| This story is posted for those who have
had a hard time observing Christmas again and feel grieved in what their
children lost. Its purpose is not to make anyone feel guilty, or to
think they now need to observe this holiday. Exiters are free to decide
whether they want to observe it, and exactly how they want to observe
it. Christ accepts us on the basis of His righteousness, because of His
all atoning sacrifice for us, not because of any works on our part.

I've gone through a lot of sick
feelings1 in regard to Christmas. By "sick" I mean not feeling
good emotionally. I know that I, like many other exiters, jumped into
Christmas too soon and too fast, and later went backwards with the
entire situation. I want to tell you about what it has been like for me
to try to connect back to observing it in my own household after
exiting,
and how it has caused me to later grieve certain things.
When December rolled around
(after leaving
Worldwide Church of
God), I thought about keeping Christmas. I knew it wasn't
wrong to spend time with our families at that time of year, but it was hard
after almost thirty years of not observing it to start up again. I ended
up sending out lots of cards that first year to people--a number of them
to people I hardly
knew at my new church. But I felt good doing it.
Finally, about two years later, I decided to buy my first small
artificial tree and dressed it to the max, over-covering it with long
icicles and blinking lights. I baked and wrapped presents and taped cards
to the wall when they arrived. (I know now I was trying to recreate the time
I remembered from my childhood.) I began to notice, however, that with
each year I started to feel "sicker" with all of it.
Even getting out a box of cards and attempting to address them was
causing me to experience very pressuring feelings. When Christmas
day was over with, I felt the need
to take everything down as quickly as I could.
As a child, I had experienced simple, happy
memories of Christmas, but none of it seemed to connect with
what I was trying to do now. All I was aware of was the "sick"
feelings arising every Christmas when I began to involve myself in it.
So I
decided I didn't want to take any decorations out until about one or two
weeks before Christmas, put up very few, and then take them down the day
after Christmas and get them out of my sight since they were beginning
to look gaudy in my mind. I would even switch sometimes
to a one foot high Christmas tree on a stand instead of decorating the larger one.
I doubted I would ever feel any different and wondered if it was worth
it all.
I now am sure that the reason I
experienced these feelings was because of all the years that HWA and his
ministers drilled into my head, year after year, article after article,
sermon after sermon, about Christmas being "a sin" because it
"came from paganism." I had trained myself to look the other way
when I saw decorated trees or Christmas lights and presents. I even
remember how the set-up crew in our congregation would place folding French doors
every December in front of the Christmas tree (that the school had placed there),
in order that no member--especially the children--would
stare at it during the sermon. To look at it was "evil" they
said. I told my children not to look when we drove past
a Christmas tree that was lit up and they suddenly said, "Look, how
beautiful!" I was afraid of a tree and what it might do to our
minds.
In the WCG, I quickly turned the radio or TV off if I heard
Christmas carols being played. I had to make sure nothing of Christmas
whatsoever entered my mind. After all, it was "a materialistic,
pagan day" and I could
hardly wait until it was over with. I felt the people
who bought presents were "covetous and greedy." I knew nothing about
quiet family gatherings of those who kept it simple and who shared some of
their abundance at that time with the poor and needy. I taught my
children that it
was all based on "lies." I knew nothing about those who used
the season as an opportunity to share Jesus and His love and salvation
to lost souls.
This is not to say that
Christmas has always been enjoyable for families that were outside
"the church." I know now that even other cults and strict religious
churches torment their children by telling them they "won't receive
any presents if they are bad." Much misery surrounds
every holiday--and every holy day we observed. How many remember fights at the
Feast of Tabernacles? (the time of the year that was supposed to be the
"happiest") Weren't there bad incidences that took place in
motel rooms, or in vehicles, that no one else knew about? How many got
drunk at the Feast, or even drank too much? How many over ate? How many
didn't want to go to services or visit others because they were too
tired, or just wanted to be alone? How many were treated badly by their
"true church family"? How many really were alone emotionally
at the Feast and no
one understood that loneliness, or the trials they were going through?
It's not just at Christmas that these things happen, and it's not just
the "Santa Claus lie" that damages children. It's a lack
of love and mercy that damages others.
I remember a WCG member one
time making fun of Christmas and saying that "after it's over with,
everything just stops." What did she think happened at the
Feast? We also acted in similar ways like people did at Christmas time:
buying presents, shopping in ritzy stores after we arrived, getting
together with "family," acting happy, spending money, eating
lots of fine dainties--and when the Feast was over with, everything also
came to an end ("just stopped"). Many members were so full of criticism and pride
toward
other Christians
outside of "God's church" that they couldn't see
themselves.
When my children
were young, my mother would mail presents every December for them. She
knew I didn't observe Christmas so she didn't wrap them in Christmas
paper, but I think she was hoping they might receive at least some
little present beforehand. And what did I do? I hid those presents until
January and gave them to them then. How foolish and how wrong that
was! Not only to my mother who loved me, but to my children. I couldn't see how I was allowing a "day" to come between
myself and my true family who continued to love me all the years I was in WCG. I
hindered my own children from having the happy times I remembered as a
child.
For many years after leaving the WCG, the Christmas
season was a time when I experienced deep feelings of grief because of knowing what I had
deprived my children of all those years. I later apologized to each
of them in a heartfelt way and they understood, but it was too late to give them
the fun, innocence, and wonderment I experienced when young, not only at
Christmas, but on every holiday. No one but a loving God could
really understand these feelings of grief and sorrow that weighed me
down and "sickened" me even more.
Christmas is especially a time for
children. I remember a doll and a doll house with toy people that I
played with for hours. I remember a purple satin dress for church, a monkey my
grandmother made, and a wonderful small, toy piano. These were all
sitting out under the tree when I came down the stairs on Christmas day.
I remember the toy xylophone
which I took up to my bedroom that day and played on it "Joy to the World."
The stocking I hung was filled with
oranges, nuts and fancy candy. As a child, it was the most wonderful day
of the year for me. How could any of this that only brought joy be
"foolishness" or "evil?" After leaving WCG, I've had to face the
memories of a wasted past and what I failed to give my children. My
children were never told about how Jesus came to die for them that they might have
eternal life.
They were only told how "bad" Christmas was and how
"good" "God's church" was. My children missed out on the most
important gift of all and that was telling them about Jesus and His
love.
Today I am still working
toward making Christmas
a simple, but happy time in my house--a time for togetherness and peace with those
I love. I still buy few
presents and send out few cards, but for the first time I can say I am
able to enjoy listening to some Christmas carols again. I decorated the tree
differently this year (blue and white) and when I look at it, it doesn't
bother me. It's only a tree. As each Christmas rolls around, the "sick"
feelings fade more and more into the background, but I will always
remember the happy Christmases I had when young and what I threw away. I
am getting beyond the grief created by
Herbert Armstrong and his
damaging lies. I have begun
anew with each of my children. We are a closer family today and they are
now enjoying with their children what they never had growing up. The present moment and
my unconditional love toward them is what counts in the end.
By Shannon (former WCG member)
December 1, 2003
Last updated December 10, 2004
Footnote:
1These
type of feelings are often tied in with traumas suffered from being in WCG.
Note: If any exiter has
had questions or concerns about Christmas being pagan,
see how this has
been answered on our Q&A's.
The Gradual Process of
Bringing Christmas Back Into Our Family
Poems/Free Verse &
Comfort in Music (comfort for the broken hearted; no audio)
Books: Spiritual Comfort
Back to
Personal Stories About Grief
|