Christmas

If you’ve been looking for a way for the children around you to memorize and even understand the Bible this Christmas, you don’t have to look any longer. Randall Goodgame, the singer-songwriter behind Slugs & Bugs, has come out with a Christmas album that’s totally based on God’s Word.

This album tells the truth of Scripture in a way that helps it stick in young hearts. With music inspired by “A Charlie Brown Christmas,” these songs were created so the truths of the Bible can resonate in young hearts, but that doesn’t mean it can’t work on the hearts of parents and grandparents, as well.

Here are a few songs from Randall Goodgame’s Sing the Bible Family Christmas that will help you and the kids in your life get in the Christ-centered Christmas spirit this year:

 

John 1:1-4, 14

In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through Him, and without Him nothing was made that was made. In Him was life, and the life was the light of men.

And the Word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we beheld His glory, the glory as of the only begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.

 

Isaiah 9:6

For unto us a Child is born,
Unto us a Son is given;
And the government will be upon His shoulder.
And His name will be called
Wonderful, Counselor, Mighty God,
Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.

 

Luke 1:46-48

And Mary said,

“My soul magnifies the Lord,
and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior,
for he has looked on the humble estate of his servant.
For behold, from now on all generations will call me blessed;”

 
 

STBC-productSing the Bible Family Christmas

To have this album for the Christmas season, don’t hesitate to request your copy when you make a gift to Haven Today and we’ll send you Sing the Bible Family Christmas as our “thank you” for your generosity to this listener-supported ministry. Randall Goodgame created this album so that each word-for-word Scripture song would celebrate the miracles of all miracles: the coming of Jesus. When you follow the link below, you’ll get the chance to listen to samples of other songs on the album, such as “When the Fullness of Time had Come,” “Zechariah’s Prophecy,” “I Heard the Bells,” and more.

request-your-copy-today-400

 
 

Christmas is a season for kindling the fire for hospitality in the hall, the genial flame of charity in the heart. ~ Washington Irving

Christmas … is not an external event at all, but a piece of one’s home that one carries in one’s heart. ~ Freya Stark

Christmas, my child, is love in action. Every time we love, every time we give, it’s Christmas. ~ Dale Evans

These are all famous quotes that you’ll find online or in Christmas cards this year regarding the true meaning, or spirit, of Christmas. But did you notice what’s missing? Upon first glance, there doesn’t seem to be anything wrong with what’s being said. It’s only when we take a closer look that we begin to see what’s missing—Jesus.

Sure, we can celebrate the nostalgia and happy times that seem to be at the front of our minds this time of year. But let us not miss out on the rich meaning and celebration that this season has to offer.

As December 25 fast approaches, let us first remember a different set of quotes from those who were anticipating and celebrating the One who came to bridge the gap between Heaven and Earth.

May these be the words at the front of our minds this Christmas: 

Therefore the Lord himself will give you a sign. Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a son, and shall call his name Immanuel. ~ Isaiah 7:14

For to us a child is born, to us a son is given; and the government shall be upon his shoulder, and his name shall be called Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace. ~ Isaiah 9:6

There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse, and a branch from his roots shall bear fruit. ~ Isaiah 11:1

But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah, though you are small among the clans of Judah, out of you will come for me one who will be ruler over Israel, whose origins are from of old, from ancient times. ~ Micah 5:2

Rejoice greatly, O daughter of Zion! Shout aloud, O daughter of Jerusalem! Behold, your king is coming to you; righteous and having salvation is he, humble and mounted on a donkey, on a colt, the foal of a donkey. ~ Zechariah 9:9

She will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins. ~ Matthew 1:23

After Jesus was born in Bethlehem in Judea, during the time of King Herod, Magi from the east came to Jerusalem and asked, “Where is the one who has been born king of the Jews? We saw his star when it rose and have come to worship him.”Matthew 2:1-2

The angel answered, “The Holy Spirit will come on you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you. So the holy one to be born will be called the Son of God.” ~ Luke 1:35

