Let us discuss faith. If we look into the definition of faith. The Word of God says faith is “the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” We are given by God a certain measure of faith, and then as we mature that faith grows with us if we allow it to. But are there things in this world that begin to tear away at faith from the very beginning, and could some of those things even come from those we love? The following words are neither written in right nor wrong point of view but rather let each person make that decision for themselves.
In our homes and in church we are taught to believe in God and to believe in his only begotten Son. We are taught to believe in something that many have neither saw, heard, nor felt. Many of us in the faith now face children and young adults that seem to contain little or no faith and that rightfully burdens our hearts. Could it be something we have done as parents, or maybe not doing now?
How many things are we taught as children are real? Later on to find out that those things we truly had faith in and believed in were anything but real. For an example lets us the figure of “Santa Claus”. As Children we are taught to believe in a happy, jolly man that brings toys to good little boys and girls. That he lives in the North Pole and has a sled led by flying reindeer. We all know the story right? I can’t speak for everyone, but I know I believed in him. My parents told me he was real. I saw the evidence in the malls- I even sat on Santa’s lap. But the question is could this believing in someone and later finding out they are not real damage or even tear down faith in God and Christ Things such as the Easter bunny, the Tooth fairly and more are drove into our minds as children, and then later found to be false. Could these things affect us as adults? Could this be part of the problem in our youth? Could what most think as simply fun and imaginative creation lead to a hindrance to believe in something else, such as God, or creation? Could it be that evil has slipped in and disguised itself as good, or perhaps simply, people not really looking into the whole picture? Remember faith is believing in something we may not have ever seen, nor felt.
Do not misunderstand I deeply love the holidays. During Christmas, I love the beautiful lights and music. The feeling of happiness seems to glow from most everyone during this season. As Christians we celebrate the birth of our Savior Jesus Christ. People have spirit of giving and love during at this time that seems to radiate. As Christian parents we want our children to be able to have a positive relationship with God-amen. We want what is in their best interest, and would never do anything to hinder that in any way. This subject can cause great controversy, but it may be one that seriously needs discussed in our churches today. If there is anything in our lives or what we do that could in any way hurt our growth in maturing as Christian men and women, I feel each and everyone one of us would agree. It needs our attention. Take a moment today and ask the father how he feels, and let us all work to do all we can do for the building up of faith.
Richard A. Kent

This is a controversial topic, and I think every Christian parent needs to make their own decision about what it means to be in the world but not of the world.
Personally, I agree with you. I never tried to get my kids to believe in Santa Claus. I reason that if I lie to them about some things that they can’t see, then how can they believe me when I tell them about Jesus, whom they also can’t see.
My main problem with Santa Claus is that he doesn’t deliver. God, on the other hand, does answer prayer. And what God has to offer is infinitely better than the materialism that the Santa Claus story creates.
I would say believing in Santa Clause and the God of the Bible is the same, so it wont hurt your faith.