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The Miracles of Christmas Are for You

I know you’ve likely had a busy few weeks, full of Christmas services, programs, and ministry. By this point, you’re probably exhausted. But don’t miss the opportunity to take a few moments to reflect on the miracles of Christmas. You’ve preached about Christmas. You’ve talked about it. You’ve sung about it.

It’s easy to get so busy doing ministry during the Christmas season that you never take the time to think about what God did at Christmas—and what it means for you.

As you wrap up this season and head into a new year, take some time to thank God for these four Christmas miracles.

God Came to Earth

The God of the universe became a man. The Bible describes Jesus as “the image of the invisible God” (Colossians 1:15 NIV). Jesus wasn’t just a good man—He was God in the flesh. 

The incarnation isn’t just a fancy theological term for you to preach; it’s a deeply personal reality to embrace in your ministry. God isn’t detached from the struggles you’re facing. He is right there in your fatigue, frustrations, and joys.

Thanks to the miracle of the incarnation, you are never alone. God’s presence is the greatest gift you can receive this Christmas.

God Came as a Man

Paul tells us, “[Christ] gave up his place with God and made himself nothing. He was born as a man and became like a servant. And when he was living as a man, he humbled himself” (Philippians 2:7-8 NCV).

Think about all the ways God could have revealed himself. He could have written his message in fiery letters across the sky or invented a worldwide satellite system 2,000 years ago to broadcast his arrival. But he didn’t.

Jesus didn’t come as a distant force or an imposing deity. He came as a vulnerable, approachable, fully human baby. Why? So he could relate to you. He grew like you, experienced life as you do, and faced every temptation without sinning.

Jesus understands the demands and challenges you face as a pastor. He knows what it’s like to be tired, to be misunderstood, and to carry the burdens of others. Let this truth sink in deeply this Christmas: You have a Savior who truly understands.

God Came for Everyone

The angels didn’t announce Jesus’ birth to the political and social elites of his time. They shared the Good News with lowly shepherds instead. It’s a powerful reminder that no one is excluded from the love Jesus came to earth to show.

That includes you. You’re not just a shepherd caring for others. You’re a sheep under the care of the Good Shepherd. You’re not just a preacher of the Good News about Jesus—you’re a recipient of it as well.

This Christmas, let that sink in: Jesus didn’t just come for the world—he came for you. his love is personal, and his grace is meant to renew your heart, even amid your ministry responsibilities.

God Came for Our Benefit

Jesus didn’t come to condemn us. He came to save us. He came to give us a life of abundance and purpose. Remember what Jesus says in John 10:10: “I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full” (NIV).

That “they” includes you! In the busyness of the Christmas season, it’s easy to focus on what God wants to give to those you’re shepherding. But don’t forget to thank God for the gifts he brings you—including the gift of your calling as a pastor.

Reflecting on the Miracles
Pastor, these miracles shouldn’t just be the foundation of your Christmas sermons—they’re God’s gift to you. As you look back on this busy season, let these truths refresh your own walk with Christ.

Recent Articles

Prayer: Your Ministry Decompression Chamber

Prayer: Your Ministry Decompression Chamber

Pastor, in a world of constant pressure and stress, prayer is like a spiritual decompression chamber.Jesus knew that.When you read the Gospels, you see him again and again stepping away from crowds, demands, and expectations to spend time alone with his Father. “Very early in the morning, while it was still dark, Jesus got up, left the house and went off to a solitary place, where he prayed” (Mark 1:35 NIV).This wasn’t occasional. It was habitual. “Many people came to hear Jesus and to be healed of their sicknesses, but Jesus often slipped away to be alone so he could pray” (Luke 5:15–16 NCV).If Jesus needed that space with the Father, how much more do you?You might be thinking, “I’m too busy to spend extended time in prayer.” But the truth is this: You’ll have nothing left to give your people if you don’t first let God refill you. Ministry drains. Prayer restores.Scripture reminds us, “Be still and know that I am God” (Psalm 46:10 NCV). It’s in unhurried, quiet moments with God that he recharges, renews, and restores your soul. And as your ministry load becomes heavier, this time with God becomes more essential—not less.So how do you make space to listen to God?Start by being still for an extended moment. Find a quiet place outside, in your office, or in a corner of your home. Sit before the Lord and simply ask, “God, is there anything you want to say to me?” Then resist the urge to rush. Be still. Listen.God may bring a thought to mind. He may lead you to a passage of Scripture and speak through his Word. If worries keep intruding, let Scripture redirect your attention and allow God’s truth to quiet what your mind keeps replaying.Pastor, God wants to speak to you, not just through you. He’s not asking for another performance or prayer report. He’s inviting you to come away with him, to be filled again before you pour yourself out.Make space.Be still long enough to listen.Let him restore you.
Thanking God Even When Life Is Hard

