Friday, December 19, 2025

O Little Town Of Bethlehem

 

Bethlehem Ephrathah, you are too little to be among the family groups of Judah. But from you One will come who will rule for Me in Israel. His coming was planned long ago, from the beginning.
- Micah 5:2 (NLV)
 
There’s something special about traveling through quaint little towns, the kind you might pass through on a road trip—where time seems to slow down, the streets are quieter, and life feels a little less rushed. You don’t usually plan to stay long, but something about the simplicity makes you pay attention.
Bethlehem was that kind of place - it wasn’t a destination people talked about or a city that drew attention to itself. Yet it became the place where heaven touched earth. God chose a town most people would pass right by to introduce the most important moment in history.
O Little Town of Bethlehem reminds us that God’s greatest work doesn’t always happen where we expect it. Sometimes it happens while we’re on the move, in seasons of transition, or in places we never planned to linger.
Travel changes our perspective. It pulls us out of routine and invites us to notice things we’d normally miss. In the same way, God often meets us when we’re in between—between plans, between seasons, between what was and what’s coming next.
As Mary and Joseph traveled, they couldn’t have known how significant that journey would be. They were simply being faithful with the next step in front of them. And in that obedience, God unfolded a miracle.
As we continue toward Christmas, may we stay open to the places God leads us—even if they aren’t on our original map. May we trust that every step, every stop, and every detour can be part of His greater plan.
 
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Daily Inspiration from the Bible

Thursday, December 18, 2025

Hark! The Herald Angels Sing

 

And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying: “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, goodwill toward men!”
- Luke 2:13-14 (NKJV)
 
There are moments in Scripture where heaven simply cannot stay quiet.
The night Jesus was born was not silent for long. What began in obscurity—shepherds watching their flocks, a newborn lying in a manger—suddenly erupted into praise. Heaven broke through the darkness, and the message was clear: This changes everything.
Hark! The Herald Angels Sing is not a gentle invitation. It is a proclamation. It calls us to stop, to listen, to pay attention. Something extraordinary has happened, and the heavens themselves are declaring it.
The angels did not announce political power or military strength. They announced glory and peace. They sang of reconciliation between God and humanity, of hope restored, of a Savior who had come not to condemn the world but to redeem it.
What’s beautiful is who received the announcement: Not kings or scholars and not the powerful.
Shepherds - ordinary people doing ordinary work on an ordinary night—until God interrupted it with extraordinary news. That tells us something about the heart of God. His good news is not reserved for the elite or the polished. It is for the humble, the overlooked, and the willing to listen.
Sometimes our lives are noisy. Our hearts are busy. We rush past moments where God is speaking because we’re focused on what’s right in front of us. This hymn invites us to pause and hark—to listen closely for the voice of God breaking into our everyday routines.
As we continue our journey toward the manger, may we tune our hearts to heaven’s song. May we recognize God’s glory not only in grand moments, but in quiet nights, simple lives, and unexpected places.
And when we hear Him—may our response be praise.
 
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Daily Inspiration from the Bible

Wednesday, December 17, 2025

Away In A Manger

 

She gave birth to her firstborn son. She wrapped him snugly in strips of cloth and laid him in a manger, because there was no lodging available for them.
— Luke 2:7 (NLT)
 
There is something tender and almost painfully gentle about Away in a Manger. No fanfare, no palace, no room at the inn.
The Savior of the world entered humanity not with noise or power, but with humility. A feeding trough became His first bed. Strips of cloth replaced royal robes. Heaven touched earth in the quietest way imaginable.
It’s easy to overlook the simplicity of this moment because we know how the story ends. But at the beginning, there was nothing impressive about it—at least not by the world’s standards. And maybe that’s the point.
Jesus did not come to overwhelm us. He came to draw near.
In a world that constantly tells us we need more—more success, more recognition, more perfection—Away in a Manger reminds us that God often works through the small, the overlooked, and the ordinary.
Maybe your life feels a bit like that manger right now—crowded, messy, or unprepared. Maybe there’s no room, no quiet, no sense that you have it all together. And yet, that is exactly where Jesus chooses to come.
The manger reminds us that God is not waiting for perfection. He is looking for willingness. He meets us right where we are and brings His presence into our imperfect spaces.
This year, let's make room—not in polished appearances or perfect plans—but in humble, open hearts ready to receive Him.
 
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Daily Inspiration from the Bible

Tuesday, December 16, 2025

Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus

 

For my eyes have seen your salvation, which you have prepared in the sight of all nations: a light for revelation to the Gentiles, and the glory of your people Israel.
— Luke 2:30–32 (NIV)
 
There is something deeply human about waiting with expectation.
Come, Thou Long Expected Jesus was written as a prayer—one that echoes centuries of hope, longing, and trust. It reminds us that the story of Christmas did not begin in a stable, but in promises whispered and carried forward by faithful hearts.
Simeon knew waiting.
Scripture tells us he was righteous and devout, waiting for the consolation of Israel. Day after day, year after year, he waited—not knowing when, only trusting who. And then one ordinary day, God fulfilled a lifetime of promise in his arms.
When Simeon looked at Jesus, he did not see a baby bound by human limitations. He saw salvation. He saw light. He saw the fulfillment of everything God had promised.
Waiting does not mean God is late.
Sometimes it means God is working far beyond what we can see. Sometimes it means the promise is growing deeper roots before it is revealed. And sometimes, like Simeon, we are invited to recognize the miracle in the ordinary moment.
This hymn reminds us that Jesus did not come only to meet expectations—He came to exceed them. He came not just for one people, but for all nations. Not just to rescue, but to illuminate. Not just to arrive, but to redeem.
Starting today, may we learn to wait with trust, to recognize God’s timing, and to rejoice when His promises unfold—often in ways far greater than we imagined.
 
