Turning Holidays into Holy-Days

You know they’re coming. You can feel it just as certain as the slight chill you sense each Fall morning. And when they come, you hope you’ll be able to hold on in the battle of time, diet, and onslaught of company to retain your sanity and sense of humor. But isn’t there more to the holidays than all of this? Is there any hope of making this year’s holiday season one full of peace, joy, and happiness? Can the holidays really become holy-days?

Here are a few tips that can make the difference in your household:

  • Keep your focus clear. Believe it or not, Thanksgiving was not about a turkey dinner (with apologies to grocery store owners). Nor is Christmas about getting, or even giving gifts (with apologies to retail store owners). Nothing wrong with food (I love it!), nothing wrong with giving or receiving gifts (I love them too!). But, the truth is that the first celebrations of these holidays had entirely different meanings than how we now think of them.

Thanksgiving was to celebrate the provision of God through the harsh seasons of the early years of the Pilgrims. God supplied through the Indians, and through the work of the people. Christmas celebrates the birth of the Christ child, given freely by God for the salvation of the world. The early church took an existing celebration and used it to mark a moment of quiet awe at the gift of God. This year, determine in advance that you will keep thankfulness in your Thanksgiving and awe in your Christmas.

  • Do something to meet the needs of others. The quickest way to break the cycle of destructive, hectic, holiday madness is to meet the needs of someone less fortunate than you. When you participate in a feeding program, when you give clothing to those who need it, when you wrap a gift (new!) for a needy child, you break the cycle of self-absorption that our culture is so capable of fostering. And by the way… if you have children—make sure they participate with you. Children are uniquely susceptible to the self-absorption of our time.  And, children are uniquely able to understand the difference between their heightened sense of “want” at this time of year and the very real “need” of others when they see it up close and personal.
  • Participate in a meaningful holy-day observance. I know you may not be religious. But, the holy-days have a way of providing meaning and value to life that is often absent in the rush of our world. Take time this season to be with people of faith. Share some moments where you can hear the Christmas story in all the wonder and awe of the first century. Risk a moment of faith in your hurry-up world. See with awe and majesty what God can do when you risk a single step.

“And without faith, it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him” (Hebrews 11:6).

POSTED ON November 26, 2018

Comments are closed.

Dr. Jackson has served as the president of William Jessup University (WJU) since 2011 where enrollment has more than doubled during his tenure. He earned his Ph.D. in Educational Administration and Organizational Studies from the University of California, Santa Barbara. His strong background in executive and organizational leadership has given him the opportunity to come alongside churches and business leaders throughout the nation to assist in furthering their organizational leadership and communications skills. He has spoken in national and global settings, taught and lectured in undergraduate and graduate classes and is an author of six books on leadership and spiritual formation.