Thanking God Even When Life Is Hard

Some of you have had a tough year. You’ve endured criticism. Maybe you’ve lost a job. Maybe you’re walking through a rough patch in your marriage.Now comes Thanksgiving. Can we thank God even when times are tough?Yes, we can.“Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus” (1 Thessalonians 5:18 NIV)This verse doesn’t say to give thanks for everything. It says to give thanks in every circumstance. People misinterpret that all the time.You don’t have to thank God for evil. If a loved one was murdered, I wouldn’t be thankful. If my wife was sick, I wouldn’t be thankful. The Bible never tells us to be thankful for evil. But in every circumstance—no matter how bad it is—you can thank God because:His purpose is bigger than your problemHe will give you the power to overcome your problemYou will grow through the experience if you allow him to help you growYou may not be thankful for evil or difficulty, but you can be thankful despite evil or difficulty.How can you be grateful when you’ve lost your job, your health, or your spouse? You shift your focus. Instead of looking at what you’ve lost, look at what you still have. And you still have a lot.For one thing—you’re alive.So ask yourself: What am I taking for granted? Your health? Your freedom? Your relationships? There’s an old hymn that says, “Count your blessings, name them one by one.” We need to do that. Make lists of what you’re thankful for—your family, your friends, your ministry, anything God has given you. When times are tough, that’s when you most need to remember what God has provided.Becoming truly grateful may be the healthiest change you make all year. It’s better than any diet or exercise plan. That’s because love isn’t the healthiest emotion—gratitude is. When you’re thankful despite your circumstances, you’re more resistant to illness and stress.And remember this: You can’t find God’s will for your life when you’re ungrateful.Read this part of 1 Thessalonians 5:18 again: “Give thanks in all circumstances; for this is God’s will.” If you’re not living a grateful life—despite your circumstances—you’re outside of God’s will. It’s that simple.
Thank God before the Breakthrough

Thank God before the Breakthrough

“The king appointed singers to walk ahead of the army, singing to the LORD and praising him for his holy splendor. This is what they sang: ‘Give thanks to the LORD; his faithful love endures forever!’” (2 Chronicles 20:21 NLT)Pastor, few things strengthen your soul like thanking God before you see the breakthrough.When King Jehoshaphat faced three enemy armies, he didn’t rally the troops with a new strategy or a clever battle plan. Instead, he placed the choir in front of the soldiers—literally leading with worship. They sang, “Give thanks to the LORD; his faithful love endures forever!” (2 Chronicles 20:21 NLT).Imagine the optics: musicians on the front line and warriors behind them.But Jehoshaphat wasn’t being reckless. He was being faithful. He was reminding the people that the battle belonged to the Lord. Their formation was a declaration of trust. Their praise was tangible, public, verbalized faith.And, pastor, that’s the kind of faith God invites you to live out too.It doesn’t take much faith to thank God after the answer comes. But when attendance dips, when criticism cuts, when the budget is strained, or when prayers seem unanswered—that’s when thanking God in advance becomes an act of courage.Here’s the miracle: “At the very moment they began to sing and give praise, the LORD caused the armies of Ammon, Moab, and Mount Seir to start fighting among themselves” (2 Chronicles 20:22 NLT).The breakthrough began “at the very moment” they worshiped.Pastor, you carry pressures that most people will never see. Some battles feel unwinnable. Some problems feel unmovable. But thanking God in advance helps your heart shift from fear to faith, from striving to surrender.So today, take a moment to thank God for what you haven’t seen yet.Thank him for the wisdom you’ll need this week.Thank him for the person he’s transforming behind the scenes.Thank him for the breakthroughs in your church that haven’t yet arrived.God is already working in ways you can’t see. And just like Jehoshaphat, you can lead from a place of praise—confident that the battle still belongs to the Lord.
Four Characteristics of God-Pleasing Worship

