Thank you for reading this modest newsletter.
My intention is to periodically send you some articles, links, and resources that you may find stimulating and suggestive --
articles that promote more simple, more faithful, more perceptive celebrations for the holidays and events we and our culture deem appropriate.
This is the time to plan for a congregational event to enable your members to explore new ways to celebrate Christmas this year.
It is not too late.
This edition of New Celebrations Newsletter explores the benefits of holding an Alternative Gift Market for your church and community. Read through some of the suggestions, check out some of the resources, and use these words to stimulate your thinking about what you can do in your situation.
Perhaps some of these suggestions will prod your thinking.
You are urged to explore some of the resources in this edition of NewCelebrations Newsletter. My wish is that, this year, you and your church will have the most meaningful Christmas celebration ever: that many will come to see, to know, and to celebrate Emmanuel in their lives as never before.
I would hope that you feel free to copy some of these resources
and circulate them among your church friends and other
acquaintances.
Clyde Griffith
On the world wide web at www.LiveAbundantly.com
__________________________________________________________________________
Consider Hosting an Alternative Gift Market
An increasingly popular idea that is being done at hundreds of churches throughout the USA is the hosting of an Alternative Gift Market. Typically, the market is hosted by a local church -- or group of churches -- and involves local, national and international mission and relief agencies.
The traditional Market takes place in a special location, like a church patio, fellowship hall, or a neighborhood community center. Colorful booths are set up representing the various
Alternative Gift projects. Gifts are purchased by persons attracted to the Market for projects in the U.S. and developing countries that are working to save lives and preserve our planet.
An Alternative Gift Market is a different kind of shopping experience. Gifts are purchased in honor of family members and friends in a market setting. Instead of buying a box of candy for Aunt Mary, a shopper at this market might purchase health care for children in Kenya or purchase a solar powered computer for a classroom in the Dominican Republic. Then Aunt Mary gets an attractive card telling her about the life giving present given in her honor.
An alternative
to the Tradional Market is an Online Market whereby a church can pick a
project to fund and set up an online campaign. The church then promotes
an online link to their Alternative Gift Online Campaign. Check it out.
Alternative Gifts International helps you think through the process and offers a bevy of materials to help you.
Check out their web site: https://alternativegifts.org/
________________________________________________________________________
Alternative Christmas Community Festival
An Alternative Christmas Community Festival is a concrete, exciting way to offer ideas and support for those who want to have more meaningful Christmas celebrations. It is also a positive way to introduce the need for change to people unaware of the problems connected with the way we celebrate Christmas.
Many churches organize alternative Christmas events in the fall to encourage alternative giving and to help members simplify their celebration. The four basic plans are:
1. Sell crafts and clothing from the Third World.
This encourages Fair Trade and the second pillar of Voluntary Simplicity: Learn from the World Community.
Family and friends get beautiful gifts at reasonable prices.
Third World artisans get a better price for their work through these volunteer fairs and shops than through similar commercial importers.
2. Encourage people to give funds to worthwhile organizations in someone else's name instead of a purchased gift.
The gift is doubled - for the recipient of the funds and the recipient of the honor. Usually a gift card goes to the honoree telling something about the recipient organization.
3. Hold a workshop on alternative ways of celebrating Christmas.
Such a workshop goes beyond gifts, to the "why's" and "how's" of celebrating Christmas. Use the classic "Unplug the Christmas Machine: A Complete Guide to Putting Love and Joy Back into the Season" ($10) and "Leader's Guide to 'Unplug the Christmas Machine' Workshop". The Leader's Guide is available as a free download here.
4. Set up an alternative gift site on your web page and promote it to church members and friends.
Several alternative programs have made this easier. Check out my favorites:
Presbyterian Gift Catalog https://presbyteriangifts.org/
Heifer Project International https://www.heifer.org/
Koinonia Farm Store https://koinoniafarmstore.com/
SERRV International https://www.serrv.org/
Ten Thousand Villages https://www.tenthousandvillages.com
________________________________________________________________________
Featured Book Review
Simplify Your Christmas: 100 Ways to Reduce the Stress and Recapture the Joy of
the Holidays
By Elaine St.James
Simplify Your Christmas was published in 1999, but is still available at amazon for basically the cost of postage. In it Elaine St. James shares-in brief, easy-to-read essays-a variety of tips that will help readers deal with the seasonal overload. For example, Just Say No to Elmo, Eliminate Turkey Torpor, and Slay the Secret Santa.
A reader from Ohio writes:
"This book is chock-full of great tips for reducing the stress we all feel at holiday time.
How much should we spend on our tree?
Did I get the kids enough presents?
