A Christmas Decoration with “Substance” ~ Not Just Hot Air

It must be really confusing for children to try to understand this holiday that gets so much publicity. Not only are they given mixed messages from an ever-expanding array of sources, but most of those messages are nothing more than manipulative deceptions, and some make no sense at all. I encounter the “no sense” category every time I drive though our neighborhood, thanks to the arrival of ubiquitous, inflatable yard decorations on the Christmas scene. I refer to them simply as “blow-ups.”

There’s a Blow-up for That ~
When “smartphones” were introduced, they were accompanied by what soon became a vital necessity, the “app.” I recall one commercial that mentioned an array of commonly encountered challenges, and in regard to each one, repeated the phrase, “there’s an app for that.” Well, those inflated outdoor decorations that have now joined the brightly lit American landscape, heralding the arrival of the Christmas season would allow a similar response. In regard to any and every twisted notion of what Christmas is about, we could probably say, “There’s a blow-up for that.”

I’m not sure exactly when they made their debut, and I’m not curious enough to Google it, but this much is clear … At some point in the not too distant past, there must have been some sort of decorating crisis that gave birth to them. In spite of the willingness of the Chinese to crank out enough lights, tinsel, artificial evergreen trees, wreaths, and pre-lit garland to challenge the entire American power grid, it wasn’t quite enough. After all, the collective “observers of Christmas” in this country are resolute in their determination to visualize, dramatize, vocalize, theorize, and fantasize about every piece of Christmas minutia, new or used, real or imagined. Thus, any device holding the slightest chance of enhancing some aspect of the mystifying kaleidoscope of contradictory and confusing Christmas messages transmitted every year is fair game. So, queue the Christmas blow-up parade.

Blow-ups Aren’t New ~
There are blow-ups depicting manger scenes, frowning grinches, pointy-eared elves, Christmas trees, wise men, snowmen, camels, reindeer, polar bears, and, of course, Santa Claus, who is prone to invade any blow-up scenario, Biblical or otherwise. Many are much larger than life and rise as high as the housetops. Some folks love them, and others think they are evidence of another depressing step away from cherished decorating tradition. Either way, their popularity and proliferation shouldn’t surprise us, because human beings have always been prone to find ways to artificially inflate things. We love to make things look bigger and more impressive than they really are, and to create an image of substance that is totally lacking. We were doing “blow-ups” long before they became another colorful addition to the list of ways for the marketing predators of Madison Avenue to separate Christmas celebrants from their money.

I don’t mean to sound like I’m on some kind of campaign against blow-ups in particular, or Christmas decorations in general, but in our ongoing quest to insert a little “right side up thinking” in this “upside down world,” blow-ups have a message worth hearing. The fact that God sent His Son into the world had one foundational and overriding motivation. John said it with profound simplicity, “For God so loved the world…” (John 3:16a NKJV)

And speaking of love, there’s something noteworthy in Paul’s elaboration of what that concept looks like. He said that love does not “parade itself”, and that it “is not puffed up” (I Cor. 13:4). The word translated “puffed up” means literally to inflate something. There are obvious and profound contrasts between artificially inflated representations of things and those that are real.

Some Things Can’t Be Inflated ~
There is nothing that has more potential to astound a rational mind than the idea that the omnipotent God of our very creation would love rebellious and depraved creatures like us enough to compact Himself into a body like ours. He became one of us in every way except for the sin that afflicts all the rest of us. The child in Mary’s womb is the essence of divine condescension, and the profound opposite of humanity’s bent toward artificial inflation. She brought forth the expanse of heaven in a tiny human body, the only hope for a fallen race, invested in a helpless little form, small enough to use a feed trough for a bed. She delivered the statement from God that cannot be overstated. She gave birth to the reality that cannot be exaggerated beyond the substance that He brought with Him.

