There’s a Gift Waiting for You Today

Silent night, holy night!
Son of God, love’s pure light
radiant beams from thy holy face
with the dawn of redeeming grace,
Jesus, Lord, at thy birth,
Jesus, Lord, at thy birth.

Silent Night, verse 3

I remember the first time I perceived the holiness of God.  I was simultaneously in awe and disgusted.  In awe of the beauty of God’s holiness and disgusted by who I was in comparison.  I didn’t want God to see-but you can’t hide from God.  I didn’t think I deserved the love and grace-but God decided to give it.  I didn’t think I could stand in his presence, but Christ made it possible.  Then everything changed.

Today we celebrate the day that everything changed.  

Silent night, holy night! Son of God, loves pure light… Nothing compares to the purity and holiness of God.  But if we wanted to get a picture: it is the difference between the fresh mountain spring and a browned, murky creek.  Its the freshly fallen snow compared to the mess it becomes once it melts.  God’s pure love does not compare to your most romantic or finest familial love.  It is untarnished by the human conditions of sin.  Unsullied by malice, envy, and strife.  The love of God is the purest love that is offered or encountered.  This love is given to us in the Christ child.

This pure love is reflected in the redeeming grace.  The grace that takes your tarnished life and makes it luminous. Your sin, your shame, your darkness-redeemed.  

Will you receive this gift?  Today, will you give your life and soul to the one who redeems it by grace?  This gift is incomparable.  It is offered freely, willingly, and with perfect love.  

May this Christmas be different for you.  

May it be new and stunning.  

May it be life-altering.

And may you know the redeeming grace of our Lord Jesus Christ at his birth.

Scripture References

1 John 4:16, Luke 2:11-12

Action Step

Make some time to find someplace quiet and reflect on the birth of Jesus.   When you are ready, you may pray this prayer.

Jesus, your perfect loves purifies my soul.
I trust in your holy sacrifice that made me new.
You are more Lord forever. Amen.


Accompanying Playlist

All hymns referenced throughout the series found in one spot. Some versions are traditional. Others…not so much. Enjoy!

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A Not-So-Silent Night

Silent night, holy night!
Shepherds quake at the sight.
Glories stream from heaven afar,
heav’nly hosts sing, Alleluia!
Christ, the Savior, is born!
Christ, the Savior, is born!

Silent Night, verse 2

As a mom of 4, I often long for the silent moments. Who can relate? Silent nights, morning, mid-day. I’m not picky, just some peace and quiet. During those moments of reprieve, I find myself just stopping to take a breath. I think about the need and longing for silence, to sit in a space where I can just simply exist without expectations, needs or thoughts. The quieting of my soul. To just simply be.

Shifting my thoughts to this song and this particular Silent Night, I think about the grandeur, and the holiness but also the truth that this night was not silent as we see it at all. The angels were singing “Alleluia”, the Shepherds hearing the angels sought out the manger to find Jesus as they glorified God. Mary treasured and pondered these things within her heart.

This night was not a silent one in the way we think or the quietness I long for in breaks from life; rather it was a busy, holy, glorious night. One that brought a silencing of fears, the ushering in the dawn of peace between God and mankind. A night where we can simply exist, and find rest, peace, and joy in the midst of chaos.

The times that I seek to simply be, I find the greatest peace and rest found in Jesus. The holy ushering in of the Savior has come. I can sit in this chaos of life and join in the praises of the angels, sharing this amazing news with others while treasuring and pondering all that Jesus is. I can simply exist in chaos because of Jesus while finding rest for my soul.

Scripture Reference

Luke 2:1-20

Action Step

Prayerfully read the scripture passage. Ask the Holy Spirit to speak to you about this story giving you a fresh perspective. Then treasure and ponder what He has spoken to you.


Accompanying Playlist

All hymns referenced throughout the series found in one spot. Some versions are traditional. Others…not so much. Enjoy!

Missed a day? We got you! Access here!

You can also access this series by following our facebook page!

Nothing About This is Normal

Silent night, holy night!
All is calm, all is bright
round yon virgin mother and child.
Holy Infant, so tender and mild,
sleep in heavenly peace,
sleep in heavenly peace.

Silent Night, verse 1

Let’s revisit an idea we explored way back in our first week together.  Remember the discussion of proper nouns?   Such a distinction may seem inconsequential, but they really do provide added insight.  Take a look at “Holy Infant”, above, for example.  If this were just any child, it would read “holy infant” but He’s not…so it doesn’t.  Not only that, but the term “Holy” also reiterates this notion that this baby is special or set apart.  In fact,  that’s what holy means. 

So here we have a baby of significance which is to be set apart.  This baby, due to arrive just three days from now, is depicted as being “tender and mild.”  Make no mistake though: as this child grows, His humility will lead to his exaltation, and the message He bears will not be for the faint of heart.  He truly is set apart, not only as God’s son incarnate, but in that he flips all prevailing understandings of what it means to be a child of God and how humanity  should think about eternity.

