Halloween Is the Biggest Day of the  Year for the Fastest Growing Religion in America - By Michael  Snyder -
http://endoftheamericandream.com/archives/halloween-is-the-biggest-day-of-the-year-for-the-fastest-growing-religion-in-america 
If  you are a witch, Halloween is not just another holiday.  For Wiccans, the  festival known as "Samhain" is the time when the veil between the living and the  dead is the thinnest, and so communication with the other side is the  easiest.  And as you will see below, it is also the time "when the god  dies, to be reborn again on the Winter Solstice".  Many Americans are still  very unfamiliar with Wicca, but the truth is that it is rapidly growing in  popularity.  In fact, it has been projected that Wicca will soon become the  third largest "religion" in America after Christianity and Islam.   According to the American Religious Identification Survey, the number of  self-identified Wiccans in the United States grew from 8,000 in 1990 to 134,000  in 2001 to 342,000 in 2008.  The New York Post recently ran an article  which stated that some experts have estimated that the number of witches in the  U.S. is doubling every 30 months, and that there may now be "8 million  undeclared practitioners" of "the craft" in this country.
So  needless to say, this is a group of people that is very much growing in numbers  and in influence.  And of course not all of them believe the exact same  things.  Among various Wiccan groups there is tremendous variation in  doctrine and practice.
One  common thread that you will find among many of them, however, is a disdain for  "Halloween".  They tend to consider most Halloween traditions to be  distorted Christianized versions of ancient pagan practices, and most of them  are not really too thrilled with the mixing of the two.
For  most Wiccans, the proper name for the day is "Samhain", and it is a celebration  that they take very seriously.  The following comes from a piece that was  authored by a self-described "modern-day pagan and real-life  Wiccan"...
Today,  the holiday is still celebrated in the non-standardized, revived witchcraft  tradition known as Wicca, and in the even less standardized group known as  neo-pagans. In these circles, Halloween is called Samhain (pronunciations vary;  I go with Sah-wen). Its significance and celebrations are rooted in traditional,  pre-Christian practice, though they are by no means exact replicas.
October  31st is the midway point between the Autumn Equinox and the Winter Solstice. As  such it is considered the end of the harvest time, when everything has stopped  growing and the earth goes back to sleep. 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.
Here  is more on what Wiccans believe about Samhain from wicca.com...
Samhain,  (pronounced SOW-in, SAH-vin, or SAM-hayne) means "End of Summer", and is the  third and final Harvest. The dark winter half of the year commences on this  Sabbat.
It  is generally celebrated on October 31st, but some traditions prefer November  1st. It is one of the two "spirit-nights" each year, the other being Beltane. It  is a magical interval when the mundane laws of time and space are temporarily  suspended, and the Thin Veil between the worlds is lifted. Communicating with  ancestors and departed loved ones is easy at this time, for they journey through  this world on their way to the Summerlands. It is a time to study the Dark  Mysteries and honor the Dark Mother and the Dark Father, symbolized by the Crone  and her aged Consort.
Originally  the "Feast of the Dead" was celebrated in Celtic countries by leaving food  offerings on altars and doorsteps for the "wandering dead". Today a lot of  practitioners still carry out that tradition. Single candles were lit and left  in a window to help guide the spirits of ancestors and loved ones home. Extra  chairs were set to the table and around the hearth for the unseen guest. Apples  were buried along roadsides and paths for spirits who were lost or had no  descendants to provide for them. Turnips were hollowed out and carved to look  like protective spirits, for this was a night of magic and chaos. The Wee Folke  became very active, pulling pranks on unsuspecting humans. Traveling after dark  was was not advised. People dressed in white (like ghosts), wore disguises made  of straw, or dressed as the opposite gender in order to fool the Nature  spirits.
That  all sounds very complicated.
So  why has Wicca become so explosively popular in America and elsewhere around the  world?
Well,  there are certainly a lot of factors, but in the end a lot of them are very  basic.  According to the New York Post, Wicca "is practiced by a growing  number of lapsed Christians seeking easy gratification for life's most pressing  needs: sex, hot clothes, relief from rotten marriages."
That  is very sad for me, because as a dedicated Christian it pains me to hear that so  many of my brothers and sisters are being pulled from the faith so  easily.
But  there are those that are going the other direction as well.  In fact, the  Daily Mail recently profiled one such individual...
A  'recovering' witch who says she was deceived by the Wicca religion has revealed  why she abandoned the dark arts and returned to Christianity after years of  casting spells for her own good fortune.
Selah  Ally Tower, who goes by her middle name, joined a coven in her home state of New  Jersey after taking a correspondence course in witchcraft in 1989. However,  after a decade of casting spells, reading tarot cards, wearing capes and flowing  skirts, and enjoying an extramarital affair at the suggestion of her coven's  leaders, a pastor convinced the 58-year-old mother of three give up on  witchcraft for good.
