Religion

Friday, December 19, 2025

When Faith Trains the Body to Endure but Not to Heal


Most churches do not intend to harm people.

They intend to form faith.

And yet formation always happens somewhere.
Often it happens not only in beliefs, but in what the body learns to tolerate.

The book of Jonah offers a quiet way to see this.

Jonah does not struggle because he misunderstands God.
His theology is accurate.
He knows God is gracious, merciful, slow to anger, abounding in steadfast love.

What Jonah cannot tolerate is what that mercy asks of him.

His body tells the story his words cannot.


Jonah obeys but his body shuts down

Jonah sleeps through the storm.
Not because he trusts God, but because his system is overwhelmed.

He would rather be thrown into the sea than remain emotionally present.
He would rather die than be changed by mercy.

This is not rebellion.
It is survival.

And that is where Jonah begins to feel uncomfortably familiar.


How churches unintentionally form “Jonah bodies”

Churches rarely do this on purpose.
But certain well-intended patterns can quietly train people to survive rather than heal.


When endurance is praised more than honesty

Many churches celebrate those who stay.

Who keep serving.
Who keep showing up.
Who endure quietly.

What is less often named with the same reverence:

  • naming limits

  • telling the truth when it is inconvenient

  • leaving when something no longer holds life

Over time, the body learns:
Pain is safest when it is contained, not expressed.

Faithfulness becomes synonymous with override.

Jonah can obey.
Jonah can preach.
Jonah can endure.

But his body has never learned that honest pain will be held.


When theology substitutes for safety

Churches are often skilled at teaching truth.
They are less practiced at helping people feel safe enough to feel.

So theology quietly becomes:

  • a regulator for anxiety

  • a bypass for grief

  • a way to remain upright without remaining present

People learn to quote what is true instead of staying with what hurts.

Jonah knows who God is.
But his body cannot tolerate what God does.

That gap is not sin.
It is formation without integration.


When leaders model certainty instead of presence

Many leaders are rewarded for clarity, decisiveness, and answers.

They are rarely rewarded for:

  • staying with pain

  • not fixing

  • admitting uncertainty

  • saying “I don’t know, but I’m here”

Over time, people learn often unconsciously:
If I am undone, I am behind.

Grief becomes something to manage quickly rather than metabolize slowly.

Jonah lives under this pressure.
So do many faithful people.


When grief is rushed toward meaning

Churches love resurrection language and rightly so.

But sometimes resurrection is offered before burial is honored.

People are encouraged to:

  • forgive before they have grieved

  • praise before they have protested

  • move on before they have integrated

The result is not healing, but tightening.

Pain survives by becoming rigid.
Resentment forms quietly.
Mercy begins to feel destabilizing.

Jonah is not angry because God is cruel.
He is angry because mercy threatens the fragile structure holding him together.


When leaving is framed as failure

Perhaps the most formative message of all.

If leaving a church is framed—explicitly or implicitly—as:

  • rebellion

  • lack of submission

  • spiritual drift

then people learn to override their own signals in order to remain “faithful.”

They stay long after their bodies know something is wrong.

Jonah obeys while dissociating.
Many church members do the same.


God stays with Jonah but Jonah is not the destination

One of the most tender truths in Jonah is that God does not abandon him.

God asks questions.
God provides shade.
God stays present even with Jonah’s resentment.

But the story also shows the limits of survival-based faith.

Jonah ends still standing outside the city.
Still resistant.
Still unintegrated.

That matters.

Jonah is not a model to imitate.
He is a mirror to recognize.


What comes after Jonah

There is another way faith can live in the body.

A faith that:

  • does not require self-erasure

  • does not confuse endurance with holiness

  • does not rush pain toward meaning

  • does not demand certainty as proof of trust

A faith where mercy does not erase pain but holds it.

Some people discover this slowly, often through grief.
Through leaving places they once loved.
Through realizing that staying is no longer faithfulness but self-abandonment.

When that realization comes, leaving often does not look angry or dramatic.

It looks quiet.
Clear.
Complete.

Presence is no longer something to negotiate.

And that is not rejection.