As a result, Jesus’ holiness also beckons us to be set apart as a response.  How so? Consider the following:

We are to be broken to be whole

We are to mourn to be happy

We are to be humbled to exalt

We are to be emptied to be filled

We are to be helpless to be empowered

We are to be weak to be strong

Do these examples sound like the way of the world?  Not at all.  They are His ways.  They are the ways in which we, too,  can be set apart.  He did it first.  Now, we must follow His example. We must be set apart. 

Scripture References

2 Corinthians 5:17, 1 Peter 1:16

Action Step

Today, ask God to show you one way in which you can act so as to be set apart from the norms of our culture yet also lead you closer to Him.


Accompanying Playlist

All hymns referenced throughout the series found in one spot. Some versions are traditional. Others…not so much. Enjoy!

Missed a day? We got you! Access here!

You can also access this series by following our facebook page!

Renamed

He rules the world with truth and grace
and makes the nations prove
the glories of his righteousness
and wonders of his love,
and wonders of his love,
and wonders, wonders of his love.

Joy to the World, verse 4

You ever been pushed to the edge or pushed over the edge?  When people violate your boundaries, like in the 1940 German Blitzkrieg. Each person responds differently to these offenses, but in our sense of right and wrong, we almost always want the offending party to pay for their wrongs.  How does the Holy One of the universe feel if that is how we feel?  

He rules the world with truth and grace. There is a divine tension at play here.  The tension of truth and grace.  It is easy to understand truth and grace exclusively, but for them to live simultaneously in the same space means we must adopt God’s view on the subject.

God rules in a state of perpetual and perfect truth.  Jesus declares, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.”  Truth is also associated with laws that are to be followed and enforced.  The ten commandments give us a set of truths to follow, and Jesus establishes the law of “Love God and love other people.”  

Religious leaders in Jesus’ time (and even today) felt the response to the law should be condemnation and judgment.  On the other hand, Jesus does not condemn the sinner but offers grace when the law is broken.  He holds to the truth and acknowledges when laws have been broken, but instead of condemning offers an opportunity for redemption.  He offers grace.  

Grace is unmerited forgiveness.  We have done nothing to earn grace, and the only part we play is receiving the gift that is offered through the sacrifice of Jesus. I heard author and pastor Andy Stanley declare that Jesus is “All grace and all truth, all the time.”  

Truth creates the boundaries which give us life, and grace restores us to those life-giving boundaries when we have strayed from them. This beautiful principal proclaims “the glories of his righteousness and wonders of his love.”  And even more powerfully, Christmas declares the advent of this kingdom and invites us to participate in its life-giving truths.

Scripture References

John 14:6, Matthew 22:37-39

Action Step

What grace have you received from God? What grace do you need to extend to someone else today?


Accompanying Playlist

All hymns referenced throughout the series found in one spot. Some versions are traditional. Others…not so much. Enjoy!

Missed a day? We got you! Access here!

You can also access this series by following our facebook page!

When the Punishment Doesn’t Fit the Crime

No more let sins and sorrows grow
nor thorns infest the ground;
he comes to make his blessings flow
far as the curse is found,
far as the curse is found,
far as, far as the curse is found.

Joy to the World, verse 3

Have you ever been punished for something you did not do? As a kid, I had a couple of incidents in which I had gotten in trouble for things my siblings said or did. It was frustrating because I genuinely strived to be obedient because I hated getting into trouble. (Where are my enneagram 9’s?!)

I remember this one time, in particular, I got punished for something my brother did. The punishment was being grounded for a week. On Day 3 of my grounding, my mom called me to the kitchen table to let me know that my brother had confessed that he was the one who had broken my mom’s favorite vase. My 10-year-old self was so excited that I had been vindicated that I literally ran into my front yard and did a somersault!

 As a parent now, it can be so hard to discern “who is to blame” when the kids bring up an argument with me. I admit that I have done a one size fits all punishment where everyone gets into trouble and has to take a time out. It was a means to make sure the one who was to blame received punishment. In both childhood and parenting, I have experienced flawed justice through the giving and receiving of punishment. I’m sure you all can relate.

When I think about these moments of injustice now, I can’t help but think of Jesus. Jesus took on the penalty of sin and death for us willingly out of His love for us. The depths of His love for us are unfathomable. Jesus was sinless (1 Peter 2:22), the lamb without blemish (1 Peter 1:19), the perfect sacrifice. God saw our sin problem, with great compassion, mercy, and grace sent His Son Jesus to be the propitiation of our sin. (1 John 2:22

We didn’t deserve such great kindness. We deserve death. (Romans 6:23) What joy fills my heart over Jesus’ sacrifice! To know-how deeply loved I am. That Jesus would take on my sin so I could have everlasting life in an intimate relationship with Him. (John 3:16) This is so overwhelming that I weep with joy over this truth. He is the greatest love we will ever know.

