Christmas—Does It Cost
More Than You Think?
“MOMMY, Daddy—is there really a Santa
Claus?” It is the moment of truth that many parents dread. With a mixture of
disappointment and hurt in his eyes, seven-year-old Jimmy begs for reassurance
that the fantasy figure who brought all those wonderful presents really exists—and
that his parents have not lied to him.
As it turns out, the little boy next door was
the culprit who revealed the awful truth and put these parents in this awkward
position. Perhaps your childhood memories include a like episode.
Today’s holiday celebrations are much more
than just religious observances. Christmas, it seems, has worked itself into
some unlikely places. Japanese Buddhists, African animists, American Jews, and
Singaporean Muslims alike have opened the door to the rotund, red-suited man
bearing gifts. One religious leader asked, “Has not Christmas become a
universal holiday observed by all?”
In the eyes of many, Christmas has shed its
Western “Christian” costume and become an enchanting time of festive fun for
all. Children are at the heart of the celebration. Some people would dare to
say that no child’s life is complete without the magical fun of this holiday.
Seemingly, it is here to stay. School curriculum revolves around it. TV glorifies
it. Malls and department stores parade it. Parents pour much time and money
into Christmas. But besides the usual aftermath of burdensome debt, is there a
heavier price your family may pay?
The Santa Myth—Breach
of Trust?
“I don’t believe there is a God,”
seven-year-old John told his mother. A World Herald article
explains why: “John, it seemed, had learned earlier that day that Santa Claus
wasn’t real. Maybe God wasn’t real either, he told his mother.” Recalling his
early disillusionment, 25-year-old John said: “When parents tell children Santa
is real, I think that probably is a breach of trust.”
What to do about this delicate situation?
Child experts disagree. One encouraged parents to tell their children the truth
by age six or seven, warning that “it may actually be harmful to their psyches
if parents persist in perpetuating the myth.”
In the book Why Kids Lie—How
Parents Can Encourage Truthfulness, Dr. Paul
Ekman states: “There is no doubt that you as parents have a major influence on
your children when it comes to attitudes, beliefs, and social actions such as
lying or cheating.” Ekman continues: “Relationships may not be the same once a
lie has violated trust. The loss of trust is difficult to repair; sometimes it
is never reparable.” So why carry on deception when it comes to holiday giving?
One child researcher asserted: “I think
children are more traumatized by parents lying to them and deceiving them than
they are about finding out that Santa Claus isn’t real.” Dr. Judith A. Boss,
professor of philosophy, states: “The intention of adults . . . is to
deliberately mislead children about the nature of Santa Claus. . . .
In telling children Santa Claus is a real human, we are not engaging children’s
imaginations. We are simply lying to them.”
If you are a parent, you have a gigantic
challenge on your hands—to raise loving, happy children in a world where they
learn from an early age that people cannot be trusted. “Don’t talk to
strangers.” “You can’t believe everything the TV ad says.” “Tell them Mommy isn’t
home.” How does a child learn whom to trust? The book How to Help
Your Child Grow Up says: “Little children must
learn early the necessity and beauty of honesty, of courage, of honorable
dealing with others; and home is where these have their beginning.”
Of course, there is no such thing as the
perfect family. However, author Dolores Curran set out to identify the
character of strong families. She asked 551 family specialists in various
fields to choose the most important aspects. Her findings, in the book Traits
of a Healthy Family, discuss the top 15 qualities
selected by the experts. Trait number four was “a sense of trust.” “In the
healthy family,” she says, “trust is recognized as a precious possession,
carefully developed and nurtured as both children and parents progress through
the various stages of family life together.”
Parents do well to ask, ‘Is the perpetuation
of the Santa myth worth the price of my child’s confidence and trust in me?’
There may be no refund possible. Does Christmas have other hidden costs?
Too Much Giving?
“Begin with infancy to give the child
everything he wants. In this way he will grow to believe the world owes him a
living,” says the pamphlet 12 Rules for Raising Delinquent
Children. Overemphasizing material things can indeed be harmful.
