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What The Poor Really Want For Christmas

December 7, 2014 by Kristen

“Okay, help me pick a family,” I told my kids as we stood at the table at the back of the church and looked over the spreadsheets. Each one had several names and ages of children, with their shirt and shoe sizes listed. Next to each name was a single toy suggestion for Christmas. It’s our church’s annual version of an Angel Tree for needy children in our community.

As we looked over the families to “sponsor,” I could hear my youngest read the items on the list. Barbie doll, she whispered, and with her finger she moved to the next name, Music CD.

“Mom, is this all they will get for Christmas?” she asked.

I could tell she was trying to understand need in her world of more than enough.

We finally chose 3 kids near the ages of mine who loved music. Three kids just like mine.

This time of year, there are so many opportunities to give something to someone in need. And I’m first in line. Angel Tree-yes; Food Pantry-count us in; Fair trade gifts that employ women, you bet, dropping of secret Santa gifts to a needy family-wouldn’t miss it.

What better way to remind my kids–and myself–how much we have than by teaching them to share with those who have less?

Perspective changes Christmas. It not only shows us the needs of others, it shows us our need.

And with her finger pointing to a girl’s name, just about her age, she asked, “Is this all she wants for Christmas?”

“No, honey. She wants much more than what’s on that list. She and millions like her want one thing for Christmas:

They want to be remembered.”

What the Poor Really Want for Christmas

We live in a culture that lives in excess. We have so much and we want so much more. It’s so easy to get sucked in and think everyone lives the way we do:  Everyone spends money decorating their homes, everyone bakes 8 varieties of holiday cookies, everyone gets the best cyber deals and everyone has the opportunity to make Christmas magical for their kids.

And it’s easy to forget those who don’t live like “everyone” else.

I love traditions and magical moments as much as the next person and I don’t think we should necessarily forego or forget these special holiday moments. But at the same time, we must remember the poor. When we hang our stockings with care, we must not forget those hanging on by a thread. When we bake and eat treats and sweets, we must not forget those with empty stomachs. When we light up our tree and our house, we must not forget those who live in darkness.

you have not lived

And if we look around us, we will see the poor in our communities and across the globe.

This is real balanced living.

If we were all made rich alike, if God had given us all abundance, we should never know the value of his mercies, but he puts the poor side by side with us, to make their trials, like a dark shadow, set forth the brightness which he is pleased to give to us in temporal matters,” Spurgeon said.

The poor don’t want a handout this Christmas.

They don’t want platitudes.

They don’t want pity.

They don’t want our crap.

They just don’t want us to forget them.

Because do you know what really happens when we take care of someone who cannot take care of themselves?

We see the face of God.

When we spend our lives remembering the poor, they aren’t the only ones who receive a gift.

“Whoever gives to the poor will not want.” -Proverbs 28:27

Challenge: From now until Christmas, buy in twos (one for your family, one for another). Give and give a little more. You won’t be sorry.

This is Christmas.

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Leave a Comment Filed Under: Family

An Advent Roundup

November 19, 2014 by Kristen

I'll never forget eight December's ago when I had my youngest child seven weeks early. Gifts weren't bought or wrapped, stockings weren't hung with care. I wasn't prepared. That year changed Christmas for me.  Most of my adult life, I had overdone Christmas-bought too many gifts, spent too much money, focused on the temporal and not the eternal. But that year, I had to let so much go and focus all my energy and strength on what really mattered. Christmas has never been the same. It's ... Read More

Leave a Comment Filed Under: Home

Dear World: Let’s Stop Giving Our Crap to the Poor

October 13, 2014 by Kristen

I was getting ready to leave for a trip to Kenya a couple of years ago, when a church emailed and asked if Mercy House had any specific needs. I quickly responded and told them I wanted to give Maureen, our Kenyan Director, an iPhone, so we could communicate during (almost weekly) power outages. I told them if they would buy one instead, we could use the money for other needed items. On the church's Facebook feed a few days later, I saw an appeal that said something like, "We want to support ... Read More

Filed Under: My Life

What We Eat On Mondays and Why It Matters

October 5, 2014 by Kristen

We eat the same meal at home on Monday nights for dinner. We aren't in a rut. It's not gourmet and there aren't any secret ingredients. We are being intentional. Most of the world doesn't have the luxury of having a pantry and refrigerator full of food with dozens of options. Meat is for the wealthy and fruit is a delicacy. What better way to remind our kids how much we have than through their bellies? We eat rice and beans every Monday, so we can remember how the rest of ... Read More

Leave a Comment Filed Under: Family

Raising Daughters in a World that Devalues Them: 7 Things We Must Tell Them

October 1, 2014 by Kristen

I took my daughter shopping one night over Spring Break. It's flip flop and shorts weather down here in Texas about 10 months out of the year, not to mention my girl gets taller every minute. She passed me up months ago. Shopping with my teenager should be fun. And mostly it is, except for the actual clothes-shopping-part. It's so hard to find modest clothes. My teen doesn't even ask for the shorty shorts any more, even though it's challenging to find anything but in the stores. "Why do ... Read More

Leave a Comment Filed Under: Parenting

What We Need to Say to the Mean Girls

September 21, 2014 by Kristen

"I asked my friend if she would fold me a fortune teller out of paper like she did for the other girls," my daughter told me after school. "But she said she only makes them for her prettiest friends," she said and her lip quivered. That girl is not your friend, I whispered in her ear. It's my second time to have a second grade daughter and this isn't our first rodeo with mean girls. But that doesn't make it any easier. I hugged my little girl and reminded her that not only was she ... Read More

Leave a Comment Filed Under: Parenting

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