It is completion.


A final word for anyone still inside Jonah

For anyone who recognizes themselves here:

You are not weak.
You are not faithless.
You are not failing.

You may simply be surviving in a system that taught endurance more thoroughly than healing.

God is patient with Jonah bodies.
God stays.

But God also leads some people quietly, gently beyond Jonah.

Not away from faith.
Into embodiment.

And when that happens, leaving does not look like rebellion.

It looks like truth finally allowed to live in the body.

The Door Series: Thresholds of Faith

 

Session 6: The Door That Christ Is

Based on John 10:7–10


I. The Door With a Name

Jesus does not only speak about doors.
He names Himself as one.

“I am the door. Whoever enters through Me will be saved.” (John 10:9)

This shifts everything.
The door is not a method.
It is a relationship.

Faith is not primarily about choosing correctly.
It is about entering Christ.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The spiritual life is not about being better than others, but about being with God.”

The door is a Person who invites trust.


II. Safety and Freedom Together

Jesus describes what this door offers.

“They will come in and go out, and find pasture.” (John 10:9)

This door does not trap.
It protects and releases.
It offers safety without confinement and freedom without chaos.

Many doors promise freedom but deliver fear.
Christ’s door promises life.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“True freedom is not the power to do what we want, but the grace to live as we were created to live.”

The door of Christ restores us to ourselves.


III. The Contrast of Thieves

Jesus contrasts Himself with false doors.

“The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy.” (John 10:10)

Not every open door leads to life.
Some entrances slowly diminish the soul.

Discernment is not suspicion.
It is wisdom shaped by trust in Christ.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“The life of faith is learning to recognize where life truly flows.”

Christ’s door always leads toward abundance, even when the path is costly.


IV. Life to the Full

Jesus names His purpose clearly.

“I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full.” (John 10:10)

Fullness here is not excess.
It is depth.
Wholeness.
Integration.

The door that Christ is does not remove suffering.
It gives suffering meaning and hope.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Life with God is not immunity from pain, but trust within it.”

The door opens into a life held by love.


V. The Invitation

All other doors in Scripture lead here.
The closed door of protection.
The open door of invitation.
The door we knock on in the dark.
The gate of return.
The narrow door.

They converge in Christ.

“Come to Me, all you who are weary.” (Matthew 11:28)

Faith ultimately is not about thresholds.
It is about entering and remaining in Him.


Practicing Life Through the Door This Week

  1. Name where you seek life.
    Ask whether it truly leads toward Christ.

  2. Enter consciously.
    Begin your day with the prayer,
    “Jesus, I enter through You.”

  3. Practice discernment.
    Notice which doors bring peace and which drain it.

  4. Rest in belonging.
    Remember that you are safe within Christ.

  5. Pray for fullness.

    “Jesus, You are the door.
    Lead me into life that is whole and true.
    Keep me in Your care and guide my steps.”

Thursday, December 18, 2025

The Door Series: Thresholds of Faith

 

Session 5: The Narrow Door

Based on Luke 13:22–30


I. The Door Few Choose

As Jesus traveled and taught, someone asked Him a question driven by anxiety.

“Lord, are only a few people going to be saved?” (Luke 13:23)

Jesus did not answer with statistics.
He answered with an image.

“Make every effort to enter through the narrow door.” (Luke 13:24)

The narrow door is not about exclusion.
It is about intention.
It cannot be rushed through.
It cannot be crowded.
It requires attention and choice.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The spiritual life is not a life of accumulation, but of subtraction.”

The narrow door invites us to lay down what cannot pass through.


II. What Cannot Fit Through

Jesus warns that many will assume proximity equals belonging.

“We ate and drank with You, and You taught in our streets.” (Luke 13:26)

Familiarity is not the same as transformation.
The narrow door does not open to habit alone.
It opens to surrender.

What cannot fit through this door is self-importance.
Certainty.
Entitlement.
The need to be right rather than changed.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“We do not enter the spiritual life by being correct, but by being converted.”

The narrowness is not cruelty.
It is clarity.


III. The Urgency of Now

Jesus speaks of a time when the door is shut.

