CHRISTMAS IS NOT ABOUT GIFTS…IT’S ALL
ABOUT CHRIST!
Since we are increasingly
experiencing a COMMERCIALIZED CHRISTMAS in America, I thought it would be wise
to reprint an article by Miles Patrick Yohnke. Here it goes:
Recently, as I was cycling to my
destination I passed a park along the way. As I went by, I heard a male
voice. An old man was training his young dog. With a clear, strong,
yet tender voice, he taught his dog to sit and the dog did just as he was
commanded. With his leash on, they walked a few steps and repeated the
process. He praised his dog and I could see that the dog was very happy.
The man was teaching the dog that it
could be more. He taught the dog focus, discipline, and structure. What really struck me was that this took
time. AND HE TOOK THE NECESSARY TIME.
As I continued along my journey I
reflected on what I had witnessed, thinking how that man in the park took
quality time. He was there. He was getting the most out of his dog.
How fortunate that dog really was.
How often do we take the time to
teach our own children? We constantly hear echoes of, “I’m so busy, I
feel like I’m running on a treadmill. I’m
so stressed!”
Our modern world is inundated with
marketing and advertising that has one goal, and one goal only. That is
to make products so attractive that the consumer feels an obsession to possess
them in order to feel special, fulfilled or popular. Children and teens
need to understand the powerful attraction that marketing can create.
They must learn to differentiate between what one truly needs and what
one only wants.
And we must teach the children
well. We need to teach them that advertising exists so that individuals
or big corporations can make money. Because of that, advertisers use
powerful methods to convince consumers to buy products. We must
teach our children how media corporations need paid advertising to stay on the
air or to continue publishing. We need
to show them how advertising convinces people to want something,
even if they don’t really need it. We must discuss this because our
families are confronted by powerful and attractive advertising, whether on
television, radio, newspapers, magazines, or billboards.
We should discuss how advertising
tries to make you feel better about yourself if you own a certain product or
convince you that other people will like you better or think you’re “cool.”
We should explain that shopping
should seldom be seen as a fun pastime, but rather something people should do
to buy items they truly need.
Help your children observe how many
times a day your family is exposed to advertising. For example,
there are ads on the sides of buses, in arenas, on radio and television, on
billboards, etc. Teach them to understand when a television or radio
station tells you to tweet them or post to their Facebook site, that
they are only doing so to create traffic hits to their own website that will
increase their revenue. Show our youth that advertising tries to
create an image of what a person should (or should not) look like,
even though this image quite often does not reflect reality.
Here is the alarming thing: Do
parents really know the difference between needs and wants? And, if
so, do we love enough to speak truth to our children (and to ourselves) even
when it is uncomfortable or unpopular? Parents and grandparents, we must
refuse to retreat to that old mindset of “I’m busy, I’m running, I’m
stressed.” And we need to forge genuine connections with our offspring,
our real-life legacy.
These days, most married couples both
work full-time. Perhaps, as an indirect result, divorce rates have soared
to all-time highs and tag-team parenting has become the order of the day.
Parents feel overwhelmed. And frankly, much of this is centered on
how to pay their rent or mortgage, or for the miscellaneous stuff in their
homes, or for their vehicles, clothes, vacations, holidays, and on and on.
For the most part, we no longer understand the core values of life
or the real meaning of life.
Ask yourself this question today: Do
I actually need to keep up with the Joneses, or am I acting as a child and
merely wearing an adult face?
WOW…thank you Miles Patrick
Yohnke! You have given us significant truths which we should ponder and
pray about. Don’t get me wrong, sisters and brothers, I love Christmas
just as much as anyone, and I, too, am thrilled with the opportunity to
purchase and distribute gifts. But as we celebrate this Advent Season,
let us make a solemn pledge in 2017, and let’s stay true to it: WE WILL
KEEP CHRIST IN CHRISTMAS!
Sisters and brothers, be continually blessed, and please
(above all else) MAKE SURE YOU ARE READY TO MEET OUR SOON COMING KING.
Maranatha!
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