Scripture Reference

 Romans 5:12-21

Action Step

Take some time to write out a prayer of thanks to God for the beautiful gift we have been given.


Accompanying Playlist

All hymns referenced throughout the series found in one spot. Some versions are traditional. Others…not so much. Enjoy!

Missed a day? We got you! Access here!

You can also access this series by following our facebook page!

Audience of One for the King, Please?

Joy to the earth, the Savior reigns!
Let men their songs employ,
while fields and floods, rocks, hills, and plains,
repeat the sounding joy,
repeat the sounding joy,
repeat, repeat the sounding joy.

Joy to the World, verse 2

When we think of someone who reigns, a condition of that reign is usually one of duration and/or proximity.  For example, the reigning world champions of some event will only maintain such a status until there is a competition to name the subsequent world champion.  In terms of proximity, even the most tenacious of conquerors has an end to their governed territory and thus their reign only extends so far on the globe.

That all changed with baby Jesus, and we have a new kind of reign: one which is bound by neither geographical nor temporal constructs, and one which the world has seen neither before nor since. Jesus, our personal savior, is also the savior of the ENTIRE world for ALL eternity! He reigns in Heaven…right now…as I type and as you read. 

The battle has already been won!  No wonder we sing for joy!

And do you know what else sets our Savior apart from other rulers?  Traditionally, one has to seek an audience with someone of authority.  The subject may or may not be granted a visitation and, if so, they are typically heard on a singular topic.  A subject certainly can’t expect a standing coffee date so as to cultivate an ongoing relationship with the ruler. 

But, our Savior is different. His ways are not our ways.  Thank goodness! 

Not only is He available 24/7, He actually wants to spend as much time with you as possible and to cultivate a personal and profound relationship with you.  Amazing! Friends, find joy in this miraculous reality! 

Scripture References

Psalm 148

Action Step

Today, spend time in your Lord’s presence just because you can.  Delight in Him and praise Him for being so accessible to you and your loved ones.


Accompanying Playlist

All hymns referenced throughout the series found in one spot. Some versions are traditional. Others…not so much. Enjoy!

Missed a day? We got you! Access here!

You can also access this series by following our facebook page!

Junk Drawers: Everyone Has ‘Em

Joy to the world, the Lord is come!
Let earth receive her King;
let ev’ry heart prepare him room
and heav’n and nature sing,
and heav’n and nature sing,
and heav’n, and heav’n and nature sing.

Joy to the World, verse 1

Do you have a junk drawer?  It’s a drawer, usually in a kitchen, containing various odds and ends.  Here’s an incomplete inventory of my family junk drawer: pens, teacher notes, charging cables, stickers, and a box cutter.  I could not even get the drawer all the way open because of a renegade cardboard pizza coupon that was hung up on the inside lip of the counter.  It is a place of disorder, yet I find it hard to clean it out.  Until I need to put something else in-then, sacrifices are made.

Christmas is supposed to be a time of joy, but that joy is contingent on the receiver.  God freely gives joy to the world in the birth of King Jesus.  The gift exists and is offered, but a gift only fulfills its purpose if it is received. The gift of joy can only be received if there is room prepared for the gift. If someone wanted to gift us a new couch, we would have to get rid of the old one to make room.  When joy is offered, we must let go of the junk that prevents us from experiencing joy.

Unfortunately, we develop attachments to things that prevent our joy.  An old grudge with that co-worker or an overwhelming desire for something you may never have.  Those hindrances are called bitterness and entitlement, and they are just two.  The more you release those roadblocks, the more room there is for joy.  

The angels announced to the shepherds,  I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people. When we let joy in, heaven and nature sing.  We rejoice because we found what we always longed for.

You have to clear space in your heart for the joy to enter in.


Accompanying Playlist

All hymns referenced throughout the series found in one spot. Some versions are traditional. Others…not so much. Enjoy!

Missed a day? We got you! Access here!

You can also access this series by following our facebook page!

Rejoice and Be Glad

The Oxford dictionary defines joy as “a feeling of great pleasure and happiness”. Many things in life can bring us great joy. Depending on each individual this may look different. I get joy when I sit down with a good cup of coffee, hear the laughter of my kids or the sound of crashing waves and sand between my toes, see a beautiful waterfall in the midst of the woods after a hike, and the list goes on. Each of these is a gift from God. (Matthew 7:11)

The two songs we will be diving into this week, almost written a century apart from each other, point to the greatest joy we will ever experience. The joy found in Jesus. The Messiah promised. The fulfillment of prophecy and promises long ago. The Savior of the world came, Jesus who ushered in a new covenant one filled with grace.