“Once the owner of the house gets up and closes the door, you will stand outside knocking.” (Luke 13:25)

This is not meant to produce fear.
It is meant to awaken seriousness.

There are moments when grace invites decision.
Delay hardens the heart.
The narrow door teaches us that faith is lived in time, not abstraction.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“Grace is not opposed to effort.
It is opposed to earning.”

Entering the narrow door requires effort of attention, humility, and obedience.


IV. The Surprise Beyond the Door

Jesus ends with reversal.

“Indeed there are those who are last who will be first, and first who will be last.” (Luke 13:30)

The narrow door opens into a kingdom that overturns expectations.
Those who come empty-handed find room.
Those who cling to status find themselves unable to enter.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The way of Jesus is the way of downward mobility.”

The narrow door leads into freedom, not loss.


V. The Invitation

The narrow door is always before us.
Quiet.
Unimpressive.
Demanding honesty rather than performance.

“Humble yourselves before the Lord, and He will lift you up.” (James 4:10)

Faith matures when we choose the door that asks the most of our hearts.


Practicing the Narrow Door This Week

  1. Notice what feels too wide.
    Identify habits or attitudes that crowd your attention.

  2. Practice intentional choice.
    Choose one act of obedience that requires humility.

  3. Release entitlement.
    Pray,
    “Lord, help me enter with open hands.”

  4. Live attentively.
    Treat today as a threshold, not a rehearsal.

  5. Pray for clarity.

    “Lord, lead me through the narrow door.
    Strip away what does not belong.
    Form my heart for Your kingdom.”

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

The Door Series: Thresholds of Faith


Session 4: The Gate of Return

Based on Luke 15:20–24


I. The Road That Leads Home

The parable of the prodigal son is often read as a story about departure.
But its turning point is the return.

The son rehearses his speech.
He calculates his unworthiness.
He walks the long road home believing the door may remain closed.

“But while he was still a long way off, his father saw him and was filled with compassion for him.” (Luke 15:20)

Before the son reaches the gate, the father runs.
Grace moves faster than shame.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The return to the Father is the most radical movement of the spiritual life.”

The gate of return opens before the words are spoken.


II. The Door That Opens From the Inside

This gate is not opened by knocking.
It is opened by recognition.

The father does not wait to hear the confession.
He interrupts it with embrace.
He closes the distance with love.

“He ran to his son, threw his arms around him and kissed him.” (Luke 15:20)

Return does not begin with explanation.
It begins with being seen.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“God is not found in self-accusation but in the humility that accepts being loved.”

The door of return opens when we stop defending ourselves and allow grace to meet us.


III. Shame Left Outside the Gate

The son expected consequences.
He prepared for demotion.
He anticipated exclusion.

Instead, the father restores him fully.

“Quick. Bring the best robe and put it on him.
Put a ring on his finger and sandals on his feet.” (Luke 15:22)

The robe covers shame.
The ring restores identity.
The sandals mark freedom.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“Grace is not opposed to effort.
It is opposed to earning.”

The son’s return did not earn restoration.
It received it.


IV. The Table Beyond the Gate

Every door in this parable leads to a table.

“Let’s have a feast and celebrate.” (Luke 15:23)

Return always ends in communion.
The gate opens not into punishment but into celebration.

The table declares what the son could not say.
Belonging is restored.
Relationship is renewed.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“God’s joy is found not in punishing sinners but in welcoming them home.”

The gate of return leads into joy.


V. The Invitation

The gate of return stands open for all who wander, doubt, or feel unworthy.
It does not require eloquent repentance.
It requires willingness to come home.

“There will be more rejoicing in heaven over one sinner who repents.” (Luke 15:7)

Faith sometimes grows not by moving forward, but by turning back toward grace.


Practicing the Gate of Return This Week

  1. Name where you need to return.
    Bring it honestly before God without rehearsing a defense.

  2. Receive the embrace.
    Sit quietly and imagine the Father running toward you.

  3. Release self-punishment.
    Let go of the need to earn your way back.

  4. Accept restored identity.
    Remember that you are called child, not servant.

  5. Pray for homecoming grace.

    “Father, I am coming home.
    Meet me with compassion.
    Restore what has been lost.
    Let me live again in Your joy.”

