Friday, October 31, 2025

The Supernatural

I can still see it in my mind’s eye, a clearly written neatly typed bulletin note just outside the student lounge. It was addressed to all of us, from a fellow seminarian, a good friend who was a ‘recovering hippy.’ He had seen it all, tried it all, and at that time not pleased with us, his fellow Christians in this grad school, participating in on-campus or community trick or treat door knocker festivities. He knew and had had experience with the dark origins of Hallowe'en. Although he and his wife were both kind hearted and soft-spoken, they sparked considerable conversation and fresh perspective especially for those of us with children who loved to dress up and collect a few candies and cheery greetings in the neighborhood.

Created by David
Today’s Canuckle word is SCARY – yup, got it in three tries ๐Ÿ˜Š – and the Fun Fact is a continuation of this very topic. “Halloween is the perfect time for all things scary in Canada. … Creepy costumes, scary decorations, and spine-chilling stories make Halloween the perfect time to embrace the supernatural.” That’s where I cannot but gulp a little. It is now fifty years later (I just did the math) and today my friend's (R.I.P.) admonishment comes to mind. As we prepare treats for the little hooligans who will ring our doorbell tonight, my mind goes back. What are we including, or possibly excluding in our celebrations? In my previous blogpost just a week ago I write about the nature of Jesus’ ongoing presence. [i] Considerable reference to the supernatural there, this could now be a continuation of that.

Now here is my question. Do we believe in the supernatural? Even among people of faith, much energy is spent aligning ourselves with various spiritual or political or personal viewpoints, but do we actually believe in the supernatural? Fact is, All Hallows’ Day, in medieval Christianity was recognition of a mysterious thin line between the living and the dead, and the day before came to be identified as All Hallows Eve, easily shortened to Hallowe’en. My knee-jerk response to the Fun Fact is “Do you also believe in the upside of supernatural? How about God, how about Jesus, about resurrection, ascension, about the ongoing presence of Holy Spirit among us"? What is not supernatural about that? In other words, "What is not supernatural about weekly worship services"?

I’m guessing the writer of that fun fact may even be a church goer – just maybe not very often ๐Ÿ˜ or perhaps just not made the connection. It is indeed quite easy, almost par for the course, to put church or ceremony or liturgy in a ritual category, easy to forget the supernatural, and that is what has made it easy for Halloween to be the commercial fun evasion of that which we all yearn for.

The Apostle Paul seemed quite aware of this possibility even back there in one of his epistles, “It is my eager expectation and hope that … Christ will be exalted now as always in my body, whether by life or by death” (Philippians 1:20). Whether by life or by death, we dare not forget the supernatural in God’s daily redemptive presence, not only the ghoulish coffins we put on our lawns on October 31.


[i] “Who is Jesus?”, https://www.jcfroomthoughts.blogspot.com/. 

4 comments:

  1. I'm happy we have one day a year to recognize the supernatural, All Souls day October 31st. To be fair to the Catholic Church, they have always emphasized the importance of All Saints Day, following All Souls day. So today, November 1st is a a celebration of the supernatural made abundantly evident in those people we call Saints. I like quakerism because it recognizes that of God in everyone. So the supernatural is evident in our good behavior.

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  2. Thanks for this reply. My understanding has always been, as indicated above, that Halloween is the day before All Saints (Nov 1), which is the day before All Souls, which is today - and I did confirm with Google. Do I have that right, or wrong? Mainly my point was that encounter with the supernatural is possible any day of any year (certainly not only on October 31) sometimes the darkness thereof, and sometimes the brightness.

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  3. Jake, thanks for this ‘upside of the supernatural.’ I’ll take that to my adult SS class next Sunday.

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    1. Thanks so much Peter. It's kind of a no-brainer for me, but not necessarily for all people we know these days. Would love to be part of the discussion in your class.

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