Day 23 - At Last, Joy!
Preparing to write this last Advent post, I was asking God to show me a illustration of what it looks like for Jesus to be with us.
Read MorePreparing to write this last Advent post, I was asking God to show me a illustration of what it looks like for Jesus to be with us.
Read MoreAs we unpack mega joy, it might help if we look at some important celebrations in the Old Testament.
Read MoreJesus doesn’t give peace. He gives HIS peace.
Read MoreShalom is a scandal to the world.
Read MorePeace with God.
How often to we think about what this means? Honestly, I don’t think about it all that much.
But he was pierced because of our rebellion, crushed because of our iniquities; the punishment for our peace was on him.
-Isaiah 53:5
Yesterday we pondered what brings men peace with God— the shedding of blood. The blood of a spotless lamb.
Read MoreOne of the most common phrases printed on Christmas greeting cards and home decor is “Peace On Earth” from the angels’ announcement of Jesus’ birth to the shepherds in Luke 2:14. Peace is another one of those high-frequency words we use that has layers of meaning, which when teased out, can yield some amazing depth.
Read MoreProlonged waiting in extremely uncomfortable conditions often pushes us past the limits of what propriety usually is able to restrain.
Read MoreAdvent is often characterized as a season of stillness, of waiting, and it is. Waiting without purpose, though, is laziness.
Read MoreQuietness is not born of strength and determined courage. It’s confidence is the one who holds you.
Read MoreIt’s a simple word—wait—but it’s more complex than it pretends to be.
Read MoreI can’t help but wonder if no one else saw Him because no one else was waiting for Him.
Read MoreWho looks for a Comforter without needing consolation?
Read MoreThe prophet Isaiah says that those who hope in God will not be disappointed (Isaiah 49:23). What does that mean?
Read MoreThe curse pronounced on the seducing serpent was the gospel preached to mankind.
Read MoreAn oasis is a spectacle in a desert because it audaciously sustains green and lovely things in the middle of a hostile environment. To the one on a journey through the wilderness whose eyes have grown accustomed to barrenness and sand, it reminds him that the desert is not the ultimate reality. There’s a destination on the other side of the wilderness, and an oasis is where a form of the final place pushes through the surface of the desert floor. It’s evidence of the life that’s at the end of the journey through the wilderness.
Read MoreOur hope is not an abstraction. It has a tangible anchor--the baby in the manger.
Read MoreHope is the confident expectation of future good.
Read MoreWhen this story opens, Israel has been through 400 years of drought. Not a drought of rain. Worse. A drought of hearing Yahweh speak (Amos 8:11)
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