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Merry Christmas?

WHOSE BIRTHDAY IS IT, ANYWAY? - The centerpiece for [this year’s] campaign to get Christians to re-evaluate how they celebrate Christmas is this photo by Phil Claeys. The artwork and other resources are available from Alternatives for Simple Living, 5312 Morningside Ave., P.O. Box 2787, Sioux City, Iowa 51106; phone: (712)274-8875 or (800)821-6153; Web site: www.SimpleLiving.org. Photo distributed with permission courtesy of Alternatives for Simple Living.

Why a separate page for Christmas? Because that's the season that has been most distorted from its original intent. Christmas items can be found already on display by Labor Day! The commercialism of Christmas also is very hard on the Earth. Here are some resources for planning a more meaningful Christmas celebration for your congregation.

Christmas Campaign Planning Guide
Hundred Dollar Holiday
Simplify the Holidays
Unplugging the Christmas Machine sermon

“Whose birthday is it, anyway?” is the Christmas question asked by Alternatives for Simple Living, an advocacy group that favors simple living as an antidote to societal ills such as credit cards, personal debt, shopping malls, big SUVs, depleting the earth’s resources, and not spending time with family. A UMNS graphic by Doyle Burbank-Williams, courtesy of Alternatives for Simple Living

Christmas Campaign Planning Guide

The Alternatives for Simple Living organization provides a Christmas Campaign Planning Guide to help your church have a more Christ-centered, less commercial Christmas.

Hundred Dollar Holiday by Bill McKibben

This little book, Hundred Dollar Holiday: The Case for a More Joyful Christmas started as a project for the author's rural Methodist church in the Adirondacks. It's $12 - or less if you buy a used copy on Amazon or elsewhere. Bill McKibben is a prominent author on environmental issues as well as a United Methodist layperson and Sunday School teacher.

Simplify the Holidays

The Center for a New American Dream has a Simplify the Holidays website. This site has suggestions for alternative gifts, alternative gift fairs, gift tips, and a free brochure.

Alternatives for Simple Living encourages people to focus on "relationships and traditions instead of mass-produced things," in this artwork by Robby Mason. Since 1973, Alternatives has been "equipping people of faith to challenge consumerism, live justly and celebrate responsibly." The organization stresses simplicity throughout the year and for all holidays, but the commercialization of Christmas is its major target. A UMNS photo courtesy of Alternatives for Simple Living

A heartwarming story of a non-commercial Christmas gift might be good sermon material.

There are a number of useful non-commercial gift ideas in the "Post your gift ideas" for ideas from other people. You may want to post some of your own!

In addition, on the menu at the left of this New Dream webpage, there is a link to very clever Alternative Christmas Carols.

Unplugging the Christmas Machine

Here's a sermon "You're a Keen One, Mr. Grinch: Unplugging the Christmas Machine" by Rev. Robin Zucker.

 

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