Tower  has authored two books about her experiences.  One is entitled "Taken from  the Night: A Witch's Encounter with God", and the other is entitled "From the  Craft to Christ: The Allure of Witchcraft and the Church's Response".  Like  many people, she was drawn to Wicca because she found that it could produce real  results for real needs in her life.  Here is more from the Daily  Mail...
'Casting  spells, I saw results. Usually, it was like - maybe I needed money or I needed a  car. I needed love in my life,' she said of the allure of witchcraft. 'It was  very selfish. It was all about what I wanted. I was really satisfied with my  life.'
When  most people watch television or they go to the movies and they hear about "the  power of magic", it isn't something that they take too seriously.
But  for most Wiccans, magic is something that is very real and that has a tremendous  amount of power.  The following is what Wikipedia has to say about Wiccans  and magic...
Many  Wiccans believe in magic, a manipulative force exercised through the practice of  witchcraft or sorcery. Many Wiccans agree with the definition of magic offered  by ceremonial magicians,[41] such as Aleister Crowley, who declared that magic  was "the science and art of causing change to occur in conformity with will",  while another prominent ceremonial magician, MacGregor Mathers stated that it  was "the science of the control of the secret forces of nature".[41] Many  Wiccans believe magic to be a law of nature, as yet misunderstood or disregarded  by contemporary science,[41] and as such they do not view it as being  supernatural, but a part of what Leo Martello calls the "super powers that  reside in the natural".[42] Some Wiccans believe that magic is simply making  full use of the five senses in order to achieve surprising results,[42] whilst  other Wiccans do not claim to know how magic works, merely believing that it  does because they have observed it to be so.[43] Some spell it "magick", a  variation coined by the influential occultist Aleister Crowley, though this  spelling is more commonly associated with Crowley's religion of Thelema than  with Wicca.
During  ritual practices, which are often staged in a sacred circle, Wiccans cast spells  or "workings" intended to bring about real changes in the physical world. Common  Wiccan spells include those used for healing, for protection, fertility, or to  banish negative influences.[45] Many early Wiccans, such as Alex Sanders, Sybil  Leek and Doreen Valiente, referred to their own magic as "white magic", which  contrasted with "black magic", which they associated with evil and Satanism.  Sanders also used the similar terminology of "left hand path" to describe  malevolent magic, and "right hand path" to describe magic performed with good  intentions;[46] terminology that had originated with the occultist Helena  Blavatsky in the 19th century. Some modern Wiccans however have stopped using  the white-black magic and left-right hand path dichotomies, arguing for instance  that the colour black should not necessarily have any associations with  evil.[47]
But  even for the vast majority of Americans that are not into Wicca, this time of  the year has increasingly become known as a time to focus on "magic", evil and  horror.
For  instance, one hot new trend is to photograph little children as they are dressed  up to perfectly resemble characters from horror films, and another hot new trend  is to hold something called "a blood rave"...
Put  on by BBQ Films and tied to the weekend-long ruckus that is NYC Comic Con, the  Blood Rave featured a live action performance of scenes from the film, with  ticket-buyers encouraged to dress the part of hemoglobin-craving vampires. Also  adding to the ambiance was electronic music legends The Crystal Method, who  headlined the evening.
But  the star attractions were Blade... and all the (fake) blood. Just before  midnight, a squadron of technicians suited up with body-mounted sprayers  surrounded the crowd and, on cue, soaked the writhing masses with synthetic  blood. No leather corset or bare tattooed back was spared as the ravers seethed  with fanged glee beneath the crimson rain. For a few hours, it was truly weird  and wonderful to see a sea of giddy daywalkers living out fantasy  bloodlust.
Approximately  70 percent of all Americans will participate in Halloween festivities once again  this year, and they will spend somewhere in the neighborhood of 6 billion  dollars celebrating the holiday, and most will believe that it is just a bunch  of innocent fun.
But  the minority of Americans that take this holiday very, very seriously is  growing, and that is not a good thing.
On  page 96 of the Satanic Bible, Anton LaVey wrote the following...
"After  one's own birthday, the two major Satanic holidays are Walpurgisnacht (May 1st)  and Halloween."
Halloween  is the biggest day of the year for Wiccans, white witches, black witches,  Satanists, neo-pagans and occultists of all stripes.
When  you participate in traditions and practices that are rooted in that world, you  also risk opening up a door for supernatural forces that you do not understand  and will not be able to control.
As  a Christian, I do not want to have anything to do with Halloween, Samhain or  whatever else they may want to call it.
So  what about you?
What  is your perspective on this holiday?
BE SURE TO CHECK OUT MY ALL NEW PROPHECY AND CREATION DESIGN WEBSITES.  THERE IS A LOT TO SEE AND DO..........
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.