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

The Door Series: Thresholds of Faith

 

Session 3: Knocking in the Dark

Based on Matthew 7:7–11


I. The Door That Does Not Open Immediately

Jesus speaks words that sound simple but are often lived in tension.

“Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you.” (Matthew 7:7)

Knocking implies delay.
It assumes a closed door.
It acknowledges that what we desire is not yet accessible.

Faith is often formed not when doors open quickly, but when they remain closed longer than we expected.
Knocking in the dark is the discipline of continuing to trust when clarity has not yet arrived.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Waiting is not a passive activity.
It is an active engagement with hope.”

The knock itself becomes an act of faith.


II. Persistence Without Certainty

Jesus does not say knock once.
The language implies ongoing action.
Ask and keep asking.
Seek and keep seeking.
Knock and keep knocking.

Persistence is not manipulation.
It is relationship.
It is returning to God again and again with the same longing, the same question, the same hope.

“For everyone who asks receives; the one who seeks finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.” (Matthew 7:8)

Knocking is prayer that refuses to disappear into discouragement.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“Prayer does not change God.
It changes the one who prays.”

The door may still be closed, but the one who knocks is being reshaped.


III. The Darkness That Deepens Trust

There are seasons when God feels silent.
The door remains closed.
The answer does not come.
The night stretches longer than expected.

Yet darkness does not mean absence.
It often means formation.

Children learn trust not when parents give immediately, but when presence remains steady even without answers.

Jesus reminds His listeners of this truth.

“Which of you, if your son asks for bread, will give him a stone?” (Matthew 7:9)

God’s goodness does not change in silence.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“Trust in God is not confidence that we will get what we want,
but assurance that God is good no matter what.”

Knocking in the dark teaches the heart to rest in God’s character rather than His outcomes.


IV. The Door Opened by Love

Jesus ends His teaching not with technique, but with assurance.

“How much more will your Father in heaven give good gifts to those who ask Him.” (Matthew 7:11)

The door opens according to love, not urgency.
God responds as a Father, not a gatekeeper.

Sometimes the door opens outward.
Sometimes it opens inward, changing the one who knocks.
Sometimes it opens later, in a way we did not expect.

But love is always on the other side.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“God’s silence is often His invitation to deeper trust.”

What feels like waiting may be the work itself.


V. The Invitation

Knocking in the dark is not failure.
It is fidelity.
It is the quiet refusal to walk away from God when answers delay.

Faith matures not when doors open easily, but when we continue to knock with hope intact.

“The Lord is good to those whose hope is in Him, to the one who seeks Him.” (Lamentations 3:25)

God honors the knock that comes from trust.


Practicing Faith While Knocking This Week

  1. Name the door you are knocking on.
    Speak it honestly to God without demanding a timeline.

  2. Practice faithful persistence.
    Return to God daily with the same prayer, trusting that He hears you.

  3. Release outcomes.
    Pray,
    “Lord, I trust Your goodness even if the door stays closed for now.”

  4. Notice internal shifts.
    Pay attention to how waiting is shaping your patience, humility, or trust.

  5. Pray for endurance.

    “Lord, teach me how to knock without losing heart.
    Strengthen my trust in Your goodness.
    Help me remain faithful in the dark.”

Monday, December 15, 2025

The Door Series: Thresholds of Faith

 

Session 2: The Open Door of Invitation

Based on Revelation 3:8


I. The Door God Opens

In the book of Revelation, Jesus speaks to a small and faithful church.
They are not powerful.
They are not influential.
They do not command attention.

Yet Jesus says something remarkable to them.

“See, I have placed before you an open door that no one can shut.” (Revelation 3:8)

The door is not opened because of strength.
It is opened because of faithfulness.
God does not always open doors for the impressive.
He opens doors for those who listen and respond.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“God’s call does not come to those who feel ready,
but to those who are willing to trust Him step by step.”

An open door is not a reward.
It is an invitation.