Writer and parent Maureen Orth asks, “How do
we instill values and character in a material world such as ours, where
consumption and greed seem so glorified, often unwittingly?” In the article “The
Gift of Not Giving,” she laments: “Our toddler-emperor believes presents are an
everyday occurrence—like getting the mail.” Is this the real message of
Christmas?
What of families who simply cannot afford the
lavish gifts hawked as Christmas musts? How do those youths feel when they hear
that Santa brings presents only to good children? And what about youngsters in
broken homes who are made painfully aware of the gap in their families at
holiday time?
“All too often the highlight of the holiday
gathering is opening the presents,” says The New York Times.
“That emphasis gives children the message that presents are what the family
gathering is all about and sets them up for disappointment.”
Love is an even more fulfilling motivation to
do good. Glenn Austin, author of Love and Power: Parent
and Child, states: “In a harmonious family where the child both
loves and respects the parent, the child may behave in an approved way to
please the parent.” Jehovah’s Witnesses work hard to create such a warm cycle
of love in their homes. Additionally, the children of Jehovah’s Witnesses are raised
to know and love the God they serve, Jehovah. What a powerful force in their
lives for the doing of good! They need no mythical figure to extort good works.
Jehovah’s Witnesses cherish their children as
gifts from God. (Psalm 127:3) Hence, instead of waiting for the calendar to
govern gift giving, these parents can give presents throughout the year. At
such times it is difficult to tell who is more thrilled—the surprised youngster
or his delighted parent. The child knows where the gift came from. Further,
Witness parents are encouraged to give frequently the gift of their time. For
when a little girl is feeling sad or lonely, how can a roomful of dolls compare
with a few moments spent wrapped in her mother’s arms listening to Mommy tell
stories about when she was little? Will a young boy be taught how to be a man
by a closetful of baseball equipment or by long, pleasant talks with his father
as they go for walks together?
This nurtured closeness can be lifesaving.
Child researchers have found that as the proverbial generation gap opens for a
youth, he becomes more strongly influenced by peers. Youthful misbehavior and a
deteriorating attitude toward adults go hand in hand. “But those who maintained
favorable views of their fathers and adults in general didn’t join with other
peers in misbehaviors.”
Jehovah’s Witnesses have at times been
criticized for not sharing in holiday fun with their families. It may appear
that the children of Jehovah’s Witnesses are deprived of this special fun. But
these sincere parents and children have sound Biblical reasons for abstaining.
(Please see pages 11-14.) And these youngsters are developing strong moral
fiber that will withstand the weight of peer pressure that crushes the will of
other youths. Morality is being washed away by the rising tide of wickedness.
Immoral sex, drugs, violence, alcohol, cults, child molesters—ever so many
dangers threaten vulnerable young people.
How can a parent shield a youngster from
these constant perils? From infancy Witness children receive consistent
training to lean on the strong moral laws of the Bible. Loving parents help
them to understand God’s view not only about holidays but about all aspects of
life. Obedience to their God springs from love and respect for him, even if it
means being different. Imagine how this must prepare them for successful young
adulthood! If a young child can sit in a class full of peers who are doing what
seems to be fun and take a stand for what he believes is right, how much better
he is able to withstand the later temptation of further seemingly fun things—drugs,
premarital sex, and other harmful enticements! The children of Jehovah’s
Witnesses may develop a moral fiber that many other children may be deprived
of.
“Many of the kids I’ve looked at don’t have
faith,” observes Dr. Robert Coles, Harvard researcher. “They have lost
everything except preoccupation with themselves, and this is enhanced every day
by the way they are brought up.”
A pediatrician describes a different family: “They
want kids who care about others and who give a little of themselves. . . .
They live a simpler life . . . , but they have something
else. For want of a better phrase, I’d call it contentment.”
Dolores Curran cites valuing service to
others as basic to happiness. “For some families in our nation [the United
States]—indeed most, I would say—success and pursuit of the good life is the
primary purpose.” But “families who presume that members can and will be caring
toward others become those healthy families who value service to others. . . .
