A Prayer about “Happy Holidays”

A Prayer about “Happy Holidays”

Joyful Lord,

It’s already happening. 

I feel my inner Grinch creeping, 

ready to make a sneak attack 

on the poor unsuspecting checkout folks 

who cheerfully call out, “Happy Holidays” 

after I’ve just bought Christmas ornaments. 

Lord, I know they’ve been told what to say. 

Lord, I know that Christmas 

has become commercialized. 

And yet, these stores will still play songs like,

“Joy to the World, the Lord is come, 

let earth receive her King,” 

and “Hark, the herald angels sing, 

‘Glory to the newborn King.’”

 So rather than getting all grinchy 

when someone tells me, “Happy Holidays,” 

help me to joyfully respond, “Thank you,” 

or even, “Joy to the world!” 

Help me to see that even the “secularization” of Christmas

offers prime opportunities 

to share the true reason for our joy — 

we have a great King, 

and that King has come, 

in the form of a baby human! 

It’s game-changing news, 

but many don’t know it. 

May we seek this season 

to share this news 

in the best way we know how, 

by living and loving 

in the fullness of our Savior’s joy!

Amen.

Read Psalm 98; Luke 2:8-20.

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Four-part devotional series designed to help you…Slow down. Let go…of the frenzy, worry, rush…
Hear the story of the wonders God has done—in the lives of people who also struggle with fear, anxiety and loss of hope.

FOUR WEEKLY GUIDES|FIVE DAILY ACTIVITIES 

Day 1: Devotional

Day 2: Reflection Questions

Day 3: Story Starters

Day 4: Prayer

Day 5: Music

How Long? When to Expect the Long-Expected Jesus

How Long? When to Expect the Long-Expected Jesus

When Can We Expect the Long-Expected Jesus?

The last few days, a lyric sticks in my head…a long-ago line from a John Denver and the Muppet’s Christmas cassette tape I used to pop in on my way home from the Young Life Christmas tree lot:

Christmas is coming, the goose is getting fat…

(that’s from the days when they fattened a goose to kill for Christmas dinner, children)…

Christmas is coming, but what about Christ?

Yes, we can feel it, Christmas is bearing down on us….But do you ever, as I do, stop and ask, “But what about Christ?” “I know Christmas is coming, but when is Christ coming?”

Do you ever get weary of waiting, short on patience for peace on earth to be a forever thing? Do you ever feel faint of the fall, heavy of heart over hard stories at Christmas-time? If so, then I invite you to join me in singing the old hymn of expectation, “Come thou long-expected Jesus”:

Consider this stanza and how it addresses our hopes, fears, needs and longings in these sometimes-dazed days the week before Christmas:

Come, Thou long expected Jesus
Born to set Thy people free;
From our fears and sins release us,
Let us find our rest in Thee.

Charles Wesley

Why not call the long-expected Jesus into the hard parts of your Christmas?

  • Christmas details causing chaos? Come, thou long-expected Jesus.
  • Family togetherness raising tension? Come, thou long-expected Jesus.
  • Economic forecast raining on your planned parade? Come, thou long-expected Jesus.
  • Stay-at-home orders ruining your Christmas gathering plans and raising your anxiety level? From our fears and sins release us.
  • Pre-Christmas preparations exposing your sin nature? From our fears and sins release us.
  • Attempts to make everyone happy stealing your joy? Let us find our rest in thee.

Without Christ, the Christmas season threatens to draw out the worst of our fears, sins and restlessness. Call to him, for the merry message of Christmas is that he comes to you. Christ the King stands ready to release us from our sins and fears; he invites us to rest in the hope and joy of the manger-child.

A Prayer about the Coming of Our Long-Expected Jesus

Come, we pray, Lord Jesus, come. Make our hearts ready to be your home. You alone are our dearest desire, our sweetest joy, our every expectation. In your very-near name we pray, Amen.

Photo by frank mckenna on Unsplash

Do you need help finding rest in Christmas?

