30 Ideas for a Christ-Centered Christmas

by Vanessa Myers
Christ-Centered Christmas

Christmas presents, tree trimming, Christmas parties, Christmas caroling, baking cookies…that’s what we do at Christmas, right? These things and more have become our Christmas traditions. But sometimes we get so caught up in doing these things that we forget about focusing on Christ and helping our family to have a Christ-centered Christmas

If you are like me, you want your family’s focus during Christmas to be on the birth of Jesus, which is the whole reason why we celebrate Christmas.  So, what can you do to help your family have a Christ-centered Christmas?

Here are 30 activities you can do with your family to keep Christ at the center of your Christmas:

1. Celebrate Advent

Advent is a Christian season where we wait and anticipate and prepare our hearts for the birth of the Messiah.  Advent means “coming”, and we are waiting for the coming of the King.  To help families at my church celebrate Advent, I gave out Family Advent Bags so they could help their families have a Christ-centered Christmas.

2. Help Decorate your Church for Advent

Volunteer your family to help prepare the church for Advent. Decorating the church can be a fun family activity!

3. Set up a Nativity in each room of your home

Put one in each room if you can. Use a kid-friendly one (like Fisher-Price) so your kids can play with it.

4. Hide & Seek with Baby Jesus

Take the baby Jesus from one of your Nativity scenes and hide Him each day.  Have your kids find Him every morning.

5. Family Devotion and Prayer Time

A great time to do this is around the dinner table. Faith5 makes a great bookmark highlighting ways to have a family devotion. Implementing these easy ways will help your family stay focused on Christ. 

6. A Stocking for Jesus

Hang a stocking in your home with Jesus’ name on it.  Fill it with notes of prayers to Him.

7. Family Craft or Baking Night

Search Pinterest for a fun nativity craft you could make together. Or try out your favorite Pinterest Christmas cookie recipe.  Hang the craft in your home and deliver the cookies to a neighbor.

8. Visit a Live Nativity

Check out your local churches to see who does a live nativity and attend one. This is a great experience for your kids to see the Nativity story come to life!

9. Take a Census of your Family

Talk about what a census is. Use this as an opportunity to map out your family tree. Then open your Bible to Matthew 1 and show your kids the family tree of Jesus.

10. Christmas Card Prayers

Put the Christmas cards you get in a basket on your table. Draw out one each morning and each night and pray for that family.

11. Watch a Charlie Brown Christmas

If your kids are able, help them memorize and recite the meaning of Christmas that Linus says in the movie:  Luke 2: 8-14.

12. Watch a Nativity Story

This movie would be a good one to watch with your older children.  To see a clip of it go here:  The Nativity Story

13. Give 3 Gifts to Jesus

On three sheets of paper, have each family member write down one thing per sheet that they want to give to Jesus or what they want to do for Jesus this year. Wrap them in three boxes and put them underneath the tree. Open on Christmas Day and share what everyone wrote.

14. Write a Personal Christmas Card

Send a handwritten Christmas card this year to someone sharing your favorite Bible verse and a prayer for them.

15. Bake a Birthday Cake for Jesus

Bake a Jesus birthday cake.  Sing Happy Birthday to Jesus and eat the cake!

16. Buy Gifts for a Family in Need

To find a family who needs help for Christmas, check with your pastor or school social worker.

17. Sing Christmas Hymns and Song

Break out in song around the piano or put on your favorite Christmas album and sing loud for all to hear!

18. Read the Nativity story from Luke 2:1-20

19. Family Blessings                                                                        

Sit around the fire at home, drink hot chocolate and talk about the blessings that God has given your family this year.

20. Prayer Hearts                                                                            

Cut out hearts for each child in your family. Write a prayer to God on a heart for each child (and spouses can do one for each other or you can allow everyone to write a prayer on each heart). Wrap them and place them under the tree and open them on Christmas morning.

21. Christmas Day Surprise                                                          

Buy a gift for a family and deliver to them on Christmas Day

22. Make a Gift for Your Pastor                                                   

Take time to thank your pastor for all he or she does to lead your church.

23. Take a Family Hike

Pretend like you are Mary and Joseph on their way to Bethlehem. Ask your kids questions about what it must have been like for them as they prepared to have a baby and had to travel a long way.

24. Jesus Name Tags

Place a Nativity set on your dinner table. Buy a set of “Hello My Name Is…” name tags. Write down one name of Jesus found in Isaiah 9:6 on each name tag (Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace, Emmanuel). Place one name tag on your family table next to baby Jesus each week of Advent as a reminder of Jesus.

25. Make a Jesse Tree or a Chrismon Tree

This type of tree is filled with religious symbols: cross, fish, crown, shepherd’s crook, manger, lamb, angel, star and many more. Jesse Trees and Chrismon Trees are a great addition to your Christmas decorations.

26. Attend a Christmas Eve Service

This has always been a Christmas tradition in my family.  I love going to church on Christmas Eve and celebrating the birth of Jesus. If your church doesn’t have one, find a church in your area that does.

27. Make Nativity Scene out of Play-Doh

This can be a fun activity for your younger kids. Have them make all the characters out of the nativity story. Afterwards discuss each person and their story.

28. Go Caroling with your Family

Grab a few other families and go caroling! This is a fun way to spread the joy of the birth of Jesus to others.

29. Read Christmas Love Letters from God

My friend, Glenys Nellist, has written a book called Christmas Love Letters from God.  It tells the story of the birth of Jesus and provides a lift-the-flap letter on each page, as well as one at the end of the book that allows the kids to write their love letters to Jesus.  Read one story each night the week before Christmas.

30. Use The Shepherd’s Treasure instead of Elf on the Shelf    

Don’t like Elf on the Shelf?  Try the The Shepherd’s Treasure. It’s the same concept of the Elf, but it has religious meaning. It keeps your children focused on helping the shepherd find baby Jesus and the true meaning of Christmas. I absolutely LOVE this book!

I hope this list will give you some ideas of how to have a Christ-centered Christmas. Maybe this list will help you start some new traditions this year that center around Jesus’ birth. May your family experience His birth and the celebration in a wonderful way this Christmas season!

More Christmas and Advent ideas for your family:

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2 comments

Sam November 1, 2017 - 1:48 am

Wonderful ideas Vanessa! So glad I came across this post – I’ve been looking for posts like this for a long time and haven’t found any 🙂 I love the idea about giving presents to Jesus too – how lovely!! 🙂

Reply
Vanessa Myers November 1, 2017 - 5:12 am

Thanks Sam!!

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