And the angel said to them, “Fear not, for behold, I bring you good news of great joy that will be for all the people.” ~ Luke 2:10

For God so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. ~ John 3:16

God exalted him to his own right hand as Prince and Savior that he might bring Israel to repentance and forgive their sins.Acts 5:31

May the God of hope fill you with all joy and peace as you trust in him, so that you may overflow with hope by the power of the Holy Spirit. ~ Romans 15:13

Thanks be unto God for his unspeakable gift.2 Corinthians 9:15

And being found in appearance as a man, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to death—even death on a cross! Therefore God exalted him to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth.Philippians 2:8-10

Every good & perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows. ~ James 1:17

Christmas is fast approaching. And now that Christ has aroused our seasonal expectations, he’ll soon fulfill them all!Augustine

Once in our world, a stable had something in it that was bigger than our whole world.C.S. Lewis

She was wearing a knit hat. Not surprising for November in Colorado Springs. But then she pulled it off and her suffering was exposed. Her eyes were bright, her smile was warm, but her head was bald from chemo.

Kara Tippets is a mother of four young children and the loving wife of a church-planting pastor. She would happily end her bio there, but she can’t … not since the diagnosis. In spite of the chemo, cancer has crossed all the boundaries of her body, and has even entered her brain.

20140930-085509.jpgKara writes beautifully about leaning into Jesus as she suffers. Her blog “Mundane Faithfulness” has thousands of readers and her recently released book, The Hardest Peace is already a best seller.

“I have recently been in so many interviews, and I am often asked if I struggle feeling angry over the path we find ourselves walking. My answer is typically the same – Jason and I have fought to be ‘broken’ instead of bitter and angry. It’s not a simple journey.”

Her battle for peace is a daily reality, especially with Christmas coming.

“Oh my heart – oh my sad and covetous and jealous heart. I want to go to a thrift store and buy old wool sweaters and make ugly stuffed animals with my kids and bake over Christmas break. I do not want to be back in radiation battling to kill what is killing me … I want to be decorating my house for Christmas.”

Kara struggles every day, but she’s a veteran in this battle. She knows where to go when she starts to covet a “normal” life.

IMG_1358“I hunt down the grace, the peace, the source of what true living really is. It’s not the absence of this pain, it’s not the presence of normal. It’s not the ability and strength that I covet so desperately. It’s Jesus.”

The answer, she says, is to, “Live so LOVED that you are able to fight the temptation of jealousy and live present in the life you have today. This moment. This minute.”

Presence – not presents – will be the focus of Christmas this year for the Tippets.

“Presence – living in this moment, looking in gratitude towards the next moment, and fighting against the lies of comparison. Our children will likely not remember the gifts, but they will remember the love.”

Janet Morris is a mother of three, a grandmother of three, and wife to Charles Morris, the speaker and president of Haven Ministries. She helps write the programs for Haven Today, has co-authored two books—Jesus in the Midst of Success and Saving a Life—and is also a women’s Bible study teacher and leader. Her third book, Missing Jesus, Find Your Life in His Great Story, comes out March 1. Janet confesses that she also drinks one pot of Chai tea a day, talks to her dog, and is close friends with C.S. Lewis. But most of all, she needs Jesus every day.

 

The arm of the Lord is mighty and strong.

And at Christmastime, the long arm of the Lord is revealed. Revealed in sending the son, Jesus Christ, to be born in a manger in Bethlehem.

What is the message for us this Christmas?

The message from Isaiah is:

“Do not fear. Do not be dismayed. I am with you. I am your god.”

And the son of God, Jesus Christ, has come to reign.

The king of kings, the Lord of lords, is with us now. God has come.

From all of us at Haven Today, Glory to God in the Highest.

Merry Christmas and Happy New Year. 


