Giving the Gift of the Gospel this Christmas
Published December 5, 2017
Even while our culture continues its acceleration away from Christendom, Christmas still remains one of the most likely time of the year for non-Christians to consider matters of faith. Here are a few tips to help you step out of your comfort zone and talk to non-Christians in your world about Jesus.
It was a Christmas Eve service in 1992, and I had been recruited to play the role of one of the young shepherd boys. With typical 90s seeker-sensitive flair, the night retold the birth of Jesus with skits, carols, praise banners, and awkwardness. Yet the gospel was preached and some who had been invited by friends responded by trusting their lives to Jesus. Why is any of this important? Well, because one of the people that night who responded to the gospel, was my Dad.Christmas comes with more opportunities to give people the gift of the gospel than any other time of the year.
You’re probably aware that Christmas is that magical time of the year when lights are up, stores are full, and millions celebrate the angel’s declaration of “peace on earth” by stressing out over the perfect gift or their imperfect family members. But what you may not be aware of is that Christmas is also the most likely time of the year for non-Christians to consider matters of faith. From the carols that are sung to the nativity scenes that are set up to the imagery on the front of Christmas cards, over the next few weeks Jesus will be placed front and centre in our cultural eye. Like my dad, many people are more open to Jesus during the Christmas season. While it is certainly true (and curious) that there are those in our culture who consider it an offensive social taboo to talk about Jesus during his birthday celebration, the bottom line for Christians is that Christmas comes with more opportunities to give people the gift of the gospel than any other time of the year. As we prepare to celebrate the incarnation of Christ into the world, here are a few tips to help you step out of your comfort zone and talk to non-Christians in your world about Jesus.1. REDEEM SANTA CLAUS
Whether you like it or not, Santa Claus is a part of the cultural landscape of December. And he’s not going anywhere. Apart from a few troubling stalker tendencies (“He sees you when you’re sleeping, he knows when you’re awake”!?), he seems like a pretty nice fellow who genuinely wants little boys and girls to try their best to be good. If they behave, they’ll have earned themselves a place on the nice list and be showered with presents instead of punished with coal.Santa is not the enemy. Santa is an opportunity.
Come to think of it, Santa would have been right at home with the Pharisees in Jesus’ day. Santa, like the Pharisees, has a fondness for rule-keeping, good behaviour, and rewarding high performers. However, the message of “try harder, do better” is not good news, and it’s not Christianity. It’s a depressing cultural distortion known as moralism, and is about as liberating as being chained to a treadmill and instructed to run to China. No matter how hard you try, you will find yourself in the exact same place—just more tired and cynical. But instead of seeing Santa as an opponent to be protested or a myth to naively endorse, Christians should see him as one of our greatest opportunities to astonish people with the gospel. Santa is not the enemy. Santa is an opportunity. Christian, you don’t need to condemn Santa. Just contrast him with Jesus. The gospel shows us that the true gift-giver is Jesus. The gospel turns the Santa-narrative on its head. In Ephesians 2:8, Paul reminds us that the unfathomable joy of salvation is the undeserved gift of God.Santa says, “Earn it.”
Jesus says, “Receive it” (John 1:12)
Santa says, “If you’re good, you’ll get my love.”
Jesus says, “Only my love can make you good” (1 John 4:10, Romans 4:5)
Santa makes a list and warns, “I’ll be checking it twice.”
Jesus fulfilled the list and declared, “It is finished” (Colossians 2:13-14, John 19:30).
The message of Christmas that every child and adult’s heart longs to hear is not “be good, for goodness sake!”, but that Jesus was good for our sake! The gospel is an explosion of hope that brilliantly outshines the dull moralism of Santa. By living the life we couldn’t live and dying the death we deserve to die, Jesus gives sinners on the naughty list (if you’re human, you qualify) the gift of God’s love. That’s news worth telling someone over the next few weeks.