Friday, January 27, 2017

Chinese New Year:

To Celebrate or Not To Celebrate?
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Well, our eldest daughter Chloe, who is now 11 and has probably outgrown this “belief,” declared when she was about 5 years old (much to the surprise of the teacher she announced this to), that she was adopted from China.  From that time on, she has insisted on celebrating Chinese New Year- to honor the “place of her birth.” Although Chloe is not truly adopted from China, we have humored her for years by celebrating Chinese New Year annually.
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Image may contain: 3 people, people smiling The Lunar New Year is truly an important cultural tradition to the Chinese and is a time for family reunions. It is a traditional custom for close knit Chinese families to get together for a special Chinese New Year’s Eve dinner.  During this time, Chinese Christians give thanks for the bountiful blessings they have received in the past year and also ask the Lord to bless them for the coming year. This is one of the reasons why Chinese Christians celebrate their New Year -because it can strengthen their faith together in the One True God.  
In our family, we order yummy food from “The Dragon Treasure Restaurant,” and spend time together after a prayer for our meal, eating, playing games, and doing Chinese crafts.  This year we’ve added eating theme based cookies the tradition-due to my new cooking decorating hobby.  It’s overall just a fun time for us, spending time together and appreciating a culture other than our own a bit.

Chinese culture is also full of folklore, according to one of these stories:
Once upon a time,12 animals competed in a big race across a river. The rat jumped on the back of the kindhearted ox, who saw no problem giving the little guy a lift from one riverbank to the other. But as they neared the finish line — ahead of the others — the rat jumped off the ox and snatched first place. The ox came in a close second. The Year of the Rat is, then, the first on the Chinese calendar, followed by the Year of the Ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, sheep, monkey, rooster, dog, & pig... based on the order in which the creatures finished the race. 
This Year, a 15 day celebration begins on Saturday, January 28th & marks the Year of the Rooster. For thousands of years, roosters have been viewed “as in charge of time, because the rooster wakes up the day.” The rooster is also symbolic of hard work and diligence— always the first one up, with energy to take on a new day. 

Although there are some aspects related to the Lunar Calendar and Chinese New Year that are not desirable as Christians, there are some fun cultural pieces that we can choose to focus on if celebrating this holiday.  This year: working hard and diligently (like the rooster) is a great goal for anyone to focus on!  (Notice: I did not say always being the first one up or waking everyone else up!) 😴😴😴😴

1 comment:

  1. Love it! We celebrated Chinese New Year for the first time this year and it was so much fun! I plan to continue the tradition. Oh, and your girl's dresses are awesome! PS- You can fine my Chinese New Year blog posts under January 2017 on my blog, it was like a 2 or 3 part series. ;-)

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