Halloween is considered by many
to have its origins in the Celtic festival of Samhain which was sometimes
regarded as the Celtic New Year, a celebration of the end of the “lighter half”
of the year and the beginning of the “darker half” of the year. The ancient
Celts believed that the veil between the physical and the non-physical realms was
thinnest at this time allowing spirits, both good and evil, to pass through. They
wore costumes and masks as a means of protection. Disguised as evil spirits
they could “blend in” and avoid being recognized as human.
The tradition of observing
Halloween or Hallowe’en, a
contraction of the original “All Hallows’ Evening,” was also influenced in the
west by the Christian church. It is observed as the evening before All Saints
Day, a time for honoring all the saints and praying for those recently departed
souls who are in purgatory and have not yet reached Heaven. The custom of
wearing costumes has been linked to All Saints Day by Prince Sorie Conteh, who
wrote: "It was traditionally believed that the souls of the departed
wandered the earth until All Saints' Day, and All Hallows' Eve provided one
last chance for the dead to gain vengeance on their enemies before moving to
the next world. In order to avoid being recognized by any soul that might be
seeking such vengeance, people would don masks or costumes to disguise their
identities".
In both traditions there is a common
theme – there are souls wandering around somewhere between the realms of Heaven
and Hell, a.k.a. “light and dark” or “good and evil.” In the Christian tradition this realm is
knows as purgatory. Purgatory is understood to be a condition of purification
or temporary punishment that prepares souls for Heaven.
In Unity, we believe that both
‘heaven’ and ‘hell’ are states of consciousness. Heaven is a state of
consciousness often referred to as Christ consciousness, which each of us may
attain. It is the consciousness of knowing Oneness with the Divine. Hell, on
the other hand, is the consciousness of duality in which one experiences the
suffering created by a mind that believes in separation. We are constantly at a
point of choice: we can choose heaven or hell in any moment. However, many, if
not most of us, walk around in state of “purgatory,” not quite in hell, but not
yet enjoying heaven. We seem to believe, perhaps not consciously, that we do
not yet deserve heaven, that we must be punished, tested or tried in order to
demonstrate our worthiness. We condemn ourselves to living in a perpetual state
of purgatory, testing and “purifying” ourselves. We are those souls who are
seeking the light, attempting to reach heaven.
As with the tradition of
Halloween in which we wear masks and costumes to protect us from evil spirits,
we, as a daily ritual, don masks and costumes disguising ourselves as the roles
we play as human beings, often times believing that we are the masks we wear,
not trying to fool the disembodied spirits of the dead, but in an attempt to
hide our Truth from ourselves and others. While this allows us to “blend in”
and to avoid standing out from the crowd, it prevents us from coming into the
full recognition of our true selves and embracing the Christ consciousness, our
ultimate potential.
In order to come into the
recognition of our Truth, we must be willing to acknowledge the masks we wear
and investigate them to determine for ourselves if we are allowing them to hide
our Light. Until we are willing to remove the masks and see ourselves as we
truly are, we will continue to believe that we are unworthy. When we recognize
our Truth, we will know that no suffering is needed, and we will release
ourselves from purgatory and enter fully into the consciousness of “heaven.”
I encourage us all to observe this
Halloween as an opportunity to free ourselves from the limitations of our masks
and costumes, and as we awaken tomorrow to All Saints Day to know what we are not
souls living in purgatory, but saints who have arisen in Christ consciousness
to celebrate Heaven.
And all of us, with unveiled faces, seeing the glory of the Lord as though reflected in a mirror, are being transformed into the same image from one degree of glory to another; for this comes from the Lord, the Spirit. -
2 Corinthians 3:18
Happy Halloween!
Glorious All Saints Day!
Thank you David! Happy Halloween!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you David. I found this Unity exploration of Halloween, fear and the masks we wear very insightful. I still download the recordings of your sermons each week. I have found a spiritual home in Virginia at Williamsburg Unitarian Universalists and am thriving there. We'll be moving from temporary housing to our permanent home on November 11. With love and gratitude, Deborah Jane Wells
ReplyDeleteMy questions are:
ReplyDeleteIf I think I am a good person, am I? Will taking off my mask really get me into heaven or will removing my mask simply be the beginning of my suffering?
My dark side needs to see the light because it is a coward when it comes to suffering.