M
Mintaka
Guest
In today’s Ask an Apologist, the questioner mentioned that she decided to become Orthodox rather than Catholic because she was scandalized by a Day of the Dead altar set up in front of the local Catholic cathedral, because she thought it was mixing too much Aztec religion into Christianity.
One problem.
The typical Day of the Dead/All Souls’ Day customs (picnicking at the graveside, putting out food and drink as well as flowers and candles, skeleton decorations) are all European Christian, and had already been around for a long time before they ever got to Mexico. In Eastern Europe, Germany, and Spain, people do much the same thing, and the only reason we don’t remember this is that US Catholics have largely stopped doing the same thing. (My mother still clearly remembers German Catholics in our town leaving All Souls’ pretzels looped over cemetery gravestone crosses or on top of flat gravestones, for example. But you don’t see that now, except maybe some Polish stuff that’s similar.)
Second problem:
Many of the Orthodox have extremely similar grave-visiting customs, but they tend to do them in Easter Week (aka Bright Week) or the week after. So there’s a lot of bringing Easter eggs to the dead, giving out candy, and singing songs. Russian Orthodox have the Radonitsa festival on the Second Tuesday after Easter, so that people aren’t fasting from eggs.
So if you think Orthodoxy won’t include a big Day of the Dead ceremony, obviously your local Orthodox must also have gotten lazy about going out to the graveyard to sing litanies and chow down at the graves… or they’re saving it for a surprise.
For some reason, Hispanic customs tend to freak US people out, and of course there are plenty of false facts being passed around. Just like every Irish custom is supposed to be pagan until you actually do the research, there are plenty of people pushing weird neopagan and Native American pagan interpretations of stuff that has always been Christian. Don’t believe the first thing you see on the Internet. And let’s not be ashamed of the ordinary faith customs of ordinary Christians around the world. It’s wrong to call good evil and evil good, and it’s an insult to the Holy Spirit. There are plenty of things that really are bad out there. Let’s discern a little.
One problem.
The typical Day of the Dead/All Souls’ Day customs (picnicking at the graveside, putting out food and drink as well as flowers and candles, skeleton decorations) are all European Christian, and had already been around for a long time before they ever got to Mexico. In Eastern Europe, Germany, and Spain, people do much the same thing, and the only reason we don’t remember this is that US Catholics have largely stopped doing the same thing. (My mother still clearly remembers German Catholics in our town leaving All Souls’ pretzels looped over cemetery gravestone crosses or on top of flat gravestones, for example. But you don’t see that now, except maybe some Polish stuff that’s similar.)
Second problem:
Many of the Orthodox have extremely similar grave-visiting customs, but they tend to do them in Easter Week (aka Bright Week) or the week after. So there’s a lot of bringing Easter eggs to the dead, giving out candy, and singing songs. Russian Orthodox have the Radonitsa festival on the Second Tuesday after Easter, so that people aren’t fasting from eggs.
So if you think Orthodoxy won’t include a big Day of the Dead ceremony, obviously your local Orthodox must also have gotten lazy about going out to the graveyard to sing litanies and chow down at the graves… or they’re saving it for a surprise.
For some reason, Hispanic customs tend to freak US people out, and of course there are plenty of false facts being passed around. Just like every Irish custom is supposed to be pagan until you actually do the research, there are plenty of people pushing weird neopagan and Native American pagan interpretations of stuff that has always been Christian. Don’t believe the first thing you see on the Internet. And let’s not be ashamed of the ordinary faith customs of ordinary Christians around the world. It’s wrong to call good evil and evil good, and it’s an insult to the Holy Spirit. There are plenty of things that really are bad out there. Let’s discern a little.