3 Things Every Child Should Know About Christmas

David RayAdvent, Christmas, Family, Kids, Ministry, Musings, PreschoolLeave a Comment

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It’s summer in Houston. We hunker down in our homes, air conditioners wheezing out tepid air under the weight of the 115-degree heat index. We venture outside at our own peril.

So what better time to talk about Christmas?

Christmas isn’t a monolithic monument, standing alone on a pinnacle. It is a junction on the journey of God’s love for His people.

But in a sense, this is the perfect moment to have this conversation. Christmas isn’t a monolithic monument, standing alone on a pinnacle. It is a junction on the journey of God’s love for His people. A road runs into it. A road runs out of it. And each of us must walk this road in its fullness to understand God’s extraordinary love for ordinary people.

That’s why we’ve spent the last six months crafting the incredible new five-lesson Unto Us Kids Christmas Curriculum with our friends at 12:30 Kids. We want each and every child to understand the true story of Christmas and take this journey with us!

Here are three things we want every child to know about Christmas:

Christmas Means God Keeps His Promises

The story of Christmas doesn’t begin with the words, “In those days, Caesar Augustus issued a decree.” It begins, well, at the beginning: “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.”

It continues through a man laying his son on a sacrificial altar, only to find instead a ram caught in a thicket. “God himself will provide the sacrifice,” Abraham had promised.

It meanders through a shepherd boy turned Shepherd King downing a giant to save his people. “The whole world will know there is a God in Israel,” David proclaimed.

It endures through a prophet sent by God himself to a wayward, calloused people. “The people walking in darkness have seen a great light,” Isaiah wrote.

At every step of the way, God’s promise endured as his people waited. The season of Advent preceding Christmas helps us remember this eager anticipation.

God keeps his promises. Each and every one. And Christmas is the proof positive.

Then, finally, God’s promise found its fulfillment in Jesus. “No word from God will ever fail,” the angel pledged to Mary. “Just as he promised,” sang Mary after she heard the news. “Lord, as you have promised,” cried Simeon as he held the infant Jesus in his arms.

God keeps his promises. Each and every one. And Christmas is the proof positive.

Christmas Shows God’s Love for Ordinary People

Our culture is obsessed with assigning value to people based on the most superficial things. All of us – our children included – are caught in a death spiral of comparison: our looks, our talents, our follower counts and post likes. In a world that glorifies the extraordinary, many of us can feel awfully ordinary.

God doesn’t care about who is following us. He wants us to follow him.

But the Bible is clear about where our value comes from. We are dearly loved children of God. And he doesn’t value the same things everyone else values. “People look at the outward appearance, but the Lord looks at the heart,” God told Samuel right before he anointed David.

God doesn’t care about who is following us. He wants us to follow him.

And when God was sending his Son into the world, he was true to his word. He chose an ordinary peasant girl to be Jesus’ mother, and a simple carpenter to be his earthly father. For the birthplace of the Savior, God chose the same ordinary town where Samuel anointed David centuries before. And the first to hear the news? A group of lowly shepherds on the outskirts of society.

God loves to use ordinary people to accomplish his extraordinary plan. All he needs is a heart that is ready to say “yes” to him. That’s just the right kind of ordinary.

Christmas Isn’t the End of the Story

Just as the Christmas story doesn’t begin, “In those days, Caesar Augustus issued a decree,” it doesn’t end twenty verses later: “And the shepherds returned glorifying and praising God.”

If we tell the story of the baby, but not the story of the Savior, we’ve missed the Good News!

The promise wasn’t simply that a Messiah would come, but that he would save his people from their sins. The road that leads from Bethlehem winds its way to a hill topped with three crosses, and a garden with an open, empty tomb.

We can’t comprehend Christmas without understanding its purpose. This Messiah came to be an atoning sacrifice, to become the way for us to know God and be part of his family. If we tell the story of the baby, but not the story of the Savior, we’ve missed the Good News!

So What Now?

These three messages are at the core of our new Christmas curriculum. We love coming alongside leaders as you teach these precious truths to the children in your church.

The Unto Us Kids Christmas Curriculum is filled to the brim with simple, useful tools:

  • Five interactive lessons full of rich, biblical content
  • Opening and closing videos featuring Dave and Jess from Doorpost Songs
  • A unique Advent Passport to keep kids coming back each week
  • Five Christmas songs with videos and hand motions from Doorpost Songs
  • Five fun Christmas-themed games from 12:30 Kids
  • A boatload of activities and craft ideas
  • Five animated Bible story videos
  • Custom media and ready-made presentation files

(You can view a sample lesson here.)

But more importantly, it’s filled with the message every child needs to hear this Christmas. God always keeps his promises. He loves ordinary people just like you. And he made a way for you to know him through Jesus.

Now that’s a story worth telling! (Even in the Houston summer.)

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About the Author

David Ray

David Ray is a worship leader, artist and songwriter from Houston, Texas. He and his wife, Jess, are the creators of Doorpost Songs, a series of songs and resources designed for kids worship, multi-gen worship, and family worship. Dave and Jess are the parents of three rambunctious kids and they love getting to serve churches and families across the nation.

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