This Christmas

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I thanked God for bringing us together and for the men who led boldly in worship, because this season is about more than lights, lists, and long lines. We opened Luke 2:11–14 and remembered that the first Christmas announcement was not about what to buy but who had come: “a Savior, which is Christ the Lord.” I asked us to be honest about a world that’s hungry for hope, unity, and understanding—and how easily we’ve traded substance for stress. Many will have a happy Tuesday; others just want it over. But no matter what shows up under a tree, there are gifts available to everyone in Christ that never run out.

First, we have a Savior. All have sinned, all have fallen short, and we cannot argue our way out of being spiritually dead. But God, in grace, shocks the flatlined soul back to life and calls us alive with Christ. You don’t have to pretend you’re fine; you can confess your need and rejoice that salvation is a gift, not a wage.

Second, we have Christ the Lord. “Savior” means He redeems; “Lord” means He reigns. He didn’t arrive with chariots and fanfare, but with authority all the same—God in human flesh, the Anointed One. If He is Lord, He doesn’t just rescue; He directs, protects, and rules over the enemies within and without.

Third, we have peace. Not the thin peace of a quiet room, but the deep peace of a reconciled heart. Shalom and eirene are not mere calm—they’re wholeness and unity created by God’s nearness. Praise invites this peace; the more we acknowledge Him, the more He steadies us in chaos, anxiety, and uncertainty.

So this Christmas, unwrap what can’t be bought: salvation by grace, a Lord who leads, and a peace that keeps your heart and mind. Don’t offer a stale praise for fresh mercies. Lift your voice like those shepherds who heard good news for all people and ran to see for themselves. The same Jesus they met is present now—saving, reigning, and bringing peace.


Key Takeaways
  • 1. Unwrap the gift of a Savior. Salvation is not self-improvement; it is resurrection. We are not bad people who need a few tips—without Christ we are spiritually dead, unable to desire God, much less please Him. Grace doesn’t make us nicer; it makes us alive, and that aliveness produces real change. Receive what you cannot earn and rejoice in what He has already given.
  • 2. Bow to Christ the Lord. Jesus doesn’t merely rescue; He rightly rules. “Christ” names His anointing and mission; “Lord” names His deity and authority over every enemy and every decision. Surrender is not loss but alignment—letting the One who knows the road set the route. Freedom grows where His rule is welcomed.
  • 3. Fresh praise for fresh mercies. God’s kindness toward you is not recycled; it’s new by the minute. Stale gratitude numbs the soul, but present-tense praise awakens wonder and keeps your heart soft to God’s movement today. Don’t treat daily grace as ordinary; answer it with living, specific worship.
  • 4. Let God reroute your steps. When you drift, He doesn’t demand you rewind your whole journey; He meets you where you are and redirects. Like a faithful guide, He recalculates from your current location, not your ideal one. Trust His Word to order your steps, and let humility replace stubborn self-navigation.
  • 5. Peace that reorders the heart. Biblical peace is more than quiet circumstances; it’s the wholeness that flows from reconciliation with God. This peace steadies grief, curbs envy, and outlasts the news cycle because it rests on Jesus’ finished work. Pursue the Person of peace, and the peace of God will guard you.

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