Last night was Halloween, and I hope it was a great evening for everyone. It’s about human encounter, and it’s also about play: who can I be, for just one night? But I love that Halloween is also about neighbors and neighborhoods and strangers handing out free gifts to anyone who comes to their door. It’s not about exchange and markets—just openness and sharing.
Today, the day after Halloween, is All Saints’ Day, when we Methodists join many other Christians in celebrating the ones who have gone before us. We don’t necessarily mean the ones who reached perfection, or the people who are canonized in other traditions. In the words of my friend Eric Park, on this day Methodists take time remember “friends, colleagues, mentors, and family members who, over the course of the journey, have consistently shown us what it means to love God, to hunger and thirst for righteousness, and to live the kind of life that shines brightly with integrity.”
On Sunday we’ll be celebrating the saints of this particular church, specifically the ones who have died in this life this year.