As the children from these families grow up, they tend to be quite caring and
responsible persons as a result of their family experiences.” Curran notes
among successful parents “a return to the value of seeking joy in people and in
giving rather than in buying, taking, and consuming.”
Put another way by an outstanding expert on
giving, “there is more happiness in giving than there is in receiving.” (Acts
20:35) Witness families are living proof of this statement by Christ Jesus.
Like him their lives are centered on the Christian ministry. Some may feel that
Witness youths are being exploited and forced to accompany their parents from
door to door. Much to the contrary, they are being taught by parental example
how to show love toward their fellowman by freely giving to their neighbors
good news about God’s Kingdom.—Matthew 24:14.
‘Won’t It Stifle
the Children?’
But isn’t a strict religious upbringing
stifling to a young child? Isn’t it better to let religious decisions be made
by each one upon reaching adulthood? That may be rule number 3 of 12 Rules
for Raising Delinquent Children: “Never give him
any spiritual training. Wait until he is 21 and then let him ‘decide for
himself.’”
However, a child’s basic moral sense,
according to Dr. Coles, begins to bud as early as three years of age. “Within
the child there is a developing moral sense. I happen to think it is God-given,
that there is a craving for a moral order.” This is the crucial time for the
inculcation of the true moral values. It is the time, for instance, to teach by
example the value of truthfulness as opposed to lying. The Bible stresses the
importance of training during the youthful years: “Train up a boy according to
the way for him; even when he grows old he will not turn aside from it.”—Proverbs
22:6.
Curran observes: “Children today can’t be
expected to be moral without help. . . . My survey respondents
suggest that the healthier the family the more developed is their sense of
right and wrong.”
A social worker responding to Curran’s survey
observed: “There’s an inescapable core of strength that religious faith gives
families.” For the family with a shared religious core, Curran says, “faith in
God plays a foundational role in daily family life. A religious core
strengthens the family support system. The parents feel a strong responsibility
for passing on the faith, but they do so in positive and meaningful ways.”
Help Your Children
Feel Love for God
Show children the gifts of God that bring
them such joy. Lie on the grass and examine with them the tiny flower so
intricately designed. Watch the ladybug that emerges from this grassy jungle to
climb to the tip of a blade of grass, lift its bright red and black-dotted wing
covers, and fly away. Let them feel the breathless wonder as a butterfly
suddenly lands on a hand to raise and lower its bright yellow wings for a brief
rest and to soak up the warm sunshine. Roll over on your back to see the fluffy
white clouds sailing overhead, and watch as they change from ships to horses to
palaces in the sky. All the while point out to your children that it is our
Creator God who brings us such joyful gifts.
And many other gifts, such as the kitten
whose playful antics with a leaf leave us convulsed with laughter or the fuzzy
puppy that “attacks” us, head shaking from side to side, growling ferociously
as it tugs on our sleeve, yet with friendly tail wagging nonstop all the while.
Or a frolic in the ocean surf, a hike in the mountains, or a night gazing up in
awe at a sky packed with lights that twinkle and shine high overhead. Knowing
that these gifts and countless others are from the One who gave us our life,
being able to thank him for these gifts, feeling gratitude for knowing him—all
this brings joy to us and reflects a deep and appreciative love for him.
And finally on the family front, plenty of
hugs and kisses from Daddy and Mommy, which help children feel the warm glow of
security and thankfulness every day. Help them keep faith in Jehovah, rejecting
an even greater lie than the one about the red-suited Santa, namely, that all
these lovely gifts from God just happened, just evolved—a falsehood taught
without scientific evidence, unsupported by the scientific method, and
maintained only by a dogmatism repeated over and over again and again to flood
the minds of the young.
Share with your
children in frequent prayers to the greatest of Givers—at meals, when reading
his Word, at day’s end. Raise a grateful child, and that sense of appreciation
will sweeten every experience he has in life. He will grow to be a happy giver
himself in imitation of the true God and of the parents he loves. Then
happiness will come, not with the preset days of the calendar, but with the spontaneous
moments of sheer joy in living. “Happy is the people whose God is Jehovah!”—Psalm
144:15For more information please go to www.jw.org
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