Happy All Hallows Eve, Feast of All Saints, and Commemoration of All Souls everyone!
Here’s how we celebrated/are celebrating/will celebrate.
For Halloween, we carved pumpkins and went trick or treating around our neighborhood. It was lovely. The weather couldn’t have been nicer and there were a TON of other families out. We had a great time!
For All Saints Day, we’ll be back in costume first thing in the morning and off to Mass then to our Homeschool group’s All Saints Pageant and Carnival. The kids will each give a few clues about their saint then the other kids guess who they are. Then the teenagers throw a carnival for the little kids, with saint themed games. My kids look forward to it all year!
Then for All Souls, we usually go as a family to a Catholic Cemetery to say a rosary and pray for the dead, but more on that at the bottom.
For now, you need seven of something. A couple of weeks ago, I mentioned the costumes we were planning for this year. Let’s see how they turned out shall we?
Bobby was St. Maximilian Kolbe for All Saints, and an escaped convict (or guy in his pajamas inexplicably in handcuffs and a ball and chain) for Halloween. Looking at these pictures, I am totally going to shave his head in the morning. So please imagine him to look even more authentic.
Betty was St. Joan of Arc. She used a set of armor Jack and Grandad made for Jack’s St. Nuno costume two years ago, along with a new frilly red skirt (thanks Nana!) and a battle standard that I made according to the description St. Joan of Arc gave of it during her trial. Except she probably didn’t use google image search and inkjet iron on transfer paper for hers.
For trick or treating he was a zombie. That face is a combination of him trying to be a zombie and not liking how the fake blood tastes.
Perhaps you’re saying, “That wasn’t so bad. St. Lazarus did have leprosy after all.” Well, it’s only going to get worse.
This is where we ended up on the St. John the Baptist head on a platter costume. Jack and Grandad designed and built it. And it turned out awesome!
Jack was a huge hit trick or treating. He would kneel and set the table down on each front porch, with the cover lowered over his head. Then when the door opened, he could pull a little lever under the table and open up the cover! One house announced that Jack had won their costume contest and gave him a full sized candy bar. Only him. Not the other kids. It was like his personal dream come true.
I can only imagine the folks at the Saints pageant will like it too. Yes?
Okay, now I’m serious. Do not scroll down any more. Don’t do it. It will only make you mad.
I tried to warn you. But look how cute he is! And how cooperative he was for the photo shoot! Firing squad ready, this one.
Well, if you made it through that you get to see the grownup costumes!
Jim was business casual Abraham Lincoln.
fires of Purgatory, waiting for the day when they will join the company
of the saints in heaven. The celebration of Mass is the highest means
the Church can provide for charity for the dead, but we can also relieve
their sufferings through our prayers, sufferings and penances. We can
also help the Poor Souls by doing acts and prayers that have indulgences
attached to them. There are many indulgences, applicable only to the
Souls in Purgatory, that can be obtained during the month of November. . . .
To be able to gain an indulgence, one must have the intention to gain
them, and perform the works at the time and in the manner prescribed.
The traditional conditions to attain a Plenary Indulgence:
A Plenary Indulgence can be gained only one per day. The faithful must
be in the state of grace and these three conditions must accompany the
prescribed act:
- the faithful must receive the sacrament of confession, either eight days before or after the pious act is performed,
- receive Holy Communion on that day
- and recite prayers for the intentions of the Holy Father (one Our Father and one Hail Mary is the minimum, but any other additional prayers may be added).
All attachment to sin, even venial sin, must be absent. If one’s
disposition is less than perfect or if some of the above conditions are
not fulfilled, the indulgence becomes partial”
If you’d like to keep track of ALL the feasts of the Catholic liturgical year, I’ve created a wall calendar to help you do it!
As the Church year begins with December, so does this calendar. You get December 2024 through December 2025, thirteen months. Available for purchase here. Thanks!
Everyone turned out awesome!! The St. John the Baptist was so great, wow. And you are super cute with just a pregnant belly. I'm thinking boy.
Really cute costumes! I have yet to truly venture into the land of homemade costumes-so far we are firmly in the hand me down camp, but at some point I do hope to get more creative.
Unfortunately our Catholic group's All Saints Day festivities are always planned for Halloween night, making it quite clear that it is meant as an alternative to Halloween, not something meant to be celebrated in addition to it, so we are forced to choose one or the other. I would be fine going either way. Growing up we didn't do much trick or treating; my parents objected to the candy part more then the costume part and they let us go next door and across the street and that was it. But my husband has strong feelings in favor of trick-or-treating so that's what we do.
Everything turned out so cute, well–disturbing too, but mostly cute 🙂
Have fun on your babymoon! My husband wants us to take our first weekend away sans kids this spring once the baby's a little older and can be left with grandma and grandpa–but I suppose by then it might be a babymoon! If we could get pregnant soon maybe I could actually have a baby in a city where I have friends I've known longer than five months 🙂
Poor St. Lazarus made me laugh! Your son looks so despondent, but those cute little stuffed doggies really lighten the mood. Your family couldn't be more adorable!
Oh my goodness, those costumes are just amazing!
Love them all! Enjoy your weekend. 🙂
Personal Halloween dream come true – best line ever!! Awesome costumes – enjoy your weekend away!
You all look great! Your Lori costume made me laugh out loud.
Enjoy your weekend!
You're not really convincing as Lori because you aren't constantly holding up your belly 😉
Lori! The Rick Shane Rick list was the best!
"Except she probably didn't use google image search and inkjet iron on transfer paper for hers" Yes, but she WOULD have. Work smarter, not harder. 😉 The costumes are excellent!
You look AMAZING! Can't wait to "meet" the new babe.
And everyone else was great too. : )
These costume ideas are amazing! Just when my kids were getting bored with our saint costumes, I have some new, totally gruesome and unexpected ideas to share with them. Thank you!
Is all saints day the same as haloween all hallows eve?
They are three separate days. October 31st, Halloween, is the Eve of (the day before) All Saints Day. November 1st is All Saints Day, on which we celebrate all of the holy souls in Heaven. November 2nd is All Souls Day, when we pray for all people who have died, especially our own friends and family members.