What do I get for Aunt Sue THIS year?
How can I get out of the office party without riling the boss?"
One of my favorite section begins on Page 29 with "Take a Poll". Here, you're encouraged to ask your family members how they really feel about your holiday traditions. What traditions do they like enough to keep doing? Which are painful, boring or ridiculous enough to dump?
Another home run is found on page 87: Rethink your Christmas Card Tradition. St. James gives good advice on how to give your holiday mailing list (why not apply this advice to your Christmas gift list, too?) a liposuction treatment. And, all without guilt!
This book is intelligent and certainly seems to have a wide audience. Frankly, anyone with financial concerns (do you still want to be paying Christmas credit card bills next July?), time
restraints (wouldn't you rather spend the time taking your kids to the movies?) or emotional issues (if the hoidays are supposed to be peaceful, gracious and dignified, then why am I so
depressed?) should find St. James' advice helpful. Try just 10 of her tips and your life this December will improve.
I liked this book so much that I'm going to give IT for Christmas!
For more information, and/or to purchase this book, click here:
________________________________________________________________________
Invitation to Share
PLEASE, PLEASE, PLEASE, pass New Celebrations on.
New Celebrations is meant to be a clearing house, a resource, of practical information folks can use. The idea is that we could all use some help in overcoming the mass-merchandising influences of how we celebrate the holidays and events in our lives.
New Celebrations Newsletter is intended to be shareware.
As Arlo Guthrie pines: When one person does something, it is pretty much ignored.
When two people join in doing something, people raise their eyebrows.
When three people get together to do something, it becomes a movement...
Our celebrations CAN be more faith-full and less stress-full.
Help spread the word. Forward this message to everyone you can think of.
__________________________________________________________________________
Check out our Web Site: NewCelebrations.com .
Sunday, October 14, 2018
Saturday, October 6, 2018
NewCelebrations NewsLetter 2018-3
New Celebrations:
Alternative Resources for Discovering and Celebrating Emmanuel
Throughout the Year #3
Welcome to New Celebrations Newsletter 2018-3!
Thank you for reading this modest newsletter.
My intention is to periodically send you some articles, links, and resources that you may find stimulating and suggestive -- articles that promote more simple, more faithful, more perceptive celebrations for the holidays and events we and our culture deem appropriate.
In his book Hundred Dollar Holiday and in his workshops, Bill McKibben reminds us:

Because it might help us see how to change every other day of the year, in ways that really would make our whole lives, and maybe our entire 365-days-a-year culture, healthier in the long run....
If there's one way in which the world has changed more than any other since 1840,...it's that we've become such devout consumers. That consumption carries with it certain blessings... and certain costs...
[T]he greatest cost may be the way it's changed us, the way it has managed to confuse us about what we really want from the world.We weren't built just for this life we find ourselves leading - we were built for silence and solitude, built for connection with each other and the natural world, built for so much more than we now settle for. Christmas is the moment to sense that, the moment to reach for the real joys.”
Perhaps some of these suggestions will prod your thinking.
You are urged to explore some of the resources in this edition of NewCelebrations Newsletter. My wish is that, this year, you and your church will have the most meaningful Christmas celebration ever: that many will come to see, to know, and to celebrate
Emmanuel in their lives as never before.
I would hope that you feel free to copy some of these resources and circulate them among your church friends and other acquaintances.
Clyde Griffith
________________________________________________________________________
Christmas Planning Workshop
Good for an early fall event to explore the church's role in celebrating Christmas.
Jo Robinson and Jean Coppock Staeheli suggest the following format:
1. List the church's traditional Christmas activities and consider these questions:
Who is responsible for planning and carrying each one out?
Who is each of the programs designed to benefit?
Which work well?
2. What should the church's goals be at Christmas?
Take some time to dream about creative ways the church could be a more
positive force in restoring the meaning of the celebration.
How well do your current holiday activities further your goals?
3. Formulate specific ways to reach these goals.
You may wish to take these questions into consideration:
How can the work involved in these activities be redistributed to relieve
hardworking church members and include new, lonely, or single people?
How can ongoing church responsibilitiesbe reduced so that church leaders
can spend more time with their families?
How can church sermons and education classes reinforce the ideas
generated in this planning session?
(From Unplug the Christmas Machine: A Complete Guide to Putting Love & Joy Back Into the Season -- explore this idea and many others in the book.)
_________________________________________________________________________
New Christmas Celebrations
Here are just a few of the ideas presented in Unplug the Christmas Machine that churches around the United States have come up with to make their church programming more consistent with the spiritual meaning of Christmas:
Make Large Poster of Christmas Pledge. Encourage members to sign.
