10 Tips for Teaching Your Child the True Meaning of Christmas
The true meaning of Christmas is
sometimes crowded out by the frenzy of buying and gift giving. Our children are assaulted on all sides by the
secular version of Santa Clause and the TV commercials showing them the latest toys and games. How can we
teach our children the true meaning of Christmas, without taking away all the secular revelry?
One way to do that is to celebrate Advent. Advent traditionally starts on the fourth
Sunday before Christmas Eve. The four weeks leading up to Christmas Day is considered advent. The length of the
season depends on which day Christmas falls on for that year. It can last from 22 to 28 days. There are so many
ways to make Christmas special and give your children the true meaning. Advent can be the start of daily Bible
readings that lead up to the birth of Jesus. Each week has special verses that lead to Christmas Day.
Explain to your child that the gift of the baby Jesus is why we celebrate Christmas
and give gifts to others.
Keep an advent calendar and as each day goes by, celebrate that special day with a
favorite Bible verse, or Christmas Carol. The countdown to Christmas is visible and the reason for Christmas is
reinforced daily.
When Christmas cards begin arriving, make them into an Advent wreath and use your
prayer time to pray for the senders of the cards. This can instill in a child the need to pray for others, and to
thank God for the gift of friends and family.
Engage your whole family in an Advent service project. Collect
money or food to give to local charities that see an increased need at this time. Call the Salvation Army for
names of families who need “adopted” for the Holiday. Encourage your child to share their good fortune by
giving a gift to a child who is needy. The Salvation Army has set up an Angel tree in the mall and a child’s
name appears on each paper ornament. Help your child to choose a name and buy a gift for that child to have
on Christmas Day. Let your child see you donate to a church’s gift giving project, or send a special package
to a missionary family.
The nativity set is also an important part of Christmas traditions. Let your child
help set it up and tell them stories about the animals as you set them out. One tradition is to set up the manger
scene and each day move the figures in a little closer to Baby Jesus’ manger.
Have a craft time when all the family gets together to make a craft that will be a
new ornament on the tree or a new Christmas decoration they will treasure from year to year.
Sing the Christmas carols with your children. The songs of Christmas that we grew up
with are still out there for us to enjoy with our children. Take them as a group to sing carols in a nursing home.
The people in nursing homes love children and Christmas and sometimes don’t have family members or young children
in their own families to visit them. Adopt a grandma or grandpa from the inhabitants of the home. The staff can
tell you who gets visitors and who doesn’t. Let your child pick out a small gift to give them, help them to wrap it
and make it special for them. Give them a sense of giving and the good feeling it provides.
On Christmas Eve, we conclude the celebration of the Advent season. A birthday cake
for Jesus and the Happy Birthday song will reinforce that Christmas is the time we celebrate the birth of Jesus.
Prepare a nativity play, or put on your own nativity scene complete with little angels and your family pets as part
of the scenery.
Christmas Day is an important time to instill in your child the true meaning of
Christmas. Start with a prayer of thanks for the most wonderful gift of all, and have each of them say a word of
thanks for another family member. Instead of rushing to drag the gifts from under the tree, prayer and family time
will help your child realize that Christmas is about the greatest gift of all - the birth of
Jesus.
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