II. The Courage to Step Forward

An open door still requires movement.
It asks for courage, attention, and response.
Standing at a threshold is often uncomfortable.
The familiar lies behind.
The unknown lies ahead.

Jesus does not promise ease beyond the door.
He promises presence.

“I know your deeds. You have kept My word and have not denied My name.” (Revelation 3:8)

Faithfulness positions us to recognize opportunity.
Obedience trains the heart to respond when the door opens.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“Vocation is not found by fleeing from life,
but by answering the call that rises from the depths of our present circumstances.”

The open door asks not for certainty, but for trust.


III. Doors Opened by Obedience

Throughout Scripture, doors open when people respond to God’s voice.
Abraham leaves his homeland.
Moses returns to Egypt.
Mary says yes without knowing the cost.
The disciples leave their nets.

Each step through an open door reshapes a life.

“Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding.” (Proverbs 3:5)

God often opens the way only far enough for the next step.
Clarity follows obedience, not the other way around.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“God’s guidance is not given to satisfy our curiosity,
but to shape our character through faithful response.”

The open door teaches us how to walk by faith.


IV. The Grace of Timing

An open door does not remain open forever.
Discernment matters.
So does timing.

Paul wrote of doors that opened for the gospel and of moments when he was constrained to wait.
Opportunity requires attentiveness.

“Make the most of every opportunity.” (Colossians 4:5)

God’s timing is never rushed, but it is intentional.
The open door appears when the heart is ready to step through it.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Discernment is listening with patience to what God is already doing.”

The door opens when we are willing to notice.


V. The Invitation

The open door of Revelation is a sign of hope.
It tells us that God is still inviting, still calling, still making a way.

Not every open door leads to comfort.
But every door God opens leads to growth.

“Ask and it will be given to you. Seek and you will find.” (Matthew 7:7)

Faith is learned at thresholds.
Transformation begins with a step.


Responding to an Open Door This Week

  1. Notice where God may be inviting you.
    Pay attention to opportunities that bring both excitement and holy hesitation.

  2. Pray for courage, not certainty.
    Ask God for the grace to take the next faithful step.

  3. Move in obedience, even if clarity is partial.
    Trust that understanding will follow action.

  4. Practice attentiveness.
    Ask,
    “Lord, what door are You opening before me?”

  5. Pray for willingness.

    “Lord, help me recognize the doors You open.
    Give me courage to step forward in trust,
    and faith to follow where You lead.”

Sunday, December 14, 2025

The Door Series: Thresholds of Faith

 

Throughout Scripture, God often meets people not in wide open fields, but at doors.

Doors that close for protection.
Doors that open into obedience.
Doors we knock on in the dark.
Doors we walk through when grace calls us home.

This series explores the sacred thresholds where faith deepens, not through certainty, but through trust.
It reflects on the moments when God says wait, enter, keep asking, or come back, and how spiritual growth often happens in the crossing rather than the arrival.

The Door Series invites you to see divine closures and openings not as obstacles, but as mercy, guidance, and invitation.
Each session draws from Scripture to help us recognize where God is working quietly at the thresholds of our own lives.


Session 1: The Closed Door of Protection

Based on Genesis 7:16


I. The Door God Shut

The flood narrative contains a quiet but powerful detail that is easy to miss.

“Then the Lord shut him in.” (Genesis 7:16)

Noah did not close the door of the ark.
God did.

This was not a door of rejection.
It was a door of mercy.
The closing was not punishment.
It was protection.

Inside the ark were safety, provision, and preservation of life.
Outside was chaos and destruction.
The closed door became the boundary between harm and refuge.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“God’s care often takes the form of limits that protect us from what would undo us.”

Sometimes the most loving act of God is the door He closes for us.


II. Surrender Inside the Ark

Once the door was shut, Noah had no control over what came next.
He could not steer the ark.
He could not shorten the storm.
He could not open the door when fear rose.

He was fully surrendered to God’s timing and protection.

Faith inside a closed door often looks like waiting.
Like trusting without answers.
Like believing that safety does not always feel comfortable.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“Faith means trusting in advance what will only make sense in reverse.”

