Should Christians Play Santa?
Tonight we went to see my mother with my children and the subject of Christmas was naturally brought up being so close. We sang some Christmas carols to prepare for the season. While others were singing Santa and North Pole songs, I took it upon myself (playing the role of the faithful pastor) to balance our excitement with the good Christian Christmas songs. (Waiting for applause to slow down). My daughters were just wanting to sing the Santa songs. My wife asked my oldest daughter Katelynn (7yrs old) before I started the balancing act, “What is Christmas all about”? To which she responded “Presents, candy, Christmas tree, presents [again], and Santa.” My wife looked at me with the I-am-about-to-laugh-because-I-know-how-much-trouble-she-is-going-to-be-in-from-daddy look. Then she said, “Katelynn, Christmas is about Jesus, not Santa.”  I know you THINK you know where this is going, but you don’t. At first, my reaction was the typical OK, this confirms it. We are not watching anymore Santa movies, cutting way back on the Santa fun, and not going to talk about getting presents anymore. But that never feels right. I quickly turned away from that and started singing the Santa songs with them. Why?
Well, everyone is going to hate me, but why not? I will just dive right in. I don’t have that much trouble with Santa, sleigh bells, Frosty, and presents being emphasized at Christmas. I won’t even get too uptight with situations where Santa becomes the priority. (Waiting now for boos and hissing to cease). Santa is fun. Frosty is silly. And presents give us a chance to teach to give and exercise the gift of giving (since it is more blessed to give than receive). My daughter did forget the true meaning of the Christmas and I could have gotten very angry. But here is the thing: generally speaking, she hardly ever forgets about Christ. Christ is part of her life everyday. She talks to her friends about Him, she reads her Bible, she asks great questions, prays with me, she often voluntarily gives her allowance for others, and she honors her mother and I. Heck, she is even having me teach her Greek (no, I did not force this!). Who am I to step in when she is singing Christmas carols that don’t mention Christ and say in a rather legalistic fashion that she can’t sing those because it dishonors Christ? I have looked through my Bible and I cannot find where Christ gave a command to celebrate His birth on a particular day of the year. Yet He did say to celebrate the meaning of his birth everyday of the year.
This Katelynn is doing. What message am I sending by mandatorily sanctifying a particular day or season when every day is sanctified? I know that there are some days that we set aside in special way, and I have no problem with that. Neither do I have a problem when we set aside particular times of the year to focus on God and what He has done. But if Katelynn is doing everything else right and not forgetting about God throughout the year, I should not get upset if she forgets about what the meaning of Christmas is. I should not demonize Santa and other “secular” Christmas cheer when it is the life throughout the year that is important. I would rather my daughter tell one of her friends about what Christ means to her in July than to have her focus on the manger in December. Telling others about Christ all year round is commanded in Scripture and is the true meaning of Christmas.
As well, [stepping on my box] it would seem that there are so many people who choose to set aside all their secularism in December and require that there be a moratorium called on all things not pertaining to Christ, but forget the rest of the year. This seems to evidence a loss of priorities. I have often heard it said by Christians that Santa has taken over Christ in December, but I would argue that December has taken over Christ for Christians.
Should Christians play Santa? I have no problem with it. Personally, I can’t bring myself to tell my children that he actually exists, but I have no problem with others who do and I have no problem singing Christmas carols that don’t involve Christ so long as Christ is the focus of our lives, not just our Decembers. If Christ is not the focus of our lives January-November, December is not going to make any difference anyway because, contrary to popular belief, December does not sanctify the rest of the year.
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Marilyn B. on 04 Dec 2007 at 8:50 am #
I am reading your blog for the first time, having jumped here from inside a post on Pyromaniacs. Wow! Thanks for your insight. I appreciate it much. Just what I needed…another blog to which I feel I must subscribe (I only have 4 must-reads).
Love this post; I have treated Santa pretty much the way you have. I saw much harm done by my contemporaries-in-parenting as they legalistically shunned anything secular. Just one example is the dad who lectured trick-or-treaters who came to his door about the evils of Halloween and why they should not be dressing up or begging for candy. Very sad. His kids have walked away from the church.
Jesica on 05 Dec 2007 at 2:09 am #
Wow!
I found your blog because I was Googling “deathbed conversions”.
Then I thought I’d see what you’d written as of the last few days or weeks.
We are one of the families that don’t celebrate with Santa, nor do we celebrate Halloween.
However, God has done a mighty work in our hearts to teach us that this is the leading of HIS Spirit for us, and that it’s none of our business what other people do…we’re just to obey His call for OUR family.
We have spent several Halloweens giving out God’s Word..I wrote about it in October on my blog, http://www.whatilearnedfromthewordtoday.blogspot.com .