Decorate Tree.
Begin the season with an undecorated tree.
Each family that does an act that expresses the Christmas spirit is
entitled to bring an ornament to put on the tree.
Christmas Past.
Have children interview grandparents for stories of Christmas long ago.
Print the stories in special church newsletter.
Father-Children Gift Wrapping Session.
Ask all the fathers and their children to bring family presents and wrapping
paper to a special gathering.
Change Gift Giving Day.
Encourage the exchange of gifts on St. Nicholas's Day, December 6,
rather than Christmas Eve or Christmas Day, to save the true holiday for
religious expression.
Cut Christmas Expenditures by 10%.
_________________________________________________________________________
Check out our webpage: NewCelebrations . . .
Sunday, September 30, 2018
NewCelebrations NewsLetter 2018-2
New Celebrations:
Alternative Resources for Discovering and Celebrating Emmanuel
Throughout the Year #2
Clearly, it is not too early to start thinking about how we may celebrate Christmas this year.
You can be sure the "Christmas machine" is well underway with its plans to affect our Christmas celebration.
To have any impact,
to have any influence,
to have any hope of celebrating Emmanuel,
we need to make our plans now.
A good way to begin is to make a list of what was done last year at your church, or in your family. As you evaluate your list, make a pledge to add ONE MAJOR activity this year -- along with what ever other actions you may deem do-able.
You are encouraged to have a brain-storming session with yourself,
with your key church leaders,
with your family,
with whomever will participate.
Perhaps some of these suggestions will prod your thinking.
You are urged to explore some of the resources in this edition of NewCelebrations
Newsletter.
My wish is that, this year, you and your church will have the most meaningful
Christmas celebration ever: that many will come to see, to know, and to celebrate
Emmanuel in their lives as never before.
I would hope that you feel free to copy some of these resources and circulate them
among your church friends and other acquaintances.
Clyde Griffith
________________________________________________________________
Preparing for Christmas 2018: Plan New Major Activity
Depending on what you are currently doing, plan an event to extend the reach of
your Christmas doings. Look at what others are doing. Perhaps you will find
something here that stimulates your thinking. Remember, plan now so an event
can be held early enough to make a difference for celebrations this year.
Plan a workshop around the theme: Unplug the Christmas Machine.
Through this workshop your church will help its members create more rewarding,
more spiritual, and less stressful celebrations. Participants have an added benefit
of being able to function as a built-in support group for each other during the
holiday season. Highly recommended! Try it!
(Free Leader's Guide Resource available at Simple Living Works.
Plan a workshop around the theme: Whose Birthday Is It Anyway?
This most excellent resource was published each year with new material for 26 seasons!
Many churches use the contents of this publication for a church-wide workshop.
Others make varied use of it by Sunday School classes, special children's activities, and other events.
All 26 issues are available free for you to pursue and use from Simple Living Works.
Plan a workshop around Bill McKenna's Hundred Dollar Holiday: The Case for a More Joyful Christmas.
This is an excellent resource for stimulating thinking about planning holiday
celebrations around what is really important. Although now out of print, Amazon is still showing plenty plenty of used hardback editions for $4.99 (including shipping).
(There will be more about this particular resource in a later edition of the New Celebrations Newsletter.)
Plan to host an Alternative Gift Market.
Stimulate thinking about new ways of celebrating by hosting an alternative gift market for your church and community. Churches that have done this report excellent benefits.
A whole issue of the New Celebrations Newsletter will be devoted to this topic later next month.
_______________________________________________________________
A Christmas Pledge
Prepare, publish, promote and promulgate a pledge for your church members to use.
(Use this to spur the development of your own pledge.)
Believing in the true spirit of Christmas, I commit myself to
Remember those people who truly need my gifts
Express my love in more direct ways than gifts
Examine my holiday activities in the light of my deepest values
Be a peacemaker within my circle of family and friends
Redidicate myself to my spiritual growth
(From Unplug the Christmas Machine: A Complete Guide to Putting Love & Joy
Back Into the Season)
_______________________________________________________________
Check out our webpage: NewCelebrations . . .
Alternative Resources for Discovering and Celebrating Emmanuel
Throughout the Year #2
Clearly, it is not too early to start thinking about how we may celebrate Christmas this year.
You can be sure the "Christmas machine" is well underway with its plans to affect our Christmas celebration.
To have any impact,
to have any influence,
to have any hope of celebrating Emmanuel,
we need to make our plans now.
A good way to begin is to make a list of what was done last year at your church, or in your family. As you evaluate your list, make a pledge to add ONE MAJOR activity this year -- along with what ever other actions you may deem do-able.