The ark was not a place of ease.
It was a place of trust.


III. The Silence After the Closing

Scripture does not record God speaking to Noah during the flood.
There were days of rain.
Weeks of floating.
Months of uncertainty.

The silence did not mean abandonment.
It meant containment.

God was still present even when He was quiet.
The closed door held Noah in the space where life could be preserved until the storm passed.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“Silence is not the absence of God.
It is often the nearness of God beyond words.”

Inside the ark, faith matured in the quiet.


IV. Protection That Is Not Explained

God did not explain the timing.
He did not justify the length of the flood.
He did not reveal when the door would open again.

Protection does not always come with explanation.
Sometimes it comes with enclosure.

The door remained shut until the earth was ready to receive life again.

“God remembered Noah.” (Genesis 8:1)

Remembering in Scripture means acting with faithfulness.
God never forgot Noah.
He was sustaining him every moment behind the closed door.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“When we feel shut in, we are often being held.”

What feels confining may be saving your life.


V. The Invitation

The closed door of Genesis is not a symbol of rejection.
It is a symbol of divine care.

God closes doors to protect what He intends to preserve.
He encloses us not to trap us, but to carry us through what would otherwise destroy us.

“The Lord is a refuge for the oppressed, a stronghold in times of trouble.” (Psalm 9:9)

Faith sometimes means trusting the door God shut.


Living With a Closed Door This Week

  1. Name the door that is closed.
    Acknowledge it honestly before God without trying to force it open.

  2. Practice trust inside the boundary.
    Ask God what it means to rest where you are instead of striving for what is outside.

  3. Release the need for explanation.
    Pray quietly,
    “Lord, I trust Your protection even when I do not understand it.”

  4. Notice what is being preserved.
    Look for what God is protecting in your life right now.

  5. Pray for sheltering grace.

    “Lord, thank You for the doors You close to protect me.
    Help me trust Your care when the storm is loud and the waiting is long.”

Saturday, December 13, 2025

The Table Series: Communion in Everyday Life

 

Session 10: The Table of Anticipation

Based on Revelation 19:6–9


I. A Table Still Being Prepared

Scripture ends with a feast.
Not a battlefield.
Not a courtroom.
A wedding table.

“Blessed are those who are invited to the wedding supper of the Lamb.” (Revelation 19:9)

This table is not symbolic only.
It is promised.
It is prepared.
It is certain.

Every table we have encountered points toward this one.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“Hope is the expectation that something new is being born even when we cannot yet see it.”

The table of anticipation teaches us how to live toward what is coming.


II. Living Between Tables

We live between the tables of earth and the table of heaven.
Between broken meals and the perfect feast.
Between communion now and communion complete.

This tension shapes Christian hope.
We eat in faith.
We wait in trust.
We anticipate in joy.

Thomas Merton wrote,

“Faith is not clinging to the past but opening ourselves to the future God is preparing.”

Anticipation is not impatience.
It is confidence.


III. The Joy of the Coming Feast

The wedding supper is the fulfillment of every longing.
All loneliness answered.
All separation healed.
All hunger satisfied.

“Let us rejoice and be glad and give Him glory.” (Revelation 19:7)

Joy is the language of this table.
Not effort.
Not striving.
Joy.

Dallas Willard wrote,

“Joy is the settled assurance that God is at work and that His purposes will prevail.”

At the table of anticipation, joy begins before fulfillment arrives.


IV. Eating Today With Tomorrow in Mind

The promise of the future table shapes how we eat today.
It teaches us patience.
It teaches us gratitude.
It teaches us hope.

Every shared meal becomes rehearsal.
Every act of hospitality becomes practice.
Every communion becomes foretaste.

Henri Nouwen wrote,

“The Eucharist is always a promise of the future.
It tells us that what we taste now will one day be complete.”

Anticipation sanctifies the present.


V. The Invitation

The final invitation of Scripture is an invitation to the table.

“The Spirit and the bride say, ‘Come.’” (Revelation 22:17)

We live as invited people.
We eat as hopeful people.
We gather as those who know the feast is coming.