Four Characteristics of God-Pleasing Worship

Pastors know the weight of guiding people in worship each week. But before you can lead others, it’s worth remembering what kind of worship actually pleases God. God doesn’t want just a part of your life—he wants all of you. He asks for all your heart, all your soul, all your mind, and all your strength. He is not interested in half-hearted commitment, partial obedience, or the leftovers of your time and money. He desires your full devotion.A Samaritan woman once tried to debate Jesus on the best time, place, and style for worship. Jesus replied that those external issues are not the point. Where you worship is not as important as why you worship and how much of yourself you offer to God when you worship. There is a right and a wrong way to worship. The Bible says, “Let us be grateful and worship God in a way that will please him” (Hebrews 12:28 GNT).The kind of worship that pleases God has four characteristics:1) God is pleased when our worship is accurate.People often say, “I like to think of God as . . .” and then describe the kind of God they’d like to worship. But we cannot create our own comfortable or culturally acceptable image of God and then worship it. That is idolatry.Worship must be based on the truth of Scripture, not our opinions about God. Jesus told the Samaritan woman, “True worshipers will worship the Father in spirit and truth, for the Father is seeking such people to worship him.” (John 4:23 ESV). To “worship . . . in . . . truth” means worshiping God as he is truly revealed in the Bible.For those in ministry, this means keeping worship rooted in Scripture rather than in shifting preferences or trends. Congregations will follow the model set before them—so let them see a pattern shaped by God’s Word.2) God is pleased when our worship is authentic.When Jesus said we must worship “in spirit,” he wasn’t referring to the Holy Spirit but to your spirit. Made in God’s image, you are a spirit who resides in a body, and God designed your spirit to communicate with him. Worship is your spirit responding to God’s Spirit.When Jesus said, “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul” (Matthew 22:37 NIV), he meant that worship must be genuine and heartfelt. It isn’t just saying the right words; you must mean what you say. Heartless praise is no praise at all—it’s an insult to God. “People look at the outward appearance, but the LORD looks at the heart” (1 Samuel 16:7 NIV).Since worship involves delighting in God, it engages your emotions—but they must be genuine, not faked. God hates hypocrisy. We can worship God imperfectly, but we cannot worship him insincerely.For pastors, this is an important reminder. It’s tempting to measure worship by how people seem to respond in a service. But God is looking past appearances and focusing on the heart.3) God is pleased when our worship is thoughtful.Jesus’ command to “love the Lord your God . . . with all your mind” (Matthew 22:37 NIV) is repeated four times in the New Testament. God is not pleased with thoughtless singing of hymns, perfunctory praying of clichés, or careless exclamations of “Praise the Lord” when we can’t think of anything else to say. If worship is mindless, it is meaningless. Jesus called thoughtless worship “vain repetitions” (Matthew 6:7 KJV).Even biblical terms can become tired clichés from overuse. That’s why it helps to read Scripture in different translations and paraphrases—to expand your expressions of worship.Ministry leaders can serve their people well by modeling fresh language in prayers and songs, encouraging expressions of worship that are specific, meaningful, and clear.4) God is pleased when our worship is practical.“Offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God—this is your true and proper worship” (Romans 12:1 NIV).Why does God want your body? Because without your body you can’t do anything on this planet. In eternity, you’ll get a new, improved, upgraded body, but while you’re on earth, God says, “Give me what you’ve got!” He’s being practical about worship.In worship we are to offer our bodies as living sacrifices. The problem with a living sacrifice is that it can crawl off the altar—and we often do. But real worship costs. David knew this and said, “I will not offer to the LORD my God sacrifices that have cost me nothing” (2 Samuel 24:24 GNT). One thing worship costs us is our self-centeredness. You cannot exalt God and yourself at the same time.This is especially important for pastors. Worship is not just what happens on stage or in a service—it’s also in the sacrifices of humility, generosity, and service throughout the week. That’s what teaches a congregation the most.
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