The
Celebration of Samhain
An
Ending and a Beginning
by Judie C. Rall
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As a person with fundamentalist Christian roots, I was always taught
about
the evil
nature of Samhain, or as we know it today, Halloween. This
viewpoint
of the holiday,
however, is often adopted by those who are ignorant of its true
spiritual
significance
and rich historical tradition. Often, all we in Christian circles
are taught that it is the
high holy day of Satan, and that on this night witches get together and
do evil rituals
and some even sacrifice children. We are told to avoid allowing
our
children to
participate in it altogether. However, before we launch into a
true
and accurate
accounting of its history and significance, I must point out that one
cannot
pinpoint
Halloween as a day on which more evil happens than any other.
Those
who today do
call themselves witches are bound by a strict code of honor to “do no
harm.”
If they
choose to go against this code and commit evil, they are no different
than
a Christian
that goes against the Bible or an average citizen who chooses to break
the law. We
should not look at them as being worse or more evil than the average
person
who
breaks the code of law that they say they believe in and follow.
And, you cannot look at
the actions of a few people and form a belief about all people in that
group. That would
be like saying that all Christians are hypocrites because a few
are.
All witches are not
evil because a few are. Most of them love the Creator as much as
Christians do. They
simply have a different form of worship than others. Most people
have a highly
distorted view of what a witch actually is, and on this point I hope to
provide some
illumination.
In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.”
(Genesis
1:1). This is a
quotation from the Bible that is familiar to almost everyone.
However,
there is much
that is not understood about the construction of this verse, and the
historical
and
literary context in which it was written. As a result, there are
many misconceptions
about the nature of God and also the roots of the Jewish religion.
The word “God” as translated in our English Bibles, came from the
Hebrew
word
El-ohim, which we give the English meaning of “God the Creator.”
This meaning is
correct, but not complete. The word El-ohim is plural, indicating
that in creation, there
were a plurality of deities involved. Most Christian scholars
prefer
to interpret this as
showing that Jesus and the Holy Spirit were present with God and all
three
participated
in creation. They look at the plural nature of this word, and are
willing to accept that
the plurality is legitimate. However, they fail to explain that
the
word El-ohim is also in
the FEMININE gender. The word "Elohim" which is the word normally
translated "God" in -------------------
Genesis 1:1, and normally understood to be male only, is actually a
plural
form of the
-------------------singular
ALH, Eloh, by adding IM to the word. IM is usually the
termination
of a masculine
-------------------plural,
and by adding this masculine ending to a feminine root, it can be
understood
as
-------------------"a
female potency united to a masculine idea" (Kabbalah Unvieled,
MacGregor
Mathers',
-------------------p.
108). This means that El-ohim, the entity responsible for the creation
of the world, was FEMALE. Since it is also plural, we can assume
that it refers to a
group of female deities, or a group of deities whose leader or main
personality
is
female. Few Christian scholars will share this point though,
because
long ago it was
decided that the Jewish religion would be patriarchal. They do
not
want to reveal that
their own Hebrew scriptures identify the creator of the universe as
female.
This would
throw a monkey wrench into their teachings, and pretty much destroy
their
doctrine.
The Christian religion, which was based upon Judaism, would also be
forced
by this
admission to acknowledge their error and change their entire doctrinal
structure. This
is unlikely to happen in the near future.
Because it is known that the Old Testament Scriptures were not written
down until 500-
600 B.C. during the Babylonian Captivity, Biblical scholars can easily
say that the
writers of the these scriptures, under the influence of pagan
Babylonian
beliefs,
introduced this idea of a feminine deity. However, if they make
this
admission, they will
be admitting that the Bible is not word-for-word inspired and without
error.
If one verse
in the Bible has error in it, there is every reason to assume that
other
portions of it also
have errors. So they either accept the idea of a feminine deity
as
real, or they admit
that the Bible is susceptible to error because it is written by
humans.
Personally, I
believe both these positions to be true. Now, that doesn’t mean
there
is nothing of
value in the Bible. There are still parts of it that are sacred,
universal spiritual truths.
But it must be read and understood to be primarily a manmade creation
that
includes
some unique and accurate spiritual observations.
Thousands of years before the Bible was written down, and long before
the
Jewish
nation was ever formed, it was generally accepted that the deity
responsible
for
creation, as well as the maintenance of our lives, was female.
The
Goddess was
worshiped throughout most early cultures. How did these early
cultures
get the idea
that God was female? According to Romans 1:19-20, God placed in
nature
evidence of
the divine nature, evidence which was so plain that humans who rejected
God would be
held “without excuse.” In other words, the evidence in nature is
so plain that it can’t be
missed. If we look at nature, what do we learn about how life is
created?