The table of anticipation fills ordinary life with sacred expectancy.


Practicing the Table of Anticipation This Week

  1. Eat with hope.
    Let meals remind you that joy is coming.

  2. Practice gratitude for what is unfinished.
    Thank God not only for what has been fulfilled, but for what is promised.

  3. Hold sorrow with hope.
    Let anticipation soften grief.

  4. Share hope with others.
    Speak of the future God is preparing.

  5. Pray toward the feast.

    “Lord, teach me to live as one who is invited.
    Let hope shape my days and joy steady my heart.
    Prepare me for the table that is coming.”

Friday, December 12, 2025

Immanuel in the Quiet Places

 

A Christmas Reflection

There is a kind of Christmas you live before loss,
and a very different kind you live after.

Before, Christmas arrived with noise.
With plans.
With expectation.
With movement.

Now it arrives differently.
Quieter.
Slower.
More honest.

This year, Christmas does not ask you to perform joy.
It does not ask you to recreate what once was.
It simply draws near.

Not the nearness of people,
but the nearness of God.

The kind of nearness promised to the brokenhearted.
The kind that comes close when spirits are crushed.
The kind that does not flinch at sorrow,
but stays with it.

A nearness that does not hurry you.
A nearness that does not explain itself.
A nearness that remains.

Thomas Merton once said that God is not found in noise or restlessness,
but in the quiet where we finally stop running.

This Christmas, you understand that truth in your bones.


The Presence That Never Left

When you look back now,
you can see it.

Not all at once.
Not clearly at the time.
But unmistakably.

God was with you.

With you
during the shock of unspeakable loss.
With you
when words failed and silence took over.
With you
as relationships shifted and fell away.
With you
as grief slowly loosened its grip
and breath returned.
With you
as you quietly stepped into a new church, trusting God to lead your family into a healthier place.

Henri Nouwen wrote that the greatest gift we can offer one another
is not answers, but presence.

And this is what God offered you first.

He did not wait for strength.
He did not wait for understanding.
He carried you before you could carry yourself.

Christmas does not introduce this truth.
It reveals it.

You were never alone.


The God Who Entered the Quiet

Immanuel means God with us.
But this year it means God with you
in the places no one else could reach.

In the quiet evenings.
In the empty spaces.
In the moments when decisions felt heavy.
In the slow learning of what love is
and what love is not.
In the necessary release of what could not follow you forward.

Dallas Willard said that God’s presence is not something we strive toward,
but something we awaken to.

And slowly, gently, you awakened.

God did not stand outside your story.
He stepped into it.

Into silence.
Into sorrow.
Into rebuilding.

And He stayed.


The Light That Grows From Within

There is a light in you this Christmas.

Not loud.
Not showy.
Not borrowed from the season.

It is the light that rises after long darkness.
The kind foretold for those who walked through shadow
and suddenly found themselves illuminated from within.

It is the light of steadiness.
Of peace that no longer wavers.
Of joy that does not demand explanation.

Brennan Manning said that the truest thing about us
is that we are deeply loved by God.

You live from that truth now.

You are not cheerful because everything is easy.
You are calm because something has settled.

You trust again.
You rest again.
You hope without fear.

This is the light Christmas brings.
Not because the world is bright,
but because God has made His home within you.


A Holy Turning Forward

This Christmas does not pull you backward.
It gently turns you forward.

Toward a future you do not yet see,
but no longer fear.
Toward a life shaped less by loss
and more by restoration.
Toward a peace that feels earned,
and a joy that feels safe.

You are not who you were last Christmas.
You are more grounded.
More whole.
More yourself.

That is the quiet miracle.


Conclusion

Immanuel is no longer just a name from Scripture.
It is the story of your life.

God with you
when the ground gave way.
God with you
as healing began.
God with you
as you learned to stand again.
God with you
now, in a season marked by peace.

This Christmas, you do not celebrate from longing.
You celebrate from presence.

Because the God who came into the world
has been with you all along.

“Behold, the virgin shall be with child and bear a Son,
and they shall call His name Immanuel,”
which is translated, God with us.

Matthew 1:23