Click to Login or Sign Up

Baptist Message

"Helping Louisiana Baptists Impact the World For Christ"

Be sure to Vote -- Primary Elections, May 16

Click here to access more voting information

Click here for voter guide (LA constitutional amendments)

VIDEO: Closed Primary Elections in Louisiana

Be sure to Vote -- Primary Elections, May 16

Click here to access more voting information

Click here for voter guide (LA constitutional amendments)

VIDEO: Closed Primary Elections in Louisiana

  • John 3:16
  • About
  • Advertise
  • Archive
  • Cartoons
    • Joe McKeever
    • Beyond the Ark
    • Church of the Covered Dish
    • Fletch
    • Preacher’s Kids
  • Contact
  • Louisiana
  • U.S. & Intl
  • Facts & Finds
  • Culture & Society
  • Editorial

James Dobson

Can Santa and Jesus co-exist?

December 17, 2017

By James Dobson

Question: As a child, Christmas was always my favorite time of the year. I really enjoyed hearing stories about the birth of the Savior. I also have special family memories associated with the anticipation of Santa’s arrival on Christmas Eve.

I would very much like to offer these same happy experiences to my young children, but it seems many of my Christian friends think it’s wrong or harmful to include any mythical characters as part of the Christmas celebration. How do you feel about this?

Answer: My sentiments mirror yours exactly. Christmas memories are among the most cherished of all my childhood reminiscences. The fantasy of Santa Claus coming on Christmas Eve was an important part of the fun. I’m reluctant to deprive today’s kids of an experience that was so exciting for me.

On the other hand, I understand the concerns expressed by many Christian parents about the pagan celebration of Christmas. They don’t want to link Santa Claus, a mythical figure, with the reality of the baby Jesus who was born in Bethlehem of Judea. They have good reason to fear that they might weaken the validity of the Christmas story by mixing it with fantasy.

So this is the dilemma–Santa is fun, but Santa could be confusing. What are Christian parents to do? This is a judgment call to be made by a given family. Shirley and I chose to play the “Santa game” with our kids, and we had no difficulties teaching them who Jesus was and is. Other families regret mixing the two images.

What is best? I don’t know. But if I had to do it over, I would still let my children thrill to the excitement of Santa’s arrival down the chimney on Christmas Eve.

James Dobson is the Founder and President of Family Talk, a nonprofit organization that produces his radio program, “Dr. James Dobson’s Family Talk.” This editorial first appeared in Dobson’s blog.

Comments

Editorial

FIRST PERSON: The Fox in the Henhouse — Big Tech’s role in ‘regulating’ AI endangers children

By Gene Mills, special to the Baptist Message BATON ROUGE, La. (LBM) -- Big Tech is not your friend and does not share your family values. Now that I’ve said the impolite part out loud, let’s circle back to why that matters and what must be done about it. There are two significant and converging stories … Read More

Search

  • Recent
  • Must Read

Recent

FIRST PERSON: The Fox in the Henhouse — Big Tech’s role in ‘regulating’ AI endangers children

Report: Xi struggles to contain China’s Christian movement

Study: More than half of what Americans eat is ultra-processed

FDA shakes up leadership as pro-lifers hope for progress on abortion pill review

Must Read

Apologetics 101 (Part 4): Proof of the Tower of Babel

APOLOGETICS 101 (Part 3): The truth about “the” flood

LSU to post Ten Commandments in classrooms, president says

WMU search committee formed, seeking candidates for executive director

LCU President Mark Johnson inauguration

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yYnBP7g-Fuw

Copyright © 2026 · News Pro Theme 2.1 On Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in