Faith

In This Time of Giving, We Should Really Be Giving Our Time to Help Others

Dr. Gary L. Welton is assistant dean for institutional assessment, professor of psychology at Grove City College, and a contributor to The Center for Vision  […]
Dr. Gary L. Welton is assistant dean for institutional assessment, professor of psychology at Grove City College, and a contributor to The Center for Vision & Values. He is a recipient of a major research grant from the Templeton Foundation to investigate positive youth development.
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Christ is quoted, “It is more blessed to give than to receive.” Therein is one of life’s toughest lessons. How do we teach our children the habit of giving?

We know that social modeling is a powerful teacher. If we lecture our children on giving, yet portray a life of miserliness, there is little chance that our children will learn that it is “more blessed to give than to receive.” If our children will be able to learn to outgrow their selfishness, they must see our giving. Yet, not all giving is created equal.

I am a busy man, and, quite frankly, it is easier to write a check to the church or swipe a card for the relief agency than it is to get personally involved with the struggling people around me. Although the churches and relief agencies need the cash to assist during times of need—and there is good reason to provide charitable contributions in the form of cash—giving only money, without getting personally involved, does little to model the blessings of giving for our children. In fact, it is very difficult for them to get personally involved with giving cash, as cash is often one resource they have little of. In addition to cash contributions, getting personally involved is a very important component of the blessings of giving.

Many years ago, my wife convinced me that we needed to find some personal way to give at Christmas, some method of personally getting involved, and getting our children personally involved, in the exercise of giving. Through our church, we found Miss Edith. Miss Edith is an elderly woman who has outlived her family. Her brothers are all deceased; her sisters are all deceased. She has no children. She has no family except the church family. We added Miss Edith to our Christmas list.

Like your family, we have many holiday traditions that keep us very busy on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, but we added Miss Edith to that list. On Christmas Eve, we pack her presents in our car, and we drive to “the home.” We sit down with Miss Edith and look through her pile of Christmas cards, coming almost exclusively from the families in our church. We give her the presents. We sing Christmas carols with her. She has become part of our Christmas tradition.

Miss Edith is now confined to a wheel chair, and she slumps over in that chair. She falls asleep in the middle of the Christmas carols. Her memory isn’t what it used to be, so we have to remind her who the people are who sent the Christmas cards. Even though we now wrap her presents with only three small pieces of tape, we have to help her unwrap them, because she can’t quite handle the paper. Miss Edith has become a most important Christmas lesson to our family, as we are reminded anew, that indeed, “It is more blessed to give than to receive.”

Christmas is the time of giving, but giving requires that we give of ourselves. We need to learn the Christmas habit of personal giving, so that we can model and teach it to the next generation. That’s the simple lesson of Christmas giving, except for one other detail.

Although Christmas comes but once a year, Miss Edith’s needs are not so easily scheduled. We’ll visit Miss Edith on Christmas Eve, because Christmas is the time of giving. But the giving should not end there. We’ll be back again the next week, and the next week, and the week after that, because the giving of time should never be seasonal.

Comments (6)

  • universalphilos
    Posted on December 25, 2012 at 1:57am

    Spiritual messengers of God, December 1, 1978: “It makes little difference of the exact date of Jesus of Nazareth’s birth, only to the importance that God did bring forth this birth, as He did others. Be joyful then, and give the greatest gift you can give upon this Christmas Eve to one another — peace, love, hope, faith, and the belief in one another, the total belief, the complete belief within yourselves that the temple of God is not false, that temple lies within you. It is a miracle God performed for each of you, for there is not another like you, you, as each individuals, upon this great galaxy and galaxies and universes. You are a walking miracle. You are the proof of God’s existence.
    Glory be the name of the Lord; glory be the name of His children forever and ever.”
    https://docs.google.com/open?id=0BzyT3fgGxb4-T2hCTnViNS1nUnM

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    universalphilos  
  • deltaecho
    Posted on December 24, 2012 at 7:17pm

    My wife is disabled. My mother is 93. My father in law is 90 and my MIL is 80. I do all the errands and heavy lifting. I am happy that I can carry the load and pay the freight. Charity begins at home.

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    deltaecho  
  • hi
    Posted on December 24, 2012 at 6:09pm

    I love this article. It has inspired me! I especially believe old folks really need our time.

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    hi  
  • katzkiner
    Posted on December 24, 2012 at 4:08pm

    Now that we have Obamaville four more years we need to mobilize to help those who are going to be suffering. There are going to be a lot of homeless,hungry families withchildren.
    It made my heart cry to see women and children salvaging food out of dumpsters in Greece, it is already happening in America to. Gear up, America.

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    katzkiner  
    • cosette
      Posted on December 24, 2012 at 7:17pm

      Sorry folks… I’m on a different page now. As of Nov.6, 2012 I withdrew all charitable giving to all I used to help financially. I must start to store up for myself and my family. To those who fall on hard times I say this. This country decided to depend on the government for all they need so you must go there for help. The only charity i will continue to support is my local animal shelter. The animals have no voice.

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      cosette  
    • TAXEVERYONE
      Posted on December 25, 2012 at 8:54am

      Dear naive misguided Cosette. The people who need the most help, such as the elderly woman in this story, are not responsible for Obama’s election. Merry Christmas.

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      TAXEVERYONE  

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