Four-part devotional series designed to help you…Slow down. Let go…of the frenzy, worry, rush…
Hear the story of the wonders God has done—in the lives of people who also struggle with fear, anxiety and loss of hope.

FOUR WEEKLY GUIDES|FIVE DAILY ACTIVITIES 

Day 1: Devotional

Day 2: Reflection Questions

Day 3: Story Starters

Day 4: Prayer

Day 5: Music

What Do You Want from Christmas?

What Do You Want from Christmas?

What will you receive for Christmas?

“For to us a child is born, To us a son is given…” Isaiah 9:6
Hold on one second—before the kids start tearing into those gifts someone so lovingly wrapped with the color-coordinated ribbons and paper…before the dogs dive in to the pool of paper piled high… What do you want for Christmas? Or, no—better question, “What do you want from Christmas?”

Great Expectations

Because if there’s one thing the Bible tells us about Christmas, it’s that we should gorge ourselves on great expectations, that our longings, are not, as C.S. Lewis put it, too deep, but perhaps too shallow:
“It would seem that Our Lord finds our desires not too strong, but too weak. We are half-hearted creatures, fooling about with drink and sex and ambition when infinite joy is offered us, like an ignorant child who wants to go on making mud pies in a slum because he cannot imagine what is meant by the offer of a holiday at the sea. We are far too easily pleased.” C.S. Lewis, The Weight of Glory
And if there were ever a time to discover how shallow our desires can be, it might just be Christmas.

Are our desires too shallow?

We give and receive scarves and shoes and gadgets and goodies to celebrate the fact that God gave us… His SON? No, make that—the life—of his Son? His Son’s life in exchange for my sins? Really? Not only that. He gave us light.
“The people who walked in darkness have seen a great light.” Isaiah 9:2, ESV
We are that people. We were stumbling along in fog made thick, air made dank-dark by our blearing sin. At just the right time, Jesus showed up on the doorstep of our heart, delivered by none other than God himself. Not only that. He gave us joy.
“You have multiplied the nation and increased its joy.” Isaiah 9:3, ESV
Joy is common at Christmas. Or at least lots of cheer made cheerier at times by holiday cheer. If not joy, there is holly, jolly happiness—at least, for some lucky folks, especially the ones in Hallmark movies. Joy is different. The joy God gave us seeps down deep, sends a thrill through our bones and a chill to our bumps. It’s there when we’re sitting at the hospital bed of our beloved after a devastating stroke; it’s there when our boss tells us she’s so sorry about the layoffs; it’s there when our daughter’s depression returns. It’s the solid, unshakeable belief that one day all will be well again because of the gift God gave us on Christmas day. His Son. The life of his Son for the price of our sins. Not only that. He gave us the King. Not King. The King.
“Of the increase of his government and of peace there will be no end, On the throne of David and over his kingdom, to establish it and uphold it with justice and righteousness from this time forth and forevermore.” Isaiah 9:7, ESV
It’s a safe bet not many Americans asked for an increase of our government for Christmas. Right now, most of us would trade our elected officials in for a Dolly Madison donut. But this—this manger-King—his government will one day terminate the strife and bitterness? This King will reign with justice and righteousness? Everything is fair, and all is right. Silent night, holy night. All is calm. All is bright. No more oppression or abuse, and all lives matter to the Prince of Peace and to his people. Yes, this will be true fully and finally, one day. We could go on like this all day, but you have gifts to unwrap. Just take one more moment with me to take in, to fully receive God’s extravagant gift, the only one you’ll get today that will satisfy your longings forever.

A Prayer about Expecting Great Things from Jesus

Gracious God, May our jaws drop in awe at the exquisite perfection of your wildly extravagant Christmas gift. Lead our eyes to stare in stunned wonder at The King you sent, once lying there in a feeding trough. Let our hearts warm as we drink in the effervescent joy of your perfect peace. In the name of our precious Manger-King we pray, Amen. Photo by Brooke Lark on Unsplash

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Do you need help finding rest in Christmas?