As speaker and president of Haven Ministries, Charles Morris brings a rich background to Christian radio from secular media, including being a broadcase news reporter as well as press secretary for two former U.S. Senators. While in seminary in Philadelphia, he worked as an assistant to the late Dr. James Montgomery Boice before coming to Haven as the ministry’s fourth speaker in 2000. Now as the leader of the 75-year-old radio ministry, Charles is always thinking of ways to lead Christians and non-Christians to Christ—hence the familiar slogan, “Telling the great story … it’s all about Jesus.” Charles, and his wife Janet, have three children and are also the proud grandparents of Charlotte, Gracie and Ricky.

To get our hearts ready for Christ’s birth, Ann Voskamp is writing for us, celebrating the holiday that’s all about Jesus. Join us as we anticipate the coming of our savior. 

That one doctor thought it was a bit of a miracle before they even cracked open the chest and cut away at his heart.

Because who in the world figures out you’ve got a tumor plugging up an entire cavernous heart chamber when you’re blithely driving kids to hockey on Tuesday night and fine-tuning a tractor engine on Thursday and sitting in the front pew on Sunday?

Maybe you only figure out your heart’s failing when you yell at the kids over state-of-disaster floors, or when you feel like a first-class Christmas failure in the age of Pinterest, or when you and yours never get through the holidays without a whole mess of family drama—and don’t ask me how I know.

Sometimes the only thing you know by heart is that your heart knows it hurts.

So when the general practitioner in the small country clinic had suspected a tumor in the Farmer brother’s heart? The specialist could only say he couldn’t really believe it, could only think of it as a bit of a miracle. People say that when miracles happen: “I can’t believe it! It’s a miracle!”

But that’s always the best place for miracles: God meets us—right where we don’t believe.

When our believing runs out, God’s loving runs on.

They roll the Farmer’s brother into the operating theater at 1:27 in the afternoon.

We can’t think. We watch the clock. The Farmer calls his dad in Florida. They pace together. My mother calls. We pray. I keep glancing up at the minute hand, the way it keeps ticking.

Ticking.

“Did I ever tell you what Max said?” Mama’s got to be eating something. I only hear her “nhuh huh.”

“Well, yeah, he clapped the Farmer’s shoulder and said he really might be the only pig farmer he’s ever met and we laughed. And at the end, he prayed over us just like you’d think Jesus would—I told the Farmer that on the way home—that it’s not very often that you meet someone and walk away thinking: “He was so much like Jesus.”

“Uh huh?” Mama’s got to be eating almonds.

“But it’s that story he told—

Can I get through this without choking up? Max’s Texan drawl was as smooth as the back of my Grandma’s Oil of Olay hand.

And he said that Taylor Storch’s family had headed to Colorado for a little skiing. That the 13-year-old had laughed loud coming down the mountain. That Taylor had fallen—crashed—down a straight rocky slant of the earth. By nightfall, she was gone, slipped off this earth and Home, and her parents, Tara and Todd, were signing papers to give away Taylor’s still-warm heart.

Mama’s quiet on the other end of the line. She’s watched them a dig a hole in the earth for her own girl.

“Max said they ended up giving Taylor’s heart to a woman in Arizona whose heart was failing so weary that she couldn’t get off the couch anymore—Patricia Winters.” There’s snow falling out the window.

There’s been ugly sin this week and there’s been dead weary and there’s been more than a few moments I haven’t known how to go on.

“Taylor’s mama had only one request.” I lean against the windowsill, head against the cool pane, tell my Mama what Max had said, how he had shown us a photo of Taylor with her mama. How Taylor’s mama had called Patricia Winters and asked her if she could come hear her heart.

“Oh my.” Mama murmurs what only a mama can feel. The clock’s ticking on the wall.

And Max had told us how Taylor’s mama flew from Dallas to Phoenix and knocked on Patricia Winters’s door and Patricia Winters walked right past the couch and she opened the door and she opened her arms and she welcomed them in. And Taylor’s mama fell into her arms and the two mothers just held each other, Taylor’s heart beating right there next to her weeping Mama’s.

