Not Trunk or Treat or whatever it's called. Not Harvest Parties. Not anything to remotely honor the date that gives license and freedom to celebrate the occult.

I've never understood the pursuit of the "holy" facsimiles to what the world celebrates. When wickedness, evil, witchcraft, and the elements of darkness are given free rein to entertain a party of demented ideas, I find it certifiably odd that the church desires to replicate its own version of the date. Amazing that the church believes it can sabotage the "holiday" with their own creation of non-creepy activities just to make sure the kids have "an alternative" to the evil festivities. Give them candy and games and cupcakes with black and orange frosting and prizes. Hide a Jesus tract or reference in there and call it "good". Entertain, entertain, entertain.

Because most of those little ones and bigger ones all the way up to the parents have no clue what spiritual warfare is and how necessary it is to the walk of a Christian. Half the battle on this earth consists of fighting and opposing those very things celebrated and acknowledged by the date going all the way back to the Druids. Jesus demonstrated the normality of deposing demons and their activities. The spiritual realm rages in unseen wars that we feel far more often than we're willing to admit. As genuine Christians, the enemy of our souls seeks to rob us, kill us, and destroy us, and sometimes we make it so accommodating to do so. Halloween endorses the common visions and practices of the evil one.

Veteran prayer warriors and people of faith realize the influences of darkness and their often heightened activities during this time of the year. It's not hocus pocus. It's spiritual warfare.

Must be the season of the witch . . . 

Father, we honor you. We come against the spiritual forces of evil in high places according to your word and your direction and by your power and authority. We recognize the liability of romancing with the enemy to the destruction of our souls. Help us to live within your fullness, to combat the enemy, to not stand still and idle while he rampages through our lives and the lives of those we love. Let us not ignore the power you've given us in the Spirit of Truth. May we act upon your instructions and fight the good fight in your Name. Thank you for equipping us and help us to use all the spiritual weapons against a cunning foe. And may we always remember: Apart from you, we can do nothing. In the Name of Jesus, Amen.

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4 responses to ““Must be the season of the witch . . .””

  1. Normandie Avatar
    Normandie

    Preach it, sister. Someone ought to.

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  2. Nicole Avatar

    It’s how it is for me, N. Thank you.

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  3. Jessica Thomas Avatar

    I’m the same when it comes to Halloween. I really can do without it. ‘Course, now kids are coming into the picture. It’s an interesting rope to walk. I’m opting for the parenting style of letting my kids be exposed to the world. I’d rather it under my watch, than when they fly out under my wing and “discover” all this new “forbidden stuff” I’d been hiding from them. That being said, Isaac wanted to be a ghost this year, hubby said okay, and I let it be. In my opinion, 3 going on 4 is too old to talk about spiritual warefare. He scares easily. (And to him, a ghost is a Bubble Guppy wearing a white sheet.) When he’s older I’ll tell him I didn’t want him to go as a ghost and why, but also why I choose not to question Dad’s decision.
    That being said, all our holiday’s have pagan roots, relating to celebration of the seasons. I think it’s perfectly okay to turn Halloween into a celebration of God’s harvest. I think that’s what we should be focused on during the fall.

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  4. Nicole Avatar

    Our son never missed all the “stuff”. And he was called to be a prayer warrior within the spiritual warfare arena in the first grade. True story. So he understood all the occult tendencies of the so-called holiday at a very young age. Personal opinion here: if a child is old enough to know about “ghosts”, he’s old enough to get a child-like understanding of the spiritual. But I totally support your deferring to your husband and your wisdom in wanting to explain it all later.

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