Four-part devotional series designed to help you…Slow down. Let go…of the frenzy, worry, rush…
Hear the story of the wonders God has done—in the lives of people who also struggle with fear, anxiety and loss of hope.

FOUR WEEKLY GUIDES|FIVE DAILY ACTIVITIES 

Day 1: Devotional

Day 2: Reflection Questions

Day 3: Story Starters

Day 4: Prayer

Day 5: Music

Does Jesus Fit into Your Christmas?

Does Jesus Fit into Your Christmas?

And she gave birth to her firstborn son and wrapped him in swaddling cloths and laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the inn. Luke 2:7

Has the Christmas rush consumed your Advent hush?

We are well into the season of Advent now. Last week, we considered the question, “How can we find REST in this holiday season?” This week, we continue our Advent exploration with this question, “Where does Jesus fit into our Christmas?”

Advent requires us to make crucial decisions…

How has the monumental moment, the birth of the Babe in the Manger, changed your world, changed your life? Or has it? That is the question Advent draws us to ask. Advent compels me, over-thinker that I am, to decide where to place the Jesus-man (the Haitian artists who crafted our Jesus depict him as a man) in the Nativity Scene.

Advent compels me to ask—where does Jesus fit in my Christmas? #Christmas #Advent Share on X

Should I put Jesus in the hay before Christmas Day?
Some people don’t. But then, why would the wise men be there? (Of course, the wise men didn’t really show up till Jesus was two years old anyway, so they probably don’t belong at all….) Ultimately, I decide to go ahead and put Jesus in the manger, partly because I’m afraid I’ll lose him otherwise, and well, even though we have the assurance of salvation, finding another man-Jesus from a Haitian Nativity set would present a challenge!

There is a more important reason, though, that Jesus goes in the manger today—he has already come to this earth. Immanuel, God-with-us has already come to us. Christ has lived. Christ has died. Christ has risen!

Where does Jesus fit in to our Christmas?

I put the man-Jesus right there in the center with his mom and dad, the shepherds and the sheep, the wise men—all those who’ve been bowled over by God’s grace. They marvel at this King of heaven, lying right there in a stinky feeding trough. It was a game-changer, this Advent event.

I put Jesus in the manger because he reminds me to wonder and wait. To wonder at the life-changing miracle of his kingdom come. To remind me in the dark, dreary days of winter or the Christmas flurry of decorations to be done, that Christ will come again.

Sometimes I wonder if we should add another figure to our Nativity Scene—of Christ returning to earth? #Christmas #Advent Share on X

Sometimes I wonder if we should add another figure to our Nativity Scene—of Christ returning to earth, or maybe it should be a whole Second Coming Scene, with zillions of angels rejoicing in heaven and rivers of life made out of Waterford crystal and a massive hand-carved tree and 24-karat gold city gates and walls…Well, maybe that’s a little much? The fact is, in that Day, we won’t need a Second Coming Scene, because we will be living right smack in the middle of it, God with us, us with God. In that day, we will live eternally, every day awed and grateful for the King who has come again for the very last time.

A Prayer about Where Jesus Fits in Our Christmas

Oh, Lord, we confess—we’ve got it all backward. Of course, the question is, “Where do we fit into Christ’s Christmas?” Forgive us for putting ourselves at the center of Christmas instead of standing with the shepherds and the wise men gazing on your glory. Help us, we pray, to cease our rushing and listen carefully for your hushing voice in this season. Help us to find our rest in Jesus. In his baby-King’s name, we ask! Amen!

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Do you need help finding rest in Christmas?

Check out this four-part devotional series designed to help you…Slow down. Let go…of the frenzy, worry, rush…
Hear the story of the wonders God has done—in the lives of people who also struggle with fear, anxiety and loss of hope.

Each of the four weekly guides contains five daily activities:

Day 1: Devotional

Day 2: Reflection Questions

Day 3: Story Starters

Day 4: Prayer

Day 5: Music

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