I would not tell my children that Jesus is invisible. He is seated on the right hand of God. He was visible after the resurrection when He appeared to the disciples.
You can tell them all you want that Jesus who they can't see sits on the right hand of God -------but they can't see the person of Jesus who you are telling them sits on the right hand of God ---
They have to trust you to believe what your saying and wHEN they find out you lied to them about there being a mystical man named Santa Clause who climbs down your Chimney to leave presents and drives a flying sleigh with reindeer once a year all around the world in one night -----when it is really Mommy and Daddy who buy and give all the presents for them to open on Christ----Mas Day ----
What makes you think THEY SHOULD TRUST You FULLY and Believe what your saying about A JESUS that they Don't See ----who you say out of your mouth He sits on the right hand of God -----------you have already lied to them once out of your mouth about Santa Clause ----and then you expect them to Trust you fully and believe what you say out of your mouth about a God they can't see who you say sits on the right hand of God ---
Hebrew word for trust
Strong's Concordance
batach: to trust
secure , have confidence , rely , to set one’s trust on
I say -------Why would you expect your child to have confidence or to feel secure in or have them rely on what you are telling them about Jesus when they already have experienced you telling them an untruth about Santa -----and by the time the child is 6-7-8 years old when they find out that Santa Clause is Mommy and Daddy --they are of the age of understanding that they were told an untruth ---
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https://bigthink.com/neuropsych/lying-about-santa/New survey looks at how former children feel about being lied to by parents about Santa.
NEUROPSYCH — DECEMBER 21, 2018
30% of children received trust issues from ‘Santa’
Are parents being naughty or nice?
KEY TAKEAWAYS
- New survey looks at how former children feel about being lied to by parents about Santa.
- 72 percent of former believers keep the Santa myth alive for their own kids.
- At press time, about 1,200 people have taken the survey.
Robby Berman
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“During the last two years I have been overwhelmed by people getting in touch to say they were affected by the lack of trust involved when they discovered Santa wasn’t [SPOILER ALERT] real.” These are the words of psychologist
Chris Boyle of the University of Exeter in the U.K. Boyle’s in the midst of conducting an
online survey that documents adults’ feelings about their parents having lied to them about Jolly Old St. Nick when they were little
His concern is whether the Yuletide conspiracy had an impact on its believers’ trust once it was exposed. While the survey’s still ongoing, he’s gathered about 1,200 responses so far and is sharing his preliminary findings. Some of the kids were quite crushed.According to the results, one in three respondents wishes that he or she still believed in Santa. Some of this is no doubt due to a longing to return to childhood, and missing that little bit of extra motivation to be a good boy or girl, at least according to the 32 percent of respondents who said so
WHAT FORMER BELIEVERS NOW SAY
What the survey is showing thus far about that long-ago (hopefully) moment of truth:
- A third of respondents recall being upset
- 15 percent of these people felt betrayed
- 10 percent of them felt angry
- About a third say the revelation has resulted in continuing trust issues
Boyle says, “As much as this research has a light-hearted element, the responses do show a sense of disappointment and also amusement about having been lied to.”