Early cultures recognized that life was created from the womb of the
mother.
Even
though today we know that it takes a genetic contribution from the man
in order for a
woman to conceive a child, thousands of years ago this was not readily
apparent.
Because there are months which elapse between the conception of a child
and its birth,
it was not recognized that the sexual act of man and woman created this
child. As a
result, it was believed that woman had the power to create life on her
own,
spontaneously, according to her own will. And as a result, early
cultures held women in
awe and extreme respect for this ability. This pattern of female
power caused early
cultures to conclude that their creator was female. Also, most
early
healers were
women, and these women served as midwives and herbalists. These
wise
women
were the first true physicians. They assisted women in
giving
birth (or ending an
unwanted pregnancy) and their knowledge of herbs for cooking and
medicine
caused
them to be looked at as being extremely spiritually powerful.
This power, however, was threatening to men and as a result they
created
the doctrine
of original sin....that because Eve was disobedient, women would have
pain
in
childbirth and would be required to submit to male leadership, and as a
result of her
husband Adam’s failure to assert his leadership, all humans would
inherit
this sin
genetically. How convenient this doctrine was. It tied up
all
the loose ends, made
woman the villain, unable to help herself resist evil, and requiring
males
to protect her
from herself. If man had only realized that both males and
females
have their own
legitimate power, they would not have felt the need to persecute and
lord
it over women
all these years. Both men and women could have been existing in
harmony
side by
side, each accepting their own divinely bestowed power and fulfilling
their
destiny to
have dominion over the earth. Instead, humans destroy the earth
and
each other.
Early cultures understood the message God had left in nature: the
creator
was female,
the Goddess. And even though early Judaism sought to stamp out
any
trace of the
worship of the female deity, by destroying shrines, temples and images
of her, they
could not erase her from nature, and from the minds of those who
understood.
When
one reads the Bible, one gets the feeling that human history started
with
the Bible and
the people written of in its pages. There were many thousands of
years of human
history that took place before the pages of the Bible were written or
any
Bible
characters were even born. One of these cultures was the Celtic
culture.
The Celts divided the year into four quarters: Samhain (the winter
quarter),
Imbolc (the
spring quarter), Beltane (the summer quarter) and Lughnasadh (the
autumn
quarter).
The calendar and lives of the Celts were guided by the lunar and
stellar
cycles, and
they were very in-tune with nature. The Celtic day began at
sunset,
reinforcing the
influence of the moon and stars on the culture. They believed
that
the new year began
at sundown on the eve of November 1st, which falls on October 31st or
“Halloween”
for
us. Oidhche Shamhna, the Eve of Samhain, was the most important
part
of Samhain.
Villagers gathered the best of the autumn harvest and slaughtered
cattle
for the feast.
The focus of each village's festivities was a great bonfire. Villagers
cast the bones of
the slaughtered cattle upon the flames. (Our word bonfire comes from
these
"bone
fires.") With the great bonfire roaring, the villagers extinguished all
other fires. Each
family then solemnly lit their hearth from the one great common flame,
bonding all
families of the village together.
The beginning of the Celtic year was a very holy time. They
believed
that on this night
there was a gap in time. During this gap, the people of the
earthly
realm and the spirit
realm could mingle together. The dead would return to the places
they formerly lived.
Little did they know, they dead are always around us and don’t need a
special
day or
time in order to contact us. But that was the origin of most of
the
traditions of
Halloween.
Celts put out food and drink for the dead, left their windows, doors,
and
gates unlocked
to give the dead free passage into their homes (another misconception:
spirits don’t
need doors or windows in order to enter your home). As the
spirits
of our ancestors
entered the world, other not-so-friendly spirits took advantage of the
open spiritual doorway
and entered as well, so Celts carved the images of spirit-guardians
onto
turnips. They
set these jack o'lanterns before their doors to keep out unwelcome
visitors
from the
Otherworld.
There were also fun, lighthearted traditions for the younger
people.
Young people
would put on costumes and roam about the countryside, pretending to be
the returning
dead or spirits from the Otherworld. Celts thought the break in reality
on November
Eve not only provided a link between the worlds, but also dissolved the
structure of
society for the night. Boys and girls would put on each other's
clothes,
and would
generally flout convention by boisterous behavior and by playing tricks
on their elders.
Bobbing for apples, another traditional Samhain pastime, was a
reference
to the Celtic
Emhain Abhlach, "Paradise of Apples," where the dead, having eaten of
the
sacred
fruit, enjoyed a blissful immortality. As you can see, the sacred
Celtic festivals were
intertwined with Biblical tradition and beliefs. Many ancient
Celtic
customs proved
compatible with the Christian religion. Christianity embraced the
Celtic
notions of
family, community, the bond among all people, and respect for the dead.