And then Patricia Winters reached over and handed Taylor’s Mama a stethoscope.

And she laid that stethescope up against Patricia Winters and she could hear it, right there in Patricia as clear as a beckoning bell:

Thrum. Thrum.

Taylor’s mama could hear it loud and long, right there in her ears …

Thrum.

Like a thunder vibrating right through her—

Thrum.

Her daughter’s still-beating heart.

“Oh … I can’t …” Mama chokes out the words. “I can’t even imagine.”

Can’t imagine. Can’t believe … Miracle.

And then Max had asked us slow and quiet. “What was Taylor’s Mama really hearing?”

“It indwells a different body, but that heart is the heart of her girl … ” Max said. “And when God hears your heart, that’s what He hears—the still-beating heart of His Son.”

The clock’s ticking on the wall. Doctor’s will be cutting into the heart of the Farmer’s brother right now.

“Mama?”

“Oh—I’m here.”

Her voice’s breaking up. “Just—listening.”

Ticking. Beating.

“I was thinking this week—you know when we were in the hospital with Levi?” I turn from the window, turn the sink tap on, fill the sink as if I could fill an ache. “You know—she was the first one to come visit?”

“Yes.” Mama doesn’t have to say anything more. She knows who I mean, how it it’s been over a year and a half. That cards and letters get returned and invitations go unanswered or declined. That the strangest pain that never goes away is estrangement.

“She loved us, Mama … and I don’t know what went so impossibly wrong but I know that I miss them impossibly …”

Mama whispers it like she wishes she could make the words do more, “I know …“

The sink water’s not much better than lukewarm.

“I sure wish I knew how to fix this—I shake my head, turn the water hotter. “Because I’d do it in a heartbeat.”

In a heartbeat.

I stop. Hands in hot water.

I can hear it in me.

Thrum. Thrum.

Me with a tumor, me with heart blockage, me with a failing heart …

That’s the point: Your heart can’t forgive the tactless no-so-great Aunt, your heart can’t forgive the words that should never have been said, your heart can’t forgive the remark that was more like a blade and left a mark how many years later. Your heart can’t forgive the stepmother, the side joke, the backhand, the over-the-top family that just gets under your skin.

Your heart can’t forgive. That’s why He gave you His.

When you don’t think you can forgive what she’s said about you—

When you don’t think you can forget what he’s done to you—

When it’s His heart beating in you—you can forgive in a heartbeat.

I look up from the sink. The Christmas tree is there by the fireplace—and it’s right there, what all the hard relationships, gatherings, families need at Christmas:

The Tree is where God’s grace does heart transplants: God takes broken hearts—and gives you His.

I would tell Mama that later.

That they cut a three-inch tumor out of the Farmer’s brother’s heart. That only four days later, the Farmer drove his brother back home to his farm. That they prayed thanks for startling grace.

That it’s really true: That right where you don’t believe … is where God meets with a miracle.

That miracles happen in a heartbeat.

Ann Voskamp is a farmer’s wife, the home-educating mama to a half-dozen exuberant kids, and author of One Thousand Gifts: A Dare to Live Fully Right Where You Are, a New York Times bestseller, and new this month, The Greatest Gift: Unwrapping the Full Love Story of Christmas. Named by Christianity Today as one of 50 women most shaping culture and the church today, she’s a writer for DaySpring, a speaker with Women of Faith, and a global advocate for needy children with Compassion International. Ann loses library books, usually has a sink full of soaking pots, and sees empty laundry baskets rarer than a blue moon.

To get our hearts ready for Christ’s birth, Ann Voskamp is writing for us, celebrating the holiday that’s all about Jesus. Join us as we anticipate the coming of our savior. 

Here are her ideas for ways to celebrate Christmas morning while keeping the focus on Jesus.

1. Birthday for Breakfast

To serve Birthday Cake for Breakfast—with ice cream and an arch of balloons and birthday hats and light the candles and sing of wondrous grace! He has come! And for us!