Each time we have, I’ve been AMAZED at the response of both the children and the parents..they’ve been so kind and so grateful! We don’t preach to them about anything..we just hand the kids a nice Adventure Bible or a Teen Study Bible…it’s been such an awesome leading of the Lord.
The thing for me about Santa are the songs that basically teach that he’s sovereign. “He sees you when you’re sleeping, he knows when you’re awake.”
The other thing for me was that I didn’t want to lie to my children and spend 6-8 years telling them Santa was real (even by implication) and then having their sense of trust in me shattered when they found I’d been untruthful with them.
I remember as a child of about 8, telling my little friend that Santa wasn’t real, and her crying and going to ask her dad. He then stormed into the room, yelling at me and said, “Well..is JESUS REAL????!!!!!!!!!!!??????? I guess He’s not real either!!!!!!!! How do you know?!”
Truth was, at that point, I had nothing to stand on. My parents had lied to me about Santa. Now this adult was telling me they’d likely lied to me about Jesus, too.
I didn’t ever want that for my child, and God knew best. Our oldest is the most black and white thinker I’ve EVER known. Had we told him about Santa, he’d be questioning everything about Jesus right now.
So, I’m thankful for the fact that God knows our children way better than we do…and He can guide us in how they need to be raised, since He knows their future and we don’t.
I look forward to reading more on your blog.
Have a great day!
Jesica
Thomas Twitchell on 05 Dec 2007 at 10:56 pm #
Santa doesn’t exist?:-(
irreverend fox on 06 Dec 2007 at 4:24 pm #
hey…I grew up with Santa and look how good I turned out!
Mary on 08 Dec 2007 at 2:07 pm #
I must admit, although I became convicted as a young parent concerning the “lie” about Santa, I do believe it led to a level of honesty with my daughter that may or may not have been there without such honesty. I do not intend to lay a legalistic guilt trip on those who include Santa in the “holy”days, however, I personally believe we demean God’s character with secular inclusion; let’s be honest, Santa is an invention of the world and is thereby apt to be corrupt. Although Santa’s origin has evolved into a totally commercial avenue of “filthy lucre” for the mass retailers, the Spirit of the season must be determined by the individual. God’s Word tells His people:The church is called to love by God’s definition explained in 1 Corinthians 13:4. If we buy the most and best materially and have not love, we have done nothing of value!The acts of giving to those that already have may not be wrong except when we neglect the needs of those who have nothing materially. It appears that we have bought “the lie” of our culture’s advertisers and have raised several generations of “material girls and boys”.
Jim Garrington on 12 Dec 2007 at 11:16 am #
My son had me read this. (You can read his comments at http://www.xanga.com/cranekid). He said he never really believed in Santa, which got me wondering. We played the Santa game, and frankly, never got too worked up about it. My kids used to say, “You can always tell when Dad’s joking - he looks serious!” I suppose I always had my serious joke face on when we did Santa.
But we also did family Bible reading, prayer several times daily, and just in general tried to live day to day with our Lord. And Santa, the Tooth Fairy, etc. never became an issue.
Kids seem to be able to tell the difference between cartoons and real life. Santa, I suspect, belongs to the cartoon catagory. As long as I don’t insist that Bugs Bunny is alive and well and living in Anaheim, he shouldn’t be an issue.
Curtiss on 12 Dec 2007 at 11:44 am #
Your attitude is perfect! We have too many sour Christians who seem to think that God wants us to suck all the joy out of life and march around in our holy (holier-than-thou?) robes overspiritualizing everything! God invented fun and cheer just like everything else, so there’s nothing wrong with enjoying the Christmas holiday with it’s Santa and secular songs, so long as we also magnify Christ in our celebrations and in our lives!
Thanks.
Patty on 12 Dec 2007 at 11:54 am #
Santa & Halloween as we know them are creations of community leaders to focus us into celebrating in a scheduled way. This allows for jobs to be created, and products to manufactured on a time table with a deadline. This is not without merit. Halloween was actually conceived as it is now in the 40’s or 50’s to take the pumpkin-smashing wind out of “Cabbage Night’s” sails. My own father was involved in placing a Model T Ford on a neighbor’s porch roof! As I understand it, the powers-that-be with the business community created the holiday as we now know it to distract the wilder elements among us with, yes, CANDY. I really don’t have a problem with this. Admittedly, I have met my first professing Pagan here in Maine, but my neighbors, nearly to a man, do not celebrate Satan on Halloween. It’s an excuse to have fun, and don’t we need that now? If anything, I would object to the large scale push for dressing up as immodest or evil characters.
