I have never been able to grasp why it's good parenting to lie to our children. Why would we then expect those same children to believe other things we say are true? While I don't see it as spiritually subversive to wrap presents with Santa paper or to have electric reindeers on the lawn, let there be integrity with our children!
The following is an excerpt from Noel Piper's book Treasuring God in our Traditions and contains much good thinking about being Christian parents when it comes to Jolly Old Saint Nick.
Over the years, we have chosen not
to include Santa Claus in our Christmas stories and decorations. There are
several reasons.
First, fairy tales are fun and we
enjoy them, but we don't ask our children to believe them.
Second, we want our children to
understand God as fully as they're able at whatever age they are. So we try to
avoid anything that would delay or distort that understanding. It seems to us
that celebrating with a mixture of Santa and
manger will postpone a child's clear understanding of what the real truth of
God is. It's very difficult for a young child to pick through a marble cake of
part-truth and part-imagination to find the crumbs of reality.
Third, we think about how confusing
it must be to a straight-thinking, uncritically-minded preschooler because
Santa is so much like what we're trying all year to teach our children about
God. Look, for example, at the "attributes" of Santa.
- He's omniscient—he sees everything you do.
- He rewards you if you're good.
- He's omnipresent—at least, he can be everywhere in one night.
- He gives you good gifts.
- He's the most famous "old man in the sky" figure.
But at the deeper level that young
children haven't reached yet in their understanding, he is not like God at all.
For example, does Santa really care
if we're bad or good? Think of the most awful kid you can remember. Did he or
she ever not get
gifts from Santa?
What about Santa's spying and then
rewarding you if you're good enough? T hat's not the way God operates. He gave
us his gift—his Son—even though we weren't good at all. "God shows his
love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us"
(Romans 5:8). He gave his gift to us to make us good, not because we had proved
ourselves good enough.
Helping our children understand God
as much as they're able at whatever age they are is our primary goal. But we've
also seen some other encouraging effects of not including Santa in our
celebration.
First, I think children are glad to
realize that their parents, who live with them all year and know all the worst
things about them, still show their love at Christmas. Isn't that more
significant than a funny, old, make-believe man who drops in just once a year?
Second, I think most children know
their family's usual giving patterns for birthday and special events. They tend
to have an instinct about their family's typical spending levels and abilities.
Knowing that their Christmas gifts come from the people they love, rather than
from a bottomless sack, can help diminish the "I-want-this,
give-me-that" syndrome.
And finally, when children know that
God's generosity is reflected by God's people, it tends to encourage a sense of
responsibility about helping make Christmas good for others.
Karsten, for example, worked hard on
one gift in 1975. On that Christmas morning, his daddy stepped around a large,
loose-flapped cardboard box to get to his chair at the breakfast table.
"Where's Karsten?" he asked, expecting to see our excited
three-year-old raring to leap into the day. Sitting down, I said, "He'll
be here in a minute."
I nudged the box with my toe. From
inside the carton, Karsten threw back the flaps and sprang to his full
three-foot stature. "And there were shepherds living out in the fields
nearby, keeping watch over their flocks at night. An angel of the Lord appeared
to them . . ." He had memorized Luke 2:8-20 as a gift for his dad. Karsten
knew the real story.
In fact, a few days later, he and I were
walking down the hall at the church we attended then. One of the older ladies
leaned down to squeeze his pink, round cheek and asked, "What did Santa
bring you?" Karsten's head jerked quickly toward me, and he whispered
loudly, "Doesn't she know?"
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