So, I have a suggestion. Instead of laboring to inflate messages that offer no real hope, and hold no possibility of real peace, and that only obfuscate the message that Jesus came to give, maybe we could respond more like Mary did when Elizabeth delivered that beautiful blessing about the unborn Savior in her womb. She said,

“My soul doth magnify the Lord, and my spirit has rejoiced in God my Savior…” Luke 1:46-47 KJV

Her desire was not to make the Lord appear to be larger and more impressive than He really was, but to declare the magnitude of who He really was, and what He would have the power to do.

Nothing on the Inside ~
Blow-ups aren’t nearly as impressive when you unplug them, because they have nothing on the inside to hold them up. But they aren’t the only empty things on display this time of year. There are lots of empty words, lots of empty philosophies, lots of empty fantasies, and lots of empty promises that get artificially inflated this time of year. Sadly, there will be lots of hopes, dreams, desires, and expectations built on them that will eventually collapse because there is no substance to support them.

Decorating with “Substance” ~
Instead of empty blow-ups, consider what a difference it could make if we decorated our homes with the kind of joy John wrote about that is so expansive that it cannot be contained, and what if we adorned them with expressions of the kind of peace that is beyond our capacity to describe? And … what if we lit them up with the kind of love that nothing in this world can ever deflate?

“TWEETABLES” ~ Click to tweet and share from the pull quotes below.  Each one links directly back to this article through Twitter . . .

  • “Mary brought forth the expanse of heaven in a tiny human body, the only hope for a fallen race, invested in a helpless little form small enough to use a feed trough for a bed. She delivered a statement from God that cannot be overstated.” @GallaghersPen (Click here to Tweet) 
  • “Instead of laboring to inflate messages that offer no real hope and hold no possibility of real peace,” . . . “maybe we could respond more like Mary did when Elizabeth delivered that beautiful blessing about the unborn Savior in her womb.” @GallaghersPen (Click here to Tweet)
  • “Blow ups aren’t the only empty things on display this time of year. There are lots of empty words, lots of empty philosophies, lots of empty fantasies, and lots of empty promises that get artificially inflated this time of year . . . with no #Substance to support them.” @GallaghersPen(Click here to Tweet) 
  • “Instead of empty blow-ups, what if we adorned our homes with expressions of the kind of peace that is beyond our capacity to describe? And … what if we lit it up with the kind of love that nothing in this world can ever deflate?” @GallaghersPen (Click here to Tweet) 

Ron’s new book, “Right Side Up Thinking in an Upside Down World ~ Looking at the World through the Lens of Biblical Truth” is available now!

Click HERE for details.

About Ron Gallagher, Ed.S

Author, Speaker, Bible Teacher, Humorist, Satirist, Blogger ... "Right Side Up Thinking ~ In an Upside Down World" For Ron's full bio, go to GallaghersPen.com/about/
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4 Responses to A Christmas Decoration with “Substance” ~ Not Just Hot Air

  1. Ron, as always, you made me smile and stop to think. I love that last paragraph.
    Merry Christmas to you and yours, my friend!

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    • Thanks again for your encouraging comment, Beckie. We’re so blessed to see how your writing ministry is expanding and are praying for a great response at your next book signing gig. I know your fan club is growing and that’s good news, but the most exciting thing of all is the knowledge that your readers will have fresh and compelling opportunities to begin a personal relationship with Jesus Christ or to build on the one they already have. I treasure our long-distance friendship and the privilege of watching God do astonishing things through you.

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      • I treasure our long-distance friendship, too. Happy Birthday! Praying it’s blessed.

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      • We were traveling for a couple of weeks, Beckie, and I somehow missed this. But it’s nice that the depressing awareness of discovering something else I should have caught is balanced with the blessing of finally finding it. It reminds me of putting on those muscle rub creams that are like “icy/hot”–you know you’ve got something going on but you can’t tell whether to feel mostly warm and good or mostly cold and bad. But since God has blessed us with some degree of personal autonomy, I’ve decided to table the bad stuff and just rejoice that I heard from you. Thanks for the unexpected blessing–and I hope your New Year’s celebrations are safe and encouraging.

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