Has anyone noticed the across-the-board sea change in pop culture that started 3 years ago? There is not a TV show without a detailed description of sexual behavior or a 4-letter word, not a commercial without blatantly selfish motivation or a nearly totally naked body (and you all know what I’m talking about), not a movie to be “taken seriously” without the c-word in it.
I’m not trying to start a boycott. Negativity isn’t a part of God’s character. It’s God’s kindness that leads us to repentance. Luke Skywalker and Han Solo are too, you know, outer-spacey, but wasn’t it great to have a cultural sensation wash over us where there were a lot of good guys who worked together to successfully overcome evil? Do we have to drag Jesus down to human level? Christian theme parks kinda give me an uneasy sensation. It would be humiliating, and down-right dangerous to have Jesus coming down that chimney (what if Jesus couldn’t bring that pony?). I want to know where all the upright and creative Christians are? It’s time for a new Santa, or a motley crew of Santa’s who care about each other and everyone else! And not just for December.
Mary on 12 Dec 2007 at 4:13 pm #
Hmmmmm…wonder what God thinks about Santa? Isn’t that the point of decision? Of course He wouldn’t be jealous that we allowed Santa to upstage the Saviour’s birth, would He? Is He jealous for our UNDIVIDED attention? or is He cool with the fact that we rationalize our wordly connection because WE like the way Christmas makes us FEEL?
I heard a song today about a little boy asking who’s birthday we were celebrating and what did Santa have to do with that celebration? The commentary went on to suggest a 6 year old boy was having trouble figuring out the adult mind. I guess my overspiritual 53 year old mind has problems with the “joy” of selling out to the world’s game and it’s rules here. In this nation of super prosperity, what sadness we turn our dollar sign eyes away from.
Santa is man-made and has NOTHING to do with “O Holy Night” which is forgotten about the while standing in the eternal return line of Walmart exhanging your customary “wrong” size fits all gift. God’s gift to the world can never be relative to Santa and all His elves! Christians are called to come out from the world’s system and proclaim the GOOD NEWS of Jesus and Him alone. Give gifts as God blesses and directs and be real and honest about where they come from. 1 Thess. 2:3-4; Colossians 3:9. Must insert Scripture here, the truth you put into practice will make you FREE!
Merry CHRISTMAS! to all! Lovingly, your Sis
Patty on 13 Dec 2007 at 1:49 pm #
Each person in the Bible lived out their lives as unique individuals, and their examples are written down for us to follow and emulate. Paul says to imitate his good example. I think that this pattern of being, and becoming, examples of Godliness didn’t stop with Paul.
Santa (Saint Nicholas) was a positive Christian example. The sky’s the limit for us when we want to do good to our neighbor. To discount his life and love for the poor around him feels, to me anyway, small-minded and jealously petty.
Go out and do better than Paul! Go out and do better than Nicholas!! Get excited about the secret charity you can do, that will bring you riches in heaven!!! Give to people who can’t give anything back. Stop attacking “nice” things; go out and do tons of NEW nice things!!!! Go and honestly compliment a member of your church on something they have done well, and feel what Jesus feels when he ministers encouragement to you. Watch as you release that brother in Christ to do even more good work. What you do to the least of your spiritual family, you do to CHRIST. Believe it or not, if you take time to do the good things, you won’t have time to do the bad things, and neither will your local body.
We do not have time left in this world to be critical of other’s attempts at kindness, however flawed by lack of intellect or weakness of character. God will get the glory, people will ONLY know he is REAL, when YOU LOVE YOUR BROTHERS AND SISTERS.
It’s God’s kindness that leads us to repentance. Glory to his name.
Jason on 14 Dec 2007 at 1:45 pm #
Patty has the right idea.
For myself, when I run across those people who try to relegate Jesus to the same class as Santa Claus I object with “well I believe in Santa Claus.”
“You do?”
“Certainly, I believe in Nicholas, Bishop of Smyrna who was motivated by his love for Jesus and children to give gifts and provide for those in need. His example now motivates people to give gifts to others at Christmas time often while disguised in the trappings of that man of God.”
Saint Nicholas was a real man despite the Coca-Cola inspired wrappings. Jesus was (and is) a real man despite the Christianese (and pop culture) wrappings placed on him.
Share the love of Jesus this Christmas. But remember the same loving Jesus overturned tables in the Temple and drove out animals with a whip. He’s not a tame Jesus.
djeaton3162 on 15 Dec 2007 at 12:29 am #
Michael, I have a question. Since it might spark some debate, I posted it over on the forum. http://www.reclaimingthemind.org/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=261
Jason on 18 Dec 2007 at 2:55 pm #
Well I would join the forum, but neither of my email addresses are acceptable to the computer.
djeaton3162 on 18 Dec 2007 at 4:32 pm #
Sorry, Jason. The problem has been reported. Hope to have the forum issues resolved soon.