The Western
Church gave Samhain a Christian blessing in 837 AD when November 1 was
designated the Feast of All Saints or Hallow Tide. Oidhche Shamhna
became
Hallow
E'en.
Although the Goddess was seen as the supreme deity and the creator of
the
universe,
it eventually was recognized that, because nature contains both male
and
female, there
must also be a male deity. The Celts believed that the Goddess
gave
birth to the God
every year during Yuletide (which is where the Christians got the idea
that Jesus was
born in December, and why Mary was considered the “Mother of
God”....the
whole
virgin birth idea came from this, it was not originally a part of the
Bible,
although it was
a part of church tradition and Constantine used it to his advantage to
have Jesus
declared Divine so that he would not challenge Constantine for the
actual
literal
throne). He grows in power throughout the spring and at Beltane,
the mature God and
Goddess lie together to insure the fertility of the earth. During
ancient times, this act
was carried out literally by a priestess of the Goddess and the King of
the land. By
autumn, the God’s power is weakening and he prepares to die and rejoin
the world
through rebirth at Yuletide. This is the essence of the doctrine
of reincarnation, which
Jesus also taught (John 3:5 “You must be born again”). All these
truths are evident by
observing the signposts left for us in the natural realm by the Goddess
and God, who
wanted us to learn of their existence and left us clues to lead us to
them.
Are there really a God and Goddess or two different genders? The
Bible tells us that
God is a spirit (John 4:24). A spirit is an electromagnetic
force,
and has no gender.
Gender has to do with your physical sexual organs and hormones, which
spirits
do
not have nor need. The idea of gender is one specific to our
physical
realm. The infinite
intelligence which we call God has no gender, but allows us to conceive
of it in any way
which is helpful in order for us to understand. That is why the
pattern
created in nature
was male and female, to show us the two opposite but complementary
parts
of the infinite
intelligence. So as we realize that the infinite
intelligence
has no gender, we also realize
that using the idea of gender as a vehicle for better understanding was
God's idea, and
therefore we are free to express our understanding of the infinite
intelligence
through the
expression of the God and Goddess. When ancient cultures made up
different lesser
gods and goddesses, they were simply trying to express their
understanding
of the
different attributes of the infinite intelligence. It was their
way
of bringing spiritual meaning
to their understanding of the Divine. We should not look on those
people as pagan in a
Christian sense, because all gods are One God. And the ancient
celebrations
which
originated in these cultures are not anti-Christian or evil, they
simply
embrace the
common man's attempt to understand the Divine.
The celebration of All Hallows Eve, or The Festival of the Dead, is a
celebration
honoring our beloved dead. It is not the origin of human
sacrifices
or the work of Satan
or the devil (who also never existed). It is the celebration of
the
end of the harvest and
the beginning of a new year.
Incidentally, the word “witch” did not appear in the Bible until the
time
of the King
James version, who had it inserted because of his great fear of
witches.
The original
word in the Bible was “poisoner.” Remember that the wise women of
the villages knew
how to work with herbs, and it was believed that women, because of
their
tendency to
sin and be led away by their power, would use their knowledge of herbs,
of birth and death,
the body, and spirituality to kill others with poisoning, or to lead
them
astray in other evil ways.
This is once again a misconception and extreme injustice. How
many
innocent women
were burned as witches simply because people do not understand the
natural
order of
things? Also, how many were burned just like Joan of Arc, for
talking
to God and
believing that she heard the voice of God and other spiritual
messengers?
It is these
truly spiritual women who have paved the way for our spiritual freedom.
Women who call themselves witches are no more to be feared than those
who
call
themselves Christians (although, the way I have been treated by some
Christians
causes me to feel myself more closely aligned with the witches, who
have
been nothing
but kind). They are simply wise women, who intimately understand
the workings of the
spiritual world, often more accurately than Christians. They seek
to bring meaning to
all of life, to recognize the divine in every human being, and exercise
their
personal spiritual power for their betterment and the betterment of
humankind
in
general. My hope is that we will celebrate them as wise spiritual
teachers rather than
cause them to be outcasts in our society. Hopefully, the witch
hunts
are over.
I hope all people will engage in the rich traditions of Samhain with
their
families, and
bring spiritual meaning to every aspect of their lives throughout the
coming
year. Follow this
link to see some of our own special Samhain
family traditions and Favorite
Harvest Recipes.
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Copyright 2001-8 Judie C. Rall and The Center for Unhindered Living
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