The Religious Side of Halloween

Pumpkin Stories for Catholic Religion Classes

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Jack-O-Lantern - flickr, Photorita
Jack-O-Lantern - flickr, Photorita
Using All Saints Day, All Souls Day and jack-o-lanterns to teach the Catholic faith.

It may not be the most pious of holidays, but Halloween is a time of excitement for children. In the spirit of "if you can't beat 'em, join 'em," Catholic religious education teachers can bring Halloween festivities into the classroom and still sneak in a moral message.

Halloween is the perfect time of year to talk about saints. Set up a saint graveyard and let your students walk through with a flashlight, reading saint names and epitaphs off of headstones made of poster-board-covered cereal boxes.

Remind children that the holiday of Halloween began with All Souls Day and that the following day is All Saints Day. It may have evolved into a day of costumes and candy, but we can still find meaning and message in n the timeless jack-o-lantern.

Here are two ideas for Catholic youth using pumpkins. The Pumpkin Prayer shows that we have to open ourselves to God, using all our senses, in order to let his light shine in us.

The Story of the Three Pumpkins illustrates that in order for us to live like the saints did, we need to let God change us so that His light can shine through us.

Pumpkin Prayer

Before class, carve a pumpkin and keep the pieces intact. Cut eyes, ears, mouth, nose and cut a circle around the stem. Remove the seeds and pumpkin gunk, put it in a plastic bag and return it to the inside of the pumpkin. Put the eyes, ears, nose and mouth back in the cut-out holes and replace the lid. Have a candle and long-stemmed lighter ready.

Gather the children around the pumpkin and pray this prayer:

Lord, open my mind so I can learn new things about you and the world you created. (Remove the top of the pumpkin.)

Remove the things in my life that don’t please you. Forgive the wrong things I do and help me to forgive others. (Pull out the bag of seeds.)

Open my eyes to see the beauty you’ve made in the world around me. (Remove the eyes.)

Open my ears when I hear your word, so I may learn how you want me to live. (Remove the ears.)

I’m sorry for the times I’ve turned up my nose at people who are different from me, but who are your children, too. (Remove the nose.)

Let everything I say please you. (Remove the mouth.)

Lord, help me show your light to others through the things I do. (Place a candle inside and light it.)

Amen.

The Story of the Three Pumpkins

Before class, get three pumpkins, similar in shape and size. Leave the first one plain.

On the second one, draw with black marker a jack-o-lantern face. The third one you will carve eyes, ears, a nose, a mouth and a lid on top. Have a candle and long-stemmed lighter ready.

Gather the children together and read this story:

Once there were three little pumpkins (point to them). The first pumpkin (point to the pumpkin without a face) said, “I want to remain just as I am. I never want to change.”

The second pumpkin (point to the pumpkin with a drawn-on face) said, “I want to be a jack-o-lantern, but I don’t want to let go of what I already have. I want to change but I’m afraid to let anyone carve eyes, nose and a mouth out of my shell. So I won’t change either.”

The third pumpkin (point to the carved pumpkin) said, “I want to shine like the sun and in order to let the light come out of me, I need to lose part of myself. I need to change. Open my eyes, ears, nose and mouth and put a lit candle inside me. (Take the lid, set a lighted candle inside and take out the eyes, ears, nose and mouth.

The pumpkin wanted to become a jack-o-lantern, even at the cost of losing some of itself. And so, the light shone out of its eyes, ears, nose and mouth. The light of the third pumpkin, together with the light of all the other jack-o-lanterns, made the night become brighter than day. And darkness went away forever.

Diane Laney Fitzpatrick, Photo by Tim Fitzpatrick

Diane Laney Fitzpatrick - Writer, editor, blogger and humorist

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Comments

Oct 11, 2009 11:52 AM
Guest :
THANK YOU SO VERY MUCH FOR SUCH WONDERFUL AND FUN IDEAS.
Dec 31, 2009 8:45 PM
Guest :
Wonderful! A simple and fun way for all of us young and old to SEE God's love!
Nov 22, 2011 7:36 AM
Guest :
October 31 in the Roman Catholic liturgical calendar is traditionally referred to as "All Hallow's (hallow meaning holy one's, the Saints) Eve" from which comes the word halloween.
November 1 is All Saints Day where we venerate (not worship - that is for God alone) the Saints of the Church who have come before us in the Faith. Their exceptional devotion to God as shown through saintly lives and actions is held up as an example of for us today. November 2 is All Souls Day, where we set aside time to pray for the souls of our departed "brothers and sisters" in the Faith, specifically family members, friends. This is based on the Catholic teaching of praying for the souls in Purgatory, the place of final purification of souls of those who are not going to hell, but whom need to be cleansed before entering into heaven. In the Holy Bible, Revelations Ch. 21 says that nothing unclean can enter into the presence of God, therefore our souls when we die without mortal sin still need to be perfectly in the state of grace before we can come into God's presence. The idea of praying for the dead is from the second book of Maccabees in the Old Testament (which, unfortunately, is one of the seven books removed from the Bible by Martin Luther when he created the protestant religion.) Thank you for this website! Much good info here.
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