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Christmas Lessons for Kids: Joy, Chaos, and Wonder

Christmas Lessons for Kids: Joy, Chaos, and Wonder


Episode 60


Let me try a completely different angle - maybe focusing on the desperation and confusion rather than the activities themselves:

Christmas Lessons for Kids: Joy, Chaos, and Wonder

That mom at Target asking how to make her kid care about Jesus instead of Christmas presents and I'm standing there with overpriced fake snow thinking I have no clue lady.

December hits and I panic every year. Kids lose their minds over presents. Parents expect meaningful lessons about incarnation. I'm supposed to somehow compete with Santa Claus and Amazon wish lists.

Tried wrapping random household items teaching about God's gifts. Kids ignored my spiritual metaphors begged for my throw pillow. Why did I wrap stuff I wasn't gonna give them? Connor asked excellent question I had no answer for.

Emma asked if Jesus had belly button middle of my incarnation speech. Actually smart question totally derailed everything but kids suddenly interested in theological details.

Nativity turned into costume crisis. Tyler melting down over wise man shortage. Emma refusing Mary cause dresses itch. Kids more concerned about wardrobe than baby Jesus.

Flashlight star thing became chase scene. Marcus climbing furniture trying catch light with his hands. Learned flashlights plus kids equals guaranteed chaos.

Cookie decorating worked cause sugar and busy hands. Tyler asking why God picked Mary while destroying angel with yellow icing. Sometimes accidents create better discussions than planned theology.

Showed real stable pictures instead pretty Christmas cards. Sophie wanted know why Mary didn't use hospital. Kids understand important things happen in gross places.

One candle in dark room actually got their attention. Simple beats elaborate when you're desperate.

Still don't know how balance Jesus with present obsession. Maybe real Christmas story more exciting than toys if I can figure out how tell it without losing them completely.

Christmas teaching feels impossible but kids deserve better than just holiday crafts with Jesus sprinkled on top.

*For anyone drowning in December expectations, teachers trying compete with Santa, people still figuring out how make ancient story relevant to present-obsessed children.
Check out KidsMinistry.Blog for more ideas, tips, and resources to help your Children's Ministry thrive!


Published on 4 days, 12 hours ago






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