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Daily Inspiration from the Bible

Monday, December 15, 2025

O Come, O Come, Emmanuel

 

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 (NKJV)
 
For centuries, God’s people waited.
They waited through silence, through uncertainty, through generations that passed without seeing the promise fulfilled. O Come, O Come, Emmanuel gives voice to that longing — the quiet ache of hearts crying out, Come. Stay. Rescue us. Be near.
The name Immanuel appears in Scripture, spoken as a promise long before its fulfillment. It comes from the Hebrew and means “God with us.” Not a distant God. Not a God who watches from afar. A God who steps into human flesh and chooses to dwell among His people.
In the hymn, we sing the name Emmanuel—the same name, expressed through centuries of worship and tradition. Different spelling, same truth. The promise spoken in prophecy becomes the promise sung by believers across generations: God is with us.
Waiting is rarely comfortable. We live in a world that demands instant answers and quick solutions, yet Advent reminds us that waiting is often where faith is strengthened. It is in the waiting that hope takes root. It is in the quiet that God is still working, even when we cannot see it.
Maybe you’re in a season of waiting right now—waiting for healing, for peace, for clarity, for restoration. This hymn reminds us that God’s promise does not expire. What He has spoken, He will fulfill. Immanuel has come… and Emmanuel is still with us today.
Today we have 10 days before Christmas.  As we begin this journey toward the manger, may we slow our hearts, remember the waiting, and rejoice—not only because Christ came into the world, but because He continues to come near to us, right where we are.
 
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Daily Inspiration from the Bible

Friday, December 12, 2025

learning to be loved

 
We love because he first loved us.
- 1 John 4:19 (NIVUK)
 
As this week wraps up, I find myself coming back to one simple but not-so-easy truth:
Before we can truly love the way God calls us to love… we have to first learn how to receive His love.
Frances Chan teaches in his book Beloved that allowing ourselves to be loved by God means abandoning the need to prove our worth and instead resting in the secure, unchanging love He already has for us, a transformation that brings freedom and changes everything.
And honestly… that rings so true.
We’re really good at doing.
We’re pretty good at giving.
We’re even decent at serving.
But being still long enough to believe that we are fully loved—right where we are? That’s tough.
So many of us walk around carrying quiet shame and quiet regrets, the quiet reminders of all the ways we think we’ve failed.
We know God loves the world…
We just struggle to believe He loves us with that same depth and tenderness.
But Scripture is clear:
We don’t love God first.
He loved us first.
Before we cleaned up.
Before we figured things out.
Before we got it together.
Christmas proves that God didn’t wait for us to become worthy—He came because we weren’t.
And the truth is this:
Until we fully receive the love of God, we will always struggle to give the love of God.
Because you can’t pour out what you refuse to believe you truly have.
When we live loved, we love differently.
We forgive more freely.
We give more generously.
We judge less harshly.
We show up more consistently.
Love stops feeling like pressure… and starts feeling like overflow.
So today, maybe the bravest prayer isn’t “Lord, help me love better.”
Maybe it’s simply:
“Lord, help me believe that I am deeply, completely, and unconditionally loved.”
Because once that settles into your heart—
Everything else begins to change.
 
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Daily Inspiration from the Bible

Thursday, December 11, 2025

not just for you

 
By this everyone will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.
- John 13:35 (NIV)
 
One of the things that stood out to me so strongly in church this week was this reminder:
God’s love is for you… but it was never meant to stop with you.
“By this everyone will know that you are My disciples, if you love one another.”
Everyone.
Not just the people who look like us.
Not just the people who think like us.
Not just the people who are easy to love.
Everyone.
It’s such a simple verse, but it carries such a big responsibility. The way we love is meant to be a living, breathing testimony of Jesus to the world around us. Not our church attendance. Not our Bible knowledge. Not the Christian quotes we share online. Our love.
And let’s be real… loving people is not always easy.
Some people push our buttons or hurt us deeply.
Some people live in ways we don’t understand or agree with.
Some people carry labels that make it easier to judge them than to love them.
But God didn’t put conditions on John 3:16 either, did He?
God so loved the world.
Not the perfect.
Not the cleaned-up.
Not the already-holy.
The world.
We are not just here to be saved.
We are not just here to be healed.
We are not just here to sit comfortably in our faith.
We are here on purpose and on mission.
And sometimes the most powerful act of evangelism isn’t a sermon…
It’s patience.
It’s kindness.
It’s forgiveness.
It’s choosing not to keep score.
It’s loving when the world says someone is unlovable.
Something else that hit me hard this week was this truth:
My reaction to people could be the very thing that shifts the direction of their life.
That’s heavy… but it’s also holy.
So today, I’m asking myself some honest questions:
Who do I struggle to love?
Who do I silently judge?
Who do I avoid instead of engage?
And then I’m asking God to help me love anyway.
Because love isn’t just something we receive at Christmas—
It’s something we are called to release every single day.
 
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Daily Inspiration from the Bible

O Little Town Of Bethlehem

  Bethlehem Ephrathah, you are too little to be among the family groups of Judah. But from you One will come who will rule for Me in Israel....