In the NIV, the word joy is used 218 different times. The Greek definition of joy is “chara” which means “joy, gladness, a source of joy, extend favor, lean towards, the awareness of God’s grace, joy because of grace.” This kind of joy is a lasting joy. One that does not come based on the right circumstances. It’s a joy we can obtain no matter what is happening in our lives. A joy that James calls us to “consider” regardless of what hardships lay before us. (James 1:2-4)

As we enter into this advent week of joy, I encourage you to let joy lead you by enjoying the good gifts He has given, glorifying Him in those places and embracing the great gift of grace through His Son, Jesus.

Scripture References

James 1:2-4, Nehemiah 8:10, Romans 15:13, Psalm 16:11

Action Step

As we focus this Advent week on joy, start each day in prayer in the awareness of God’s grace, thanking Him for Jesus, and letting joy lead your days.


Accompanying Playlist

All hymns referenced throughout the series found in one spot. Some versions are traditional. Others…not so much. Enjoy!

Missed a day? We got you! Access here!

You can also access this series by following our facebook page!

Your Freedom Story

Chains shall He break,
for the slave is our brother,
And in His name,
all oppression shall cease

O Holy Night, verse 3b

O Holy Night is one of my favorite Christmas songs. As I listen to the song, I instantly feel peace wash over me. I rest in the words of this song as the truth sung speaks to the depths of my heart. As we focus on verse 3, I can’t help but be filled with joy and gratitude. The truth is that without Jesus we are dead in our trespasses and sin. (Ephesians 2:1) We were people walking without hope, shackled to sin, dead. Jesus came to break the yoke of slavery, so we could be set free. (Galatians 5:1) He gives hope, loosens the chains, and makes us alive again. (Ephesians 2:5)

We can be enslaved by so many things. At some point in our lives, we have likely been under spiritual bondage of some sort; it could be an addiction to alcohol, pornography, or food. Or maybe you are enslaved by material possessions, careers, dreams, media, hobbies, sports or unhealthy relationships. Whatever that bondage was or is, in Jesus, we are set free, no longer enslaved.

How should we walk then? As free people! Jesus overcame sin and death, taking on sin so we could walk victoriously and free. We are no longer under the yoke of slavery. What does a free person walking look like? They walk as sons and daughters who have been set free, sharing  in Jesus’ ministry of reconciliation by telling our freedom stories with others and the gift of Jesus.  Simply put: Jesus has reconciled us, so walk freely as you share your freedom story with others.

Scripture References

Luke 4:14-21, Psalm 72:14, John 8:34-36

Action Step

Are you living as one who is set free? If not, what has enslaved you? Release it to God and ask Him to set you free. Then sit down with a trusted friend who can walk with you into freedom.


Accompanying Playlist

All hymns referenced throughout the series found in one spot. Some versions are traditional. Others…not so much. Enjoy!

Missed a day? We got you! Access here!

You can also access this series by following our facebook page!

Loving One Another is Easier Said than Done

Truly He taught us to love one another;
His law is love and His gospel is peace.
Chains shall He break, for the slave is our brother,
And in His name all oppression shall cease.

O Holy Night, verse 3a

So, here’s the thing: the imperative to love one another is a pretty loaded command.  Jesus expands on this teaching throughout the gospels and specifically stipulates that this includes both people who are easy and hard to love.  Not only are we to love our enemies, but we are to pray for those who persecute us (Matthew 5:43-44; Luke 6:32-35). 

Ugh. 

This is something I rarely want to do, but it is exactly what Christ did.  If I desire to be more Christlike and walk in obedience, then I must resolve to do the same.  Ideally, in time and the more time I spend in His presence, God will align my heart to my thoughts and actions from the inside so that praying for those whom I’m up against just becomes a part of my core identity and not something which merely checks a box.  Don’t get me wrong though, if your thoughts and heart aren’t totally aligned yet, do not let that preclude you from taking action and praying for your persecutors anyway. 

We see above that “in His name all oppression will cease.”  Notice the part that says In His name…  From Scripture we know that whatever we ask in his name, will come to pass (John 14:13-14; John 15:16). This is great news for God’s plans and desires for us! When we struggle to love those above and beyond who are easy to love, we can prayerfully petition in Jesus’ name and excitedly anticipate that God will, in fact, help us to more broadly and inclusively love one another.

Scripture References

John 13:34; Philippians 4:13

Action Step

Using Christ as your model, take a leap of faith, and act in loving kindness to someone whom you’d rather not.  If you are really struggling, ask God to help you in Jesus’ name.  Repeat as necessary!


Accompanying Playlist

All hymns referenced throughout the series found in one spot. Some versions are traditional. Others…not so much. Enjoy!

Missed a day? We got you! Access here!

You can also access this series by following our facebook page!