Our tradition is angel food cake for the birthday cake—made with freshly ground wheat—and I think of the wheat that fell to the ground, died for us and the harvest of the many.
And we make breakfast a feast fit for a king. One of our best meals of the year is reserved for Christmas breakfast—recipes we serve only for Christmas Morning Breakfast: Victorian French toast with whipped cream and fresh fruit and a cranberry raspberry slushy drink; sausage bake and orange juice and pineapple. And we decorate with floating candles and and a nativity scene centerpiece and our best linens. He’s invited us to His table, adopted us, made us one of His own—and we have time to come, to say yes to His invitation!

2. Gather as a Faith Community

To gather in a chapel, in the sanctuary, in the pews as community, to bow low together with the body of Christ and marvel at the mystery of Christ—God with us.

3. Gifts for the Birthday Child

To give gifts to the birthday babe, the King Come—and these are all gifts to the least of these, because Jesus Himself said that when you give to the least of these, you give to me. So we pick out more gifts from His catalogues. We don’t open presents per se—but we open a far deeper joy. It may sound, yes, terrifying, to not exchange gifts on Christmas morning, it did to me—but the utter and unadulterated joy we unwrapped in giving away to those Jesus Himself says He’s with: the poor. And we discovered all that He is absolutely true to His word: It is always better to give than to receive, and when you give to them you are giving to Him; it leaves us filled in the realest sense. To do the one thing that is needful—touched the hem of God, murmured adoration, and offered up gifts to Him.

4. Serve Him a Meal

A loaf of fresh bread to an elderly neighbor spending his first Christmas alone, a still-in-the-dark cup of coffee and an egg sandwich delivered downtown to a homeless person, ladling bowls in a soup kitchen at lunch time, delivering sticky buns and a hug to the family who buried a child this year, gifting all the neighborhood with cookies and a card rejoicing in Christ come—serve Christ a meal this Christmas, bread of heaven come down for all the hungry.

5. Invite Someone in Need

It may be a single relative in need of a welcoming hearth, a lonely person from your faith community, a widow from down the road, a grieving friend, a lonely stranger, but to invite someone in need to His party because Christ who came to a world that had no room in the inn now calls all to come and He calls us to His kind of hospitality. We have done this and this is His party and this is who He wants to come—the one who feels as unwanted as He did when He came to us. So we open the door and say come and celebrate with those He came for …

6. Give a Talent Show

Give the only gift we ever can really give, the gift of ourselves, by offering a little Christmas Day Talent Show. A crazy little tap dance—and everyone laughs—and she joins him—and everyone howls. What can you give of yourself to offer to Jesus, your family, on Christmas morning? Write a poem? Compose a song? Script a little play?

7. Join all of Creation

We spend hours outdoors on Christmas day, joining all of Creation and the heavenly throng in giving Him praise. We walk through the bush and sing Christmas carols, we go sledding down the back hills, we play in the snow, and we laugh. We’ve decorated trees outside with treats, strings of popcorn and cranberry, suet and peanut butter and, if the conditions are right, it’s the one day of the year that we pour maple syrup over snow and eat taffy—we taste and see that the Lord is good!

8. Tell the Story

Over the years, we’ve told the Christmas story on Christmas morning, recounting each of the Jesse Tree ornaments on the tree, all awonder that since the beginning of time, He’s been coming to save us. We’ve told the story with cousins and kids getting dressed up and re-enacting it for us. With kids written-performed-directed puppet show, with blankets and spotlight and silhouettes. Old men have been Joseph and toddlers have been Mary and this is the story that we love to tell—to remember the gift who came.

9. Sing the Hallelujah Chorus

Sing it in the woods, on the streets, in a nursing home, a hospital hall, a prison lounge, around the piano with the family, for the next door neighbors, a shut in across town. We join the angels this day and we fill the world with the music of the Messiah here. Find a way, somewhere, to sing because isn’t this the day of all days, we need to sing?

