Well Halloween doesn't really celebate the devil, that was just a Christian myth to attck pagan religions. The pagan festival of Samhein which modern halloween was adapted from DOES celebrate the horned god. This figurehead is where Christianity derived their Devil from, both to promote their religion and vilify pagan religions.
The festival of Samhien celebrates a few things. First of all it celbrates the end of the growing year (something that is obviously very important to ancient peoples) with a final harvest and party before the long cold winter. Secondly the 'veil' between the physical world and the spirit world is at it's thinnest on this date supposedly. Obviously adaptations of this is where all the ghosties and skeletons and various 'evil' or 'dark' things came from, but orginially it was just a time to meditate, perhaps try to contact loved ones that had passed on for wisdom, honor those that HAD died in the previous year, and reflect on ones own mortality.
Samhein (Oct. 31st-Nov 1st) is also the balancing holiday for Beltane (April 30th-May 1st) Beltane worships the goddess, fertility and new life. Crops are planted this time and rituals to ensure a good harvest are done. It's also a time for love and joy. So you can see how the pagan year is cyclical and both life and death are honored and worshipped.
The Devil was a Christian invention and really has nothing to do with Samhein. Though, since Halloween is more of a western interpretation and Christianity is by far and wide the most popular WESTERN religion, perhpas it is celebrating the Devil in it's own way. But that would be their own religion doing that, not the world, or the evils of society. Because if you don't believe in the Devil, how can you celebrate him at all?
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