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Category Archives: Family

Love Has Come to Stay

Love Has Come to Stay

Christmas Day – December 25, 2025

John 1:14
Love Has Come to Stay

The Word became flesh and lived among us. Love did not merely visit, it moved in. God chose to dwell fully with humanity, sharing in joy and sorrow, celebration and struggle.

Christmas Day reminds us that God’s love is not limited to one night or one moment. Christ comes to stay. To walk with us through ordinary days and uncertain seasons. To guide us, heal us, and remind us that we are not alone.

Whatever today looks like for you, busy or quiet, joyful or tender, God is present. Love has taken up residence in the world, and nothing will ever be the same.

Today, rest in this gift. Christ is born. Love has come to stay.

Prayer:
God of love, we give thanks for the gift of Christ. Help us live each day rooted in your presence and guided by your love. Amen.

Merry Christmas!

 

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Love Has Come Near

Love Has Come Near

Christmas Eve – December 24, 2025

Luke 2:1–14
Love Has Come Near

On this holy night, love does not arrive with fanfare or force. It comes quietly, in a stable, under the cover of darkness, wrapped in vulnerability. God chooses nearness over power, presence over perfection.

The world Christ enters is not calm or orderly. It is crowded, uncertain, and restless, much like our own. Yet this is exactly where God chooses to dwell. Not waiting for everything to be right, but coming close in the middle of it all.

Tonight, we remember that love does not stand at a distance. It steps into our lives as they are. It meets us in our fears, hopes, longings, and needs. The angels’ song announces peace, not because the world is suddenly fixed, but because God is with us.

As candles are lit and voices rise in song, receive this truth: Christ is born for you. Love has come near.

Prayer:
God with us, thank you for coming close. Fill our hearts with wonder, peace, and gratitude as we welcome the birth of Christ. Amen. 

Merry Christmas! 

 

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Love That Chooses the Hard Way

Love That Chooses the Hard Way

Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Matthew 1:18–21
Love That Chooses the Hard Way

Joseph doesn’t say much in the Christmas story, but his actions speak loudly. When he learns Mary is pregnant, his world shifts in an instant. Scripture tells us Joseph is a righteous man, and his first instinct is to do what is right and to do it kindly. He plans to dismiss Mary quietly, sparing her shame.

Many of us know what it feels like to stand at a crossroads like that. To be hurt, confused, or afraid, and still try to respond with integrity. To do the loving thing when it would be easier to walk away. Joseph’s love shows up not in grand words but in careful decisions and quiet courage.

Then God intervenes. In a dream, Joseph is invited to trust a bigger story than the one he can see. He does. He stays. He protects. He steps into a future he did not plan but chooses love anyway.

Advent reminds us that love is not always easy or clear. Sometimes love is choosing faith over fear, compassion over control, and trust over certainty. Joseph shows us love often begins with doing the next right thing, even when the path ahead is uncertain.

Prayer:
God of faithfulness, give us courage to choose love when the way forward is hard. Help us trust you when the story unfolds differently than we imagined. Amen.

 

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Love That Came Anyway

Love That Came Anyway

Monday, December 22, 2025

1 John 4:9–10
Love That Came Anyway

As the year draws to a close, many of us look back. We remember moments of faithfulness and moments we wish we could redo. There were days we showed up fully and days we fell short. Some choices were life-giving; others shaped by fear, exhaustion, or uncertainty.

Scripture reminds us that God knows all of this—and still chose to send Jesus into the world.

God did not wait for humanity to get it right. God did not wait for us to be faithful, generous, or strong enough. Out of love, Christ was sent to help, heal, guide, and save us, right in the middle of our unfinished stories.

Advent invites us to hold our whole year before God: the good and the hard, the faithful and the messy. Love does not arrive as a reward. It comes as a gift. Jesus enters the world not because we are worthy but because God is loving.

As Christmas draws closer, receive this truth again: whatever this year has held for you, God has not given up. Love has come anyway.

Prayer:
God of mercy and love, receive all that this year has been. Thank you for sending Christ to meet us in our need, to guide us toward healing and hope. Amen.

 

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Love That Comes to Us

Love That Comes to Us

Fourth Sunday of Advent – December 21, 2025

Luke 1:39–45
Love That Comes to Us

Have you ever had an unexpected guest, someone you admired deeply, whose presence felt like a gift? Maybe you wondered, What did I do to deserve this? The house wasn’t ready, life wasn’t perfectly in order, but the moment still felt surprising and holy.

That must be how Elizabeth felt when Mary arrived at her door. This was no ordinary visit. Mary brought both uncertainty and promise, and Elizabeth, who knew what it was to wait, was suddenly filled with joy. Scripture tells us that the child in her womb leapt, and Elizabeth was filled with wonder. “Why has this happened to me,” she asks, “that the mother of my Lord comes to me?” Her question is not doubt, but awe.

Elizabeth sees grace when it appears. She does nothing to earn it. She simply receives it.

That is how God’s love works. Grace comes to us, often unexpectedly and rarely when we expect it. Advent reminds us that Christ does not wait for us to be ready or deserving. Christ comes to us. Love draws near. And something inside us stirs with joy.

Today, think about where grace might be surprising you. God may already be closer than you realize.

Prayer:
God of love and grace, open our hearts to receive your presence with gratitude and joy as we prepare for Christ’s coming. Amen.

 

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Joy on the Edge of Arrival

Joy on the Edge of Arrival

Saturday, December 20, 2025

Luke 1:46–49
Joy on the Edge of Arrival

Mary sings her song before the child is born. Her joy comes not from having all the answers, but from trusting what God has started. She rejoices, not because the path is simple, but because God keeps promises.