10. Follow the Light

And come Christmas night, we follow the light and some years it’s outside in the woods, luminaries, candles in jars, lighting a path to a nativity scene and we sing worship in the deepening dark. And some windy years, its filling the house with candles and spending the last hours of Christmas day singing, “Glory, glory, glory, glory to God in the Highest!”

Ann Voskamp is a farmer’s wife, the home-educating mama to a half-dozen exuberant kids, and author of One Thousand Gifts: A Dare to Live Fully Right Where You Are, a New York Times bestseller, and new this month, The Greatest Gift: Unwrapping the Full Love Story of Christmas. Named by Christianity Today as one of 50 women most shaping culture and the church today, she’s a writer for DaySpring, a speaker with Women of Faith, and a global advocate for needy children with Compassion International. Ann loses library books, usually has a sink full of soaking pots, and sees empty laundry baskets rarer than a blue moon.

“The world says the real meaning of Christmas is all sorts of things … shopping, family, big sales on TVs and refrigerators, but we know that it’s Jesus, right? That’s why it’s called Christmas.”
Thus says Clive, an archaeologist, to his brother archaeologist Ian in Phil Vischer’s newest DVDs for kids, Why Do We Call it Christmas?
 

 
Isn’t that so true? How do we explain to kids with our words that Christmas is all about Christ, when what we say with our actions is that it’s everything but? Even if we’re not the ones stressed as we rush to wrap presents, make cookies for Santa, and get the good deals at stores on Black Friday, the rest of our culture certainly is. How do we keep the focus on Jesus, and not on elves or presents?
There are more tools out there to help parents than you might think. We talked to some friends, did some reading, and got some creative ideas. Here are a few of our favorites.

This Christmas will be my son’s first. And even though he’ll only be eight months old, I’m already wondering how we’re going to explain everything to him next year, so I’m doing my research, too. But I know that the best things to do aren’t even things: We need to rest in God’s sovereignty and model a rich relationship in Christ. And then we lean on the body of Christ for prayer and practical wisdom.
What ideas do you have? What have you done to help your kids understand what Christmas is really about?
 
Lindsey M. Roberts spent years writing exclusively for secular journalism, including such outlets as The Washington Post, Architect, and Gray magazine, before she first tried to write about Jesus. She’s thrilled to explore in words how everything from cleaning the kitchen three times a day to delighting in the maritime history of Nantucket is an opportunity to meet and glorify God. Lindsey lives with her husband, a pastor and U.S. Army Reserve chaplain, and two children in Wisconsin.
 

I didn’t plan on being a single mom at Christmas.

Last year at this time, my husband and I were celebrating closing on our first house, a small townhouse in the suburbs, and were anticipating the approaching birth of our first child. But after the holidays, in February, as I was painting the nursery midnight blue, my husband came home to tell me that the U.S. Army Reserves had called him up for a deployment to Afghanistan. He was to leave two weeks after our son’s due date in April.

I immediately saw that this was an answer to prayer for everyone involved. Stephen is a chaplain and his soldiers adore him and coveted his counseling while abroad. Stephen desired to love on his soldiers and do what he had spent years training to do. Our son wouldn’t know the difference, so it was perfect timing for his life. There were ways it worked for our church, too, where Stephen is an associate pastor.

The deployment was an answer to prayer for everyone involved, except myself, that was. I was going to lose out on having a partner help me through months of sleepless nights. I would be alone in seeing our son’s first everything—smile, laugh, crawl, teeth, bites of food. My husband would miss my 30th birthday, our son’s first birthday, and our fifth anniversary.

But it wasn’t only those emotional sadnesses—I was also going to be saddled with house projects while juggling a newborn’s schedule (or lack thereof), paying the bills, and maintaining a connection between father and son through handprint art in monthly care packages, a daily blog on our son’s development, and FaceTime phone calls.

To me, this was the worst news in the world. I cried for days and refused to talk to God for two months. How could this be your perfect timing, God? How could this be for my good and your glory? I felt betrayed.

