Redeeming or Retreating?
Most holidays suffer from insufferable commercialism and superficiality in these dark times. Occasionally Christians respond by retreating from the holiday as a whole. I wonder if this is really the best course of action, however, especially when young children are present; I wonder if it wouldnāt be better to redeem the holidays instead.
While not addressing the issue directly, Scripture does hint at the latter response. After all, Jesus encountered the same crass commercialism in his day. During the Passoverāwhat should have been a time of joyful celebration of Godās continuing faithfulnessāhe enters the Temple precincts and drives out those who were all too clearly worshiping Mammon instead (Mark 11:15-17). The connections to our contemporary celebration of Christmas seem too obvious to draw. But notice that he does not then abstain from commemorating Passover, but instead invests it with new, rich meaning when he celebrates the Last Supper with his disciples. Can we do the same?
If our purpose as parents is to teach our children as much about God as we can in the short time we have with them, can we afford to spurn such wonderful opportunities to do thatāall in the name of pious asceticism? Paul said, āBe very careful, then, how you liveānot as unwise but as wise, making the most of every opportunity, because the days are evilā (Ephesians 5:15-16). Here are opportunities to share something of Godās goodness and greatness in a way that speaks powerfully to children.
Consider Valentineās Day, which passed by last week. Undoubtedly this holidayālike Christmas, Easter, Thanksgivingāhas descended into a pit of inanity and outright sin. But its simple message, uncorrupted by the world, proves biblical enough. To celebrate loveāboth human and divineāseems decidedly Christian. Why not redeem this holiday by teaching our children not about superficial, tawdry, spurious romantic love, but rather about the incomparable love of Godāand the resultant love of Christians for one another? Our daughter, age three, loves Valentineās Day because, like most kids, she loves celebrations. But the message she heard was the Lordās: āI have loved you with an everlasting loveā (Jeremiah 31:3). I would not want to miss an opportunity like that.
Scripture enjoins celebration (Exodus 23:15-16; Esther 9:28; Psalm 145:7; Luke 15:23). Throughout her history, Israel celebratedāoccasionally wildlyāGodās remarkable faithfulness (e.g. Exodus 15:1-21; 1 Kings 8:62-66). Let us take advantage of these days of celebration to dazzle our children with Godās goodness and grace. That is the power of redemption, not retreat.