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What I'm Learning About ...
"Doing" Christmas

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"The Halloween candy isn't even off Wal-Mart's shelves yet, for heaven's sake," I grumbled as I pushed my cart through the tsunami of red-and-green holiday decorations already flooding the store last October.

Those colors had become a negative trigger for me, jumpstarting all my seasonal stress, pressure, and ex-pectations … feelings I'd begun to associate with a holiday that should trigger nothing but positive ones.

Peace became more elusive each holiday season. I'd lug out heavy boxes of ornaments to adorn my tree and home, trying to emulate the "perfect" Christmas look. Or spend hours in crowded malls, shopping for "perfect" gifts—items I knew were likely to be exchanged by their recipients. I'd toil over my family's traditional holiday recipes, convinced I'd be the world's worst mother if I didn't fix them.

There in Wal-Mart I suddenly thought, What must Jesus think of all this blatant commercialism?

I visualized him pushing a clumsy shopping cart, passing the same displays I saw—the tinseled trees, the plastic mangers, all screaming, "Buy me! Buy me!" And, as the final insult, doing so to the tune of "Silent Night" playing over the store's PA system.

There in Wal-Mart I suddenly thought, What must Jesus think of this blatant commercialism?

I contemplated the irony of that song. Then I remembered a little-known Scripture: "For the customs of the people are vain: for one cutteth a tree out of the forest, the work of the hands of the workman, with the axe. They deck it with silver and with gold; they fasten it with nails and with hammers, that it move not" (Jeremiah 10:3-4, KJV).

Vain customs? Ouch.

That's it, I thought. I just can't "do" Christmas anymore.

Call it a holiday-mindset makeover, if you will. Hoping to put meaning back into a season that, for me, had lost so much of it, I decided to forgo nearly all our holiday traditions except sharing great food and great times with family. I didn't put up a tree or decorations, didn't buy—or wrap—a single gift. Instead, I choreographed a Christmas my family pronounced "The best ever, Mom!"

So what did we do? We gave each other the best gift of all—time. Stress-free, worry-free time. Not only time to contemplate the significance of Christ's coming to earth to save us, but time to actually "live it." Time to read, pray, think. And time to spend with each other.

As a family, we made a list of fun and inexpensive local activities, and now, because we had the time, we did them. We bowled. We played pool. We went to the ocean. We ate out. We ate in (Costco did the cooking for us). And we finished it all off by savoring New Year's Eve fireworks displays. Together.

By stripping away the Christmas expectations I'd let bind me each year, we experienced every little bit of fun and spiritual significance the holiday provided—without the hassles and the guilt.

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 58 comments.See all comments
Marie Posted: December 15, 2007 4:34 PM
This article stinks. So much self pity and loathing. Get a grip! And people get off your high horses thinking that if you do away with festivities of a traditional Christmas celebration that this somehow means that Christ isn't involved. Nothing could be further from the truth. Christ is kept in Christmas, we have a nativity set and a Christmas tree. In fact I say, have it all. The more the merrier. What a pitifully sad and boring life some must lead to not be able to make one day of the year special, extra special. Not just for their loved ones, for memories, for the fun of it, but as a joyful song of praise because Jesus Christ was born. And that my friends is the reason for the season, and we celebrate EVERY day of the year our Savior, but on Christmas day we celebrate His birth. It's a party people, lighten up for goodnessakes! People are far too serious these days.

EVELYN Posted: December 14, 2007 4:38 PM
I love Christmas! I love to give gifts because thats what Jesus loved to do He gave gifts unto men. I believe our family joy is just as sweet singing carols about the birth of our Savior with a tree and lights as without . We worship the Lord everyday of the year but at Christmas all the world remembers and knows how Jesus came and why even if tthey have not yet bowed the knee! How special is that? Ilove it even the opportunitty to tell the real story of Saint Nickolaas. Father God loves family celebrations read the old testament...He knows how to rejoice and He will be singing over us with great joy as we remember the birth of His Son..AMEN!

S.M. Posted: December 15, 2007 11:41 AM
This is our 2nd Christmas in Mexico as missionary's and even here many commercial aspects of the holiday season are being adopted. You will note I said, "holiday" not Christmas. Much of what we do IS unrelated to Celebrating the Messiah's birth. Do we throw out all the traditions? Traditions give us a sense of familiarity and security We know what to expect, we know what will happen next and that's comforting is this busy crazy world. That said, it's good and sometimes necessary to consider what needs to be changed in our lives. Change can be freeing and liberating. It enables a person to gain fresh appreciation and insight.


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