You are encouraged to have a brain-storming session with yourself,
with your key church leaders,
with your family,
with whomever will participate.
Perhaps some of these suggestions will prod your thinking.
You are urged to explore some of the resources in this edition of NewCelebrations
Newsletter.
My wish is that, this year, you and your church will have the most meaningful
Christmas celebration ever: that many will come to see, to know, and to celebrate
Emmanuel in their lives as never before.
I would hope that you feel free to copy some of these resources and circulate them
among your church friends and other acquaintances.
Clyde Griffith
________________________________________________________________
Preparing for Christmas 2018: Plan New Major Activity
Depending on what you are currently doing, plan an event to extend the reach of
your Christmas doings. Look at what others are doing. Perhaps you will find
something here that stimulates your thinking. Remember, plan now so an event
can be held early enough to make a difference for celebrations this year.
Plan a workshop around the theme: Unplug the Christmas Machine.

more spiritual, and less stressful celebrations. Participants have an added benefit
of being able to function as a built-in support group for each other during the
holiday season. Highly recommended! Try it!
(Free Leader's Guide Resource available at Simple Living Works.
Plan a workshop around the theme: Whose Birthday Is It Anyway?
This most excellent resource was published each year with new material for 26 seasons!
Many churches use the contents of this publication for a church-wide workshop.
Others make varied use of it by Sunday School classes, special children's activities, and other events.
All 26 issues are available free for you to pursue and use from Simple Living Works.

This is an excellent resource for stimulating thinking about planning holiday
celebrations around what is really important. Although now out of print, Amazon is still showing plenty plenty of used hardback editions for $4.99 (including shipping).
(There will be more about this particular resource in a later edition of the New Celebrations Newsletter.)
Plan to host an Alternative Gift Market.
Stimulate thinking about new ways of celebrating by hosting an alternative gift market for your church and community. Churches that have done this report excellent benefits.
A whole issue of the New Celebrations Newsletter will be devoted to this topic later next month.
_______________________________________________________________
A Christmas Pledge
Prepare, publish, promote and promulgate a pledge for your church members to use.
(Use this to spur the development of your own pledge.)
Believing in the true spirit of Christmas, I commit myself to
Remember those people who truly need my gifts
Express my love in more direct ways than gifts
Examine my holiday activities in the light of my deepest values
Be a peacemaker within my circle of family and friends
Redidicate myself to my spiritual growth
(From Unplug the Christmas Machine: A Complete Guide to Putting Love & Joy
Back Into the Season)
_______________________________________________________________
Check out our webpage: NewCelebrations . . .
Saturday, February 10, 2018
Reclaiming Lent
We need Lent . . .
Traditions are the vehicles by which faith, values and the fundamental sense of
what is really important is passed from one generation to another.
The effort to keep Christian and pagan traditions separate is a continuing struggle for
Christians. Traditionally, Lent has played an important part in this struggle.
Originally a season of fasting and penance for new converts preparing for baptism on Easter Eve, Lent is a period of 40 days from Ash Wednesday to Easter.
Sundays, days when fasts could be broken, are not included in the 40 days.
The 40 days of Lent correspond to Jesus' 40-day fast in the wilderness in preparation for his ministry.
When Christianity became the state religion of the Roman empire in the fourth century, the foundation of the church was endangered by throngs of new untutored members. Identification with Jesus through the lenten fasts and practices of self-renunciation was meant to counter the paganism of these new converts.
Lent became a time of re-commitment; a time to ward off the threat of assimilation into the popular culture.
As in earlier days, Christians today are threatened with becoming a part of the popular culture. In fact, assimilation has already occurred to such a degree that it is hard to tell what differentiates Christian faith from popular culture.
The popular celebrations of Christmas and Easter are poignant reminders of this dilemma. In addition to the annual Easter clothes, card, flower and candy blitz, attempts by business to make Easter a "Second Christmas" has spawned an Easter-oriented toy industry and a massive live-animal business, with millions of rabbits, baby chicks and ducks sold each year.
"What happened on the third day?" asked one church school teacher to a group of preschoolers one Easter morning. "The Easter bunny brought eggs," was the immediate and unequivocal reply.
We need Lent! Lent encourages us to look within ourselves to see how we have confused popular cultural values with Christian faith.
Through a sustained focus on the life and ministry of Jesus, Lent can help us resist the pressures of this culture. Lent can remind us that we are called to continue his ministry:
"As the Father has sent me, so I send you" (John 20:21). Consequently, Lent prepares us for an Easter that is more than bunnies and eggs, an Easter when we celebrate God's great act in raising Jesus from the dead.
