Life Is Beautiful

Traditions Old and New: An Aussie Christmas!

Today I’m welcoming Julie and her Aussie Christmas traditions and how Jesus truly is the reason! You can read more of Julie’s work at http://chaosandgrace.com.au/  Be sure to click through to the yummy recipes she’s provided as well as the video! Here’s Julie:

 

If you are here from Melanie Pickett’s Flying Blonde Blog….G’day from Australia!

I’d love to share with you what an Australian Christmas looks like to our family.

 

Old Traditions

Every year my mum, my sister, and I have the same conversation. “Will we eat traditional food for Christmas?”

You see, two-hundred and a bit years ago, people came to our country and brought with them their English Christmas traditions:  Christmas Cake and plum pudding with hot custard, roast meat and vegetables, eggnog and singing carols by the fire. This makes perfect sense in a country that can be snowed in for Christmas.

The trouble is, in Australia, Christmas day is guaranteed to be over 30 degrees C (86 degrees F). This is not roast dinner weather as much as we love it.  So, like many others across our country, we are asking the question “What should an Aussie Christmas look like?”

 

skategirl

 

New Traditions

 

Having traditions just for tradition’s sake doesn’t always make sense.  A wave of change has come with acknowledging we celebrate Christmas in a hot country.

This year an amazing array of seafood and salad will grace the table alongside cold roast pork (because my Dad can’t quite give up Christmas crackle). Desert is now cheesecake, pavlova, and trifle.  T-shirts, shorts and thongs are the dress code for the day. After lunch we will all head to whatever water we can find to cool off while my Dad has a snooze on the lounge. There may even be a game of backyard cricket. 

 

Traditions That Create Memories

 

Whether the food is hot or not isn’t really that important.  Christmas is about celebrating with good memories and some Christmas traditions will always remain:

Our kids have decorated our Christmas tree and Christmas cards are on display.

We will bring our picnic blanket and sit under the stars singing at our community carols event, while the kids run wild with glow sticks in the night.

On Christmas Day, my kids will wake up before dawn to unwrap their presents and eat all their Christmas chocolate for breakfast. 

There will always be extras around our Christmas table because we believe no one should be alone at Christmas.

We will pop bonbons, wear silly paper hats, tell bad Christmas jokes, and Christmas songs will play all day.

We will be eating leftovers for the next week.

Christmas Table in Sunny Australia

Christmas Table in Sunny Australia

 

Teaching Our Children the Meaning of Our Traditions

In the midst of all the activities and organising, our family will be taking time out each day to remember Jesus, the reason for the season.  Jesus isn’t just thought of at church on Christmas morning. 

As we buy gifts we share with our kids that Jesus is the greatest gift of all. When we look at Christmas lights in our street we discuss how long ago Jesus called himself the light of not just a street but of the whole world. And when singing Christmas songs, we discuss as a family how the shepherds and wisemen must have felt seeing Jesus.

Sharing about Jesus is our family’s tradition that weaves all other traditions together and gives them their meaning.

From my family to yours,

 

Wishing you a very Merry Christmas,

 

xxx Julie

P.S. If you want to hear with your kids an Aussie version of Jingle Bells, watch the above video.

What are your favourite traditions? How do you infuse them with meaning for your family? I love to hear your comments below.

 


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