God didn’t capitulate to my passive-aggressive tantrum and find a way to keep my husband home. Our son is now seven months old and my husband has been gone for 207 days.

I don’t want to tie this story up into a neat little bow like the ones on your presents under the Christmas tree. Because these last seven months have been hard, and messy, and painful. I have had to take our son on walks through our neighborhood so that I wouldn’t become paralyzed with depression. And I’ve hired a teenager to give me a few hours each week to shower and keep myself pulled together. On the days when I know my husband is traveling from post to post, and potentially in danger, I find that I’m so distracted I can drive down the highway the opposite direction from my destination or forget about an important phone meeting.

But my list of the things that God has done in my life this year is longer than my list of complaints. God has made me stronger by making me weaker and he has taught me how much I need the body of Christ.

Soon after Stephen left, I decided that the tears would be over. I was not a victim. There are single mothers who stay single for their children’s entire upbringing (and I have immense respect for them).

Loving friends reminded me that I needed to scale back my activities and expectations, but I chose instead to stay up late into the night so that the house would be clean each day. And to get up early so that our son would participate in his first Turkey Trot 5K, a tradition with my husband’s family. I refused to let this be a year in which we fell behind, a year we would always be playing catch-up from.

So this Christmas, my son and I are starting our family traditions just the two of us. We are learning Christmas hymns together and reading through Sally Lloyd Jones’s Jesus Storybook Bible. And I’m putting together ornaments for our first Jesse Tree, thanks to Ann Voskamp’s Greatest Gift. My husband won’t join us for these traditions, but they’ll be ready for him next year.
I used to think that God sat up in the clouds and judged us, that our struggles with finances or housekeeping were trivial to him. But now I know that he is a person who pleads before the Father’s throne for us, that he is the Holy Spirit who lives with us. God is a god who has helped me find my wallet so I could buy groceries, who kept my baby asleep for long naps on Sundays so I could sleep, and who gave me neighbors to take in my mail while I was visiting friends and family. He has answered every single one of my emergency prayers this year.

While I may still struggle to forgive God for calling my husband up for deployment this year, the amazing thing is that God has already forgiven me for my rebellious heart that thinks I am the one in charge. I’ve never been able to deceive myself into thinking I’m alone, because I know that there is one person who always understands how I’m feeling. Jesus.

And it’s at this time of year when I think of Mary, who also must have felt so alone, with Joseph for a midwife and a dirty stable for a hospital. Her son wasn’t born the way she wanted. And yet she wasn’t alone either. She had Jesus, too. He was flesh in her arms because he had finally come to rescue her—and me.

Our life is not our own. His ways are not our ways. And praise God for that, because his plan is bigger, mightier, and more glorious than we could ever plan for ourselves. No matter what happens on this earth, we will one day live eternally in joy in heaven because Jesus was a little boy just like my own.

About the Author

Lindsey M. Roberts spent years writing exclusively for secular journalism, including such outlets as The Washington Post, Architect, and Gray magazine, before she first tried to write about Jesus. She’s thrilled to explore in words how everything from cleaning the kitchen three times a day to delighting in the maritime history of Nantucket is an opportunity to meet and glorify God. Lindsey lives with her husband, a pastor and U.S. Army Reserve chaplain, and two children in Wisconsin.

To get our hearts ready for Christ’s birth, Ann Voskamp is writing for us, celebrating the holiday that’s all about Jesus. Join us as we anticipate the coming of our savior. 

Whenever Christmas begins to burden,

it’s a sign that I’ve taken on something of the world and not of Christ.

The Farmer, he brings home these four miniature candles with the groceries and he pecks me on the cheek. Crazy, how wonders never cease!

So I set out just these four candles—one by the sink, one atop the cabinet, one by the hearth, the last at the window.

And from the sink, I can see each of the four flames bold, oil lamps keeping watch.