Adapted from a piece published by Alternatives no longer published.
Tuesday, November 21, 2017
Making ThanksGiving ThanksLiving
The days are shorter, the nights are longer. The autumnal sun dances through the colored leaves – it’s as though God had this in mind all summer long.
It is right, and quite natural, for us to feel a certain thankfulness for all the blessings that come our way – especially at this time of year.
Thanksgiving is one of the most universal of holidays. And, as you may have heard me say before, it may also be one of the most Christian.
Locked behind cell doors, Paul admonished his new Christian followers to be thankful in all things.
For us Christians, thanksgiving is a calling.
It is an attribute of the life we seek to live.
It is a definition of a way of seeing ourselves in relation to our God who created us, redeems us, and sustains us through the trials and tribulations that have a way of showing up on our life-journey.
Notice, the Ten Commandments do not start with “Thou shalt not...”
But, rather with, “I am the Lord God, who brought you out of Egypt, therefore . . .”
The entire Mosaic Law is to be followed as an act of thanksgiving. The basic understanding is that because God is God and enables marvelous things to happen and continues to be involved in my life and in the world around me, therefore, I can do nothing other than live in gratitude.
We Christians live in thanksgiving for what God has done and continues to do for us.
For us, thanksgiving is really thanks-living.
The Psalmist could sing: This is a day the Lord has made, let us rejoice and be glad in it! Greeting each day with thanks for another chance to live and to love is a very Christian thing to do.
It is not without merit that many writers refer to ingratitude as the most basest of sins.
Even Shakespeare could write:
I hate ingratitude more than lying, vainness, babbling, drunkenness, or taint of vice.
Thanksgiving reminds us of how much we owe to forces outside of ourselves.
It behooves us to take an inventory of our blessings and offer up thanks in all things.
This year, expand your thanksgiving thoughts to thoughts about thanks-living.
Sunday, July 2, 2017
Lest We Forget: The Role of the Preacher in the American Revolution
Folks in colonial America heard sermons more than any other form of communication.
The colonial preacher was prophet,
newspaper,
video,
Internet,
community college,
and social therapist all wrapped in one.
Their influence on all aspects of life in those days was so great, that even contemporary television and personal computers pale in comparison.
Day after day,
week after week,
ministers drew the people into a rhetorical world that was more compelling and more immediate than the physical settlements surrounding them.
Sermons taught not only the way to personal salvation in Christ,
but also the way to temporal and national prosperity for God's chosen people.
Events were perceived not from the mundane, human vantage point
but from God's perspective.
The vast majority of colonists were Presbyterian
to whom things were not as they might appear at ground level:
all events, no matter how mundane or seemingly random, were parts of a larger pattern of meaning, part of God's providential design.
The outlines of this pattern were contained in Scripture and interpreted by discerning pastors.
Colonial congregations saw themselves as the "New Israel,"
endowed with a sacred mission that destined them as lead actors in the last triumphant chapter in redemption history.
Check it out: http://www.newcelebrations.com/independencedayusa.html
The colonial preacher was prophet,
newspaper,
video,
Internet,
community college,
and social therapist all wrapped in one.
Their influence on all aspects of life in those days was so great, that even contemporary television and personal computers pale in comparison.
Day after day,
week after week,
ministers drew the people into a rhetorical world that was more compelling and more immediate than the physical settlements surrounding them.
Sermons taught not only the way to personal salvation in Christ,
but also the way to temporal and national prosperity for God's chosen people.
Events were perceived not from the mundane, human vantage point
but from God's perspective.
The vast majority of colonists were Presbyterian
to whom things were not as they might appear at ground level:
all events, no matter how mundane or seemingly random, were parts of a larger pattern of meaning, part of God's providential design.
The outlines of this pattern were contained in Scripture and interpreted by discerning pastors.
Colonial congregations saw themselves as the "New Israel,"
endowed with a sacred mission that destined them as lead actors in the last triumphant chapter in redemption history.
Check it out: http://www.newcelebrations.com/independencedayusa.html
The American Revolution Was a Religious Event
It is significant for us to remember, many historians agree that when understood in its own times,
the American Revolution was first and foremost a religious event.
At the forefront of the revolution were the preachers.
Think about the influence of the preachers:
Over the span of the colonial era, American ministers delivered approximately 8 million sermons, each lasting one to one-and-a-half hours.
The average 70-year-old colonial churchgoer would have listened to some 7,000 sermons in his or her lifetime, totaling nearly 10,000 hours of concentrated listening.
No matter what denomination,
folks in colonial America heard sermons more than any other form of communication.
Check it out:
http://www.newcelebrations.com/independencedayusa.html
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