luvsJack
DIS Legend
- Joined
- Apr 3, 2007
- Messages
- 20,362
A few years ago I started a thread saying that if Christians feels so strongly about focusing on Jesus at Christmas then they should make a collective effort to do so instead of focusing on the symbols of Christmas (Santa, Trees, gifts). I got an overwhelming negative response about "you celebrate your way, and I'll celebrate mine." At the end of the day, people *want* to celebrate the santa/tree way...that's my theory. Secondly, why are there so many shootings at Christmas time?
We do focus on Jesus, the celebrations of Christmas in our church come first and foremost. We have a tree and we visit and believe in Santa and we give gifts--but that doesn't mean our main focus is not on the reason for the season.
The gifts symbolizes the gifts given to the Christ Child.
The tree is an evergreen and symbolizes the everlasting life offered to us by Christ.
The wreath is a circle, with no end and no beginning, and symbolizes His never ending love for us.
Before someone gets going on the fact that any of this was originally pagen--it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter what these things mean to you, it doesn't matter what it meant a long, long time ago--these are the meaning of these things in my home and it is how we celebrate the holiday and keep Christ in all we do.
Oh, and Santa is all about the spirit of giving and symbolizes to us the way Jesus would want us to treat others. Santa is a fun way for kids to understand the spirit of giving.
I firmly believe that everyone should celebrate the holiday in anyway they choose or not celebrate as they choose. This is the way I celebrate it.
Oh, and to answer the comment about a church being a business: Tithing by the members of the church is not for the church to make money. It pays the bills of the church and it pays the preacher. Most churches don't even break even. All expeditures are voted on by each and every member of the church and no one is required to give anything. That is totally up to the church member and God.