Four flickering wicks—they’re like these lamps keeping vigil for the Babe coming under a star.

I stand there with a grocery bag and one question: Why do I usually let the oil go out?

Why fume about the kid’s Latin CDs left naked and ashamed in the study, throw up my hands when the boys rub each other wrong, and I’m no Aaron or Hur, and it’s my heart that grows heavy, and I fall all the time and it needs to be falling in prayer,and why can’t I keep watch even one hour? Why rate Christmas on cookies and worth on works and presents on perfection?

Who keeps the vigil this Advent and why am I not the virgin with the lamp, just vigilant just for Christ?

It comes, like a lighting:

Christmas cannot be bought. Christmas cannot be created.
Christmas cannot be made by hand. Christmas can only be found—

In the creche, in the cradling trough, in the mire and the stench and the unexpected and unlikely and only in the person of Christ.

And I breathe.

Exhale.

Living slow is the way to carry an extra flask of oil joy and living life slow is a way to see.

And the slower I take the last days of Advent, the more places I find Christ and Christmas and the Light that warms.

The shadows lengthen.

The kids whine.

The soup burns.

The packaging and the twine and the paper and the cookies and the cards explode across the house.

And four brazen flames burn, ready … waiting … watching.

And it’s like a kindling—

What if I laid down efforts and expectations, perfectionism and performance … and simply waited with arms and heart and eyes wide open?

Christ the Babe comes in Christmas just as Christ the Savior comes on the Cross—seeking only our embrace.

And the only thing really to wrap? Is the heart around around Him.

The Farmer, he heads out for evening barn chores. A

nd I stand in the mess and watch from the window. He turns and winks.

And I smile and wave, a burning heart in the midst—

and wait for his coming again, the paned glass reflecting wicks keeping bright vigil, extra oil of joy still left out for the love that comes down.

Love that comes down and simple says come rest.

Ann Voskamp is a farmer’s wife, the home-educating mama to a half-dozen exuberant kids, and author of One Thousand Gifts: A Dare to Live Fully Right Where You Are, a New York Times bestseller, and new this month, The Greatest Gift: Unwrapping the Full Love Story of Christmas. Named by Christianity Today as one of 50 women most shaping culture and the church today, she’s a writer for DaySpring, a speaker with Women of Faith, and a global advocate for needy children with Compassion International. Ann loses library books, usually has a sink full of soaking pots, and sees empty laundry baskets rarer than a blue moon.

Santa lives at the North Pole. … Jesus is everywhere.
Santa rides in a sleigh. … Jesus rides on the wind and walks on the water.
Santa comes but once a year. … Jesus is an ever present help.
Santa fills your stockings with goodies. … Jesus supplies all your needs.
Santa comes down your chimney uninvited. … Jesus stands at your door and knocks, and then enters your heart when invited.
You have to wait in line to see Santa. … Jesus is as close as the mention of His name.
Santa lets you sit on his lap. … Jesus lets you rest in His arms.
Santa doesn’t know your name, all he can say is “Hi little boy or girl, what’s your name?”. … Jesus knew our name before we did. Not only does He know our name, He knows our address too. He knows our history and future and He even knows how many hairs are on our heads.
Santa has a belly like a bowl full of jelly. … Jesus has a heart full of love.
All Santa can offer is “Ho, ho, ho.” … Jesus offers health, help and hope.
Santa says, “You better not cry.” . … Jesus says, “Cast all your cares on me for I care for you.”
Santa’s little helpers make toys. … Jesus makes new life, mends wounded hearts, repairs broken homes and builds mansions.
Santa may make you chuckle but. … Jesus gives you joy that is your strength.
While Santa puts gifts under your tree. … Jesus became our gift and died on a tree.
It’s obvious there is really no comparison. We need to remember who Christmas is all about. Jesus is still the reason for the season.
Yes, Jesus is better, He is even better than Santa Claus.

– By Courtney (13 year old)

Merry Christmas, from everyone at Haven Today.