There is a particular kind of joy that comes when we are close, close to a long-awaited moment, close to an answered prayer, close to something new taking shape. Advent holds us in that space. We are not yet at Christmas, but we can feel it approaching. Joy gathers there, at the edge of arrival.

This joy is often quiet and steady. It shows up in final preparations, in small acts of care, in the ordinary faithfulness of showing up one more time. It reminds us that God does not wait for perfect conditions to draw near.

As this Advent week comes to an end, pause for a moment. Take a breath. Notice the joy that is already here, even before everything is finished. God is closer than we think.

Prayer:
God of promise, steady our hearts as we wait. Help us rejoice in what you are already bringing to life among us. Amen.

 

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Joy Meant to Be Shared

Joy Meant to Be Shared

Friday, December 19, 2025

Luke 2:17–18
Joy Meant to Be Shared

After seeing the child lying in the manger, the shepherds did not keep the experience to themselves. Luke tells us they made the news known, and all who heard it were stunned. Joy, once found, naturally moved outward.

That is often how joy works. It grows when it is shared, in a story told, a word of encouragement offered, a moment of hope spoken aloud. Joy doesn’t demand perfection or certainty. It simply asks us to bear witness to what we have seen and experienced.

This season reminds us that sharing joy doesn’t require something grand. Sometimes it looks like checking in on someone, offering a kind word, or showing up when it would be easier not to. These small acts become echoes of the shepherds’ proclamation, spreading wonder in quiet, faithful ways.

Perhaps today, think of how joy might be asking to move through you. Who needs to hear a word of hope? Where might your presence be a sign that God is near?

Prayer:
God of good news, help us share the joy you have placed in our hearts. Use our words and actions to bring hope and joy to others. Amen.

 

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Joy That Lingers

Joy That Lingers

Thursday, December 18, 2025

Luke 2:19
Joy That Lingers

After the shepherds arrived in Bethlehem and shared what they had seen and heard, the scene quieted. Luke tells us that Mary treasured all these words and pondered them in her heart. Joy did not rush past her. It stayed. It settled. It lingered.

Not all joy is loud or immediate. Some joy takes time to sink in. It shows up after the moment has passed when we replay a conversation, remember a shared smile, or sit quietly with what God has revealed. Advent invites us into that kind of joy, the kind that doesn’t demand a response right away, but gently reshapes us from the inside.

We live in a world that moves quickly, where joy can feel fleeting or easily interrupted. Yet Mary reminds us that joy can be held, reflected upon, and carried forward. It can sustain us long after the moment itself has ended.

Today, notice where joy may be lingering for you. It might be found in a memory, a word spoken earlier this week, or a quiet sense of peace you can’t fully explain. Hold it gently. Treasure it. God is still at work.

Prayer:
God who dwells among us, help us notice and hold the joy you place in our hearts. Teach us to treasure your presence as we wait for Christ’s coming. Amen.

 
 

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Choosing Joy, Even Now

Choosing Joy, Even Now

Monday, December 15, 2025

Philippians 4:4–7
Choosing Joy, Even Now

Yesterday in worship, we focused on joy. No matter where that worship took place—whether in a church, a chapel, a living room, or somewhere else—there is joy in the House of God when people gather with open hearts. Joy grows when we are with others who encourage us, pray for us, and remind us that we are not alone.

Even so, joy can feel fragile at this time of year. Like winter, it is easy to feel discouraged, surrounded by gray skies, cold days, and long nights. We also wake up to news of violence that shakes communities and brings grief, including recent shootings in places that should be safe. All of this can feel overwhelming.

Advent does not ignore that heaviness. Instead, it speaks directly into it. Paul’s words remind us that joy is not the absence of sorrow, nor is it naïve optimism. Joy is something we choose and practice, even when the world feels uncertain. It requires intention. We have to look for it. We have to be willing to notice where God is still at work—in compassion, in kindness, in moments of connection that break through the darkness.

Life is too short to hold on to things that harden our hearts. Advent invites us to forgive quickly, to love quickly, to let go of what weighs us down, and to welcome what gives life. This is not ignoring reality; it is having faithful hope. It is choosing joy, even now.

Prayer:
God of peace, hold us in a world that feels heavy. Help us seek joy with intention, trust your nearness, and live with hope as we wait for Christ’s coming. Amen.

 

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Ready or Not

Ready or Not

Saturday, December 13, 2025

Luke 1:39–45

Ready or Not

This past week, we spent hours in the Compassion Hub Closet, sorting and hanging clothes, clearing tables, and making room for yet another wave of generous donations. The work felt never-ending. Even when others joined in and helped for hours, there was still more to do. Eventually, I had to stop, not because everything was finished, but because I was simply done for the day.

That feeling isn’t limited to the closet. It’s the same in my office, and it’s the same in Advent. We prepare and prepare, cleaning, organizing, planning, and hoping to feel “ready.” Yet the work is never truly complete. In Luke’s Gospel, Mary doesn’t wait until everything is settled before she moves forward. She carries Christ into the world amid uncertainty, interruption, and unfinished plans.

As we move closer to Christmas, we are reminded that Christ does not wait for perfect conditions. Ready or not, Christ comes. We’re not called to finish everything, but to make space, to show up with willing hearts and trust that God meets us right where we are.

Prayer:
Faithful God, when our work feels unfinished, and our lives feel full, remind us that your coming does not depend on our perfection. Help us make room for Christ with open hearts and steady trust. Amen.

 

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