Home for the Holidays
/No matter where you find yourself (physically) this holiday season, and regardless of where your heart is (emotionally) as Christmas approaches, you can come home and are always welcome home (spiritually).
Read MoreNo matter where you find yourself (physically) this holiday season, and regardless of where your heart is (emotionally) as Christmas approaches, you can come home and are always welcome home (spiritually).
Read MoreThere’s no place like home
For the holidays
Especially when we’re scattered
All over the place
So my prayer for us all
This time each year
Is to treasure home
As we all draw near
Near to the Savior
Who drew near to you and me
And near to family and friends
Regardless of proximity
Home is far more
Than a mere dwelling place
It’s where the heart is
a treasured, sacred space
So let’s treasure home
Both near and far
And make our home
Right where we are
By loving God
Who loved us first
And loving others
Even at their worst
This is the Gospel
The greatest gift, the best news
It keeps us home
Keeps us grounded and true
And since it is better
To give than to receive
Let’s give others the gift of home
By living what we believe
And we’ll experience home
Like never before
This Christmas and beyond
Simply by loving even more
There’s no place like home
For the holidays
So make Christ your home
Now and always
Read MoreThis past Sunday, on the first day of Advent, my pastor said, “Advent is as simple as ABC. It means Arrival, Beginning and Coming.” That little acronym got me thinking about Advent through the lens of motherhood and how arrivals, firsts and future, are all a part of God’s plan for us.
Now I am not comparing my children or yours to Jesus, nor am I comparing myself or you to Mary, but as I ponder the meaning of Advent mixed with the emotions of motherhood, some similarities definitely jump out at me.
We wait for the arrival of the children we carry in our womb, and then we wait for their arrival into adulthood.
We anticipate their firsts — first smile, first steps, first word, and the firsts become lasts and we anticipate those, too — last day of school, last game, last dance, and there’s no going back for a second chance.
The anticipation of what is to come is often met with mixed emotions, and the mixed emotions are met with the decision to trust God with the plan and purpose He has for our children or doubt His faithfulness and fear the worse.
Like Mary, we have a choice. Will we trust the Father’s plan? Will we partner with Him by praying for them? Or will follow fear which leads us to worry and doubt?
“But Mary treasured up all these things, pondering them in her heart.” (Luke 2:19, ESV)
Like Mary, let’s treasure the arrivals, beginning and coming, and the uncertainty they carry, by pondering them in our heart, and surrendering them to God.
Instead of allowing the uncertainty to cause anxiety, let’s rest is the safe and sacred space of God’s grace. He loves our children far more than we can fathom, and His plan will prevail in the beauty of His sovereignty.
Praise God for that first Christmas when He brought hope to the world in the gift of a baby boy.
Praise God that thirty-three years later that child, who became an adult, took His final breath so we could be born again.
Jesus, through His arrival, beginning and coming, infuses purpose into the first, future, and final moments of motherhood as we guide our kids from childhood to adulthood.
It may be as simple as ABC, but it’s as profound as anything could ever be!
Read MoreThe come and go of the Gospel.
Christmas & Easter.
Two holidays we celebrate to commemorate two holy days of the Christian faith.
The bookends of the Gospel holding together the come and go of the Gospel.
We’re four weeks away from the start of Advent and seven away from Christmas Day.
Seven weeks and two days later, we’ll start Lent on Ash Wednesday, conclude forty days later on Maundy Thursday, and remember the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus on the three days that follow.
The come and go of the Gospel.
He came to bring life, light, love, and to leave a legacy. He came here to draw us NEAR. The heartbeat of NEAR, a 28-day ADVENTure through the Gospel of Matthew (the first of the the four Gospels).
He went away so we could STAY. When we Seek Him, Turn to Him, Abide in Him and, Yearn for His Return, we learn to STAY NEAR! The heartbeat of STAY, a 40-day excelLENT journey through the Gospel of John (the last of the four Gospels).
The come and go of the Gospel.
Jesus came and He went, so we could come to Him and go tell others about Him and make disciples for Him.
Observing these holy days is NEAR and dear to my heart because I long to STAY faithful until He comes and goes again.
The come and go of the Gospel.
He is coming again. He is going to take us to the place He’s prepared for us.
This world is not our home. Eternity awaits. And the way there was made as Jesus made His way to, through, and out of this world, and will make His way back again.
The come and go of the Gospel.
“The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy. I came that they may have life and have it abundantly.” (John 10:10 ESV)
“Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me. In my Father’s house are many rooms. If it were not so, would I have told you that I go to prepare a place for you? And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and will take you to myself, that where I am you may be also. And you know the way to where I am going.” (John 14:1-4 ESV)
Advent 2023 starts December 3.
Lent 2024 starts February 14.
NEAR is available now. STAY will be available soon, so stay tuned…
Read MoreDecember 21st.
The darkest day of the year.
The day that declares
winter is officially here.
Darker days
coupled with cooler weather
ushering in
the Light of the World,
our greatest treasure.
In the beginning
and still to this day,
God’s light continues
to make a way.
When He made the world
and when saved it,
in the dark of night
by His power and might,
God said,
“LET THERE BE LIGHT!”
And it was good.
And it’s still good today.
Even in the hard times,
the dark times,
it’s making a way.
Jesus is the light
and He shines brighter
against the backdrop
of a cold, dark world.
Winter may be here,
and the world full of fear,
but that darkness and despair
only highlight
the HOPE of LIGHT and LOVE
given for us.
An innocent babe
wrapped in swaddling clothes.
A vulnerable world
wrapped in His unending love.
The darkest night
Wrapped in His perfect light.
Pure and holy.
Blameless and true.
A winter welcoming warmth
For me and you.
Read More