how do you do day 13?
the flowers are withering
the weather is dreary
sadness is in every crevice of my being
our enemy would say this is it...death is the end and it will hurt like this forever.
...we say together, ""Thank you God."... and grasp to pull strength from Him and one another...
HOPE trickles through our crushed hearts,
as friends are praying diligently, and asking Him to blanket us with Grace to hold on.
and He whispers through His words...
that we are not alone
that our beautiful baby is safe
that Victory is hers
and that angels surround us.
Christmas is about such a bigger plan
we read together and try to take in the story
of the certainty of His coming,
and we light our
HOPE candle. something tangible with words we stick on the candle and cling to...
We
beg Him to break in—to find us, to shatter our idols, to rescue us from
sin and death, to pursue us in our depravity and wandering. He must
come to us for we are unable and unwilling to come to Him. Advent
answers our despair and our self-righteousness with the beautiful
mystery of Christ’s incarnation. We are not waiting in vain! We learn
on the first Sunday of Advent, as He rides in to Jerusalem on a donkey,
that He is coming with His eyes set like a flint on the cross. He means
to be our Savior, to conquer death, hell, and every sin that so easily
besets us.
The waiting gives us time to repent, to prepare for the Savior of the world to be born, not just in manger, but in our hearts.
The season of Advent
teaches
us to live in expectation and repentance—to yearn for Him, to remember
what it was like to live in darkness and to give thanks to the One who
is always shattering the night.
We are desperate for the One who comes.
Read more at
http://www.lifeingraceblog.com/2013/12/why-we-need-advent-so-desperately-week-1/#Y4X6fJHExybB9BDp.99
the waiting, itself, signifies our desperation. we need Him so desperately to come to us.
marvin and I want to live in expectation and repentance—to yearn for Him,... to remember what it
was/and is like to live in darkness and to give thanks to the One who is always
shattering the night.
we are desperate for the One who comes to do that.
and then... God stretches open His hand, and the rain drops begin to
fall from His fingertips.
the rain may take all kinds of forms,
for God
has limitless resources, but we know the rain when it hits us.
it
refreshes us, and we feel the buds opening just a little again.
"Yet at the scent of
water it will bud and bring forth branches like a plant."
a stump,
bringing forth branches?
it's not just empty encouragement; it's in
the very heart of God...
"To comfort all who mourn,
To console those who mourn in Zion,
To give them beauty for ashes,
The oil of joy for mourning,
The garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness;
That they may be called trees of righteousness,
The planting of the Lord, that He may be glorified."
~ Isaiah 61:2-3, NKJV
Jesus
is speaking to the nation of Israel here, but timelessly, He is also
speaking to our family in a beautiful, specific way,...
for He has included us and our very real, present circumstances in the heart of His mission.
"Please God, out of ashes of devastation, draw out beauty and life. that's who You Are..."
we don't want to settle for stumps, regardless of how things seem or how we feel.
Jesus is in the business of bringing stumps to life with just the scent
of His Spirit.
and He does this for us...
thank you for praying.
we need Jesus.
We
beg Him to break in—to find us, to shatter our idols, to rescue us from
sin and death, to pursue us in our depravity and wandering. He must
come to us for we are unable and unwilling to come to Him. Advent
answers our despair and our self-righteousness with the beautiful
mystery of Christ’s incarnation. We are not waiting in vain! We learn
on the first Sunday of Advent, as He rides in to Jerusalem on a donkey,
that He is coming with His eyes set like a flint on the cross. He means
to be our Savior, to conquer death, hell, and every sin that so easily
besets us.
The waiting gives us time to repent, to prepare for the Savior of the world to be born, not just in manger, but in our hearts.
The season of Advent
teaches
us to live in expectation and repentance—to yearn for Him, to remember
what it was like to live in darkness and to give thanks to the One who
is always shattering the night.
We are desperate for the One who comes.
Read more at
http://www.lifeingraceblog.com/2013/12/why-we-need-advent-so-desperately-week-1/#Y4X6fJHExybB9BDp.99
We
beg Him to break in—to find us, to shatter our idols, to rescue us from
sin and death, to pursue us in our depravity and wandering. He must
come to us for we are unable and unwilling to come to Him. Advent
answers our despair and our self-righteousness with the beautiful
mystery of Christ’s incarnation. We are not waiting in vain! We learn
on the first Sunday of Advent, as He rides in to Jerusalem on a donkey,
that He is coming with His eyes set like a flint on the cross. He means
to be our Savior, to conquer death, hell, and every sin that so easily
besets us.
The waiting gives us time to repent, to prepare for the Savior of the world to be born, not just in manger, but in our hearts.
The season of Advent
teaches
us to live in expectation and repentance—to yearn for Him, to remember
what it was like to live in darkness and to give thanks to the One who
is always shattering the night.
We are desperate for the One who comes.
Read more at
http://www.lifeingraceblog.com/2013/12/why-we-need-advent-so-desperately-week-1/#Y4X6fJHExybB9BDp.99
We
beg Him to break in—to find us, to shatter our idols, to rescue us from
sin and death, to pursue us in our depravity and wandering. He must
come to us for we are unable and unwilling to come to Him. Advent
answers our despair and our self-righteousness with the beautiful
mystery of Christ’s incarnation. We are not waiting in vain! We learn
on the first Sunday of Advent, as He rides in to Jerusalem on a donkey,
that He is coming with His eyes set like a flint on the cross. He means
to be our Savior, to conquer death, hell, and every sin that so easily
besets us.
The waiting gives us time to repent, to prepare for the Savior of the world to be born, not just in manger, but in our hearts.
The season of Advent
teaches
us to live in expectation and repentance—to yearn for Him, to remember
what it was like to live in darkness and to give thanks to the One who
is always shattering the night.
We are desperate for the One who comes.
Read more at
http://www.lifeingraceblog.com/2013/12/why-we-need-advent-so-desperately-week-1/#Y4X6fJHExybB9BDp.99
We
beg Him to break in—to find us, to shatter our idols, to rescue us from
sin and death, to pursue us in our depravity and wandering. He must
come to us for we are unable and unwilling to come to Him. Advent
answers our despair and our self-righteousness with the beautiful
mystery of Christ’s incarnation. We are not waiting in vain! We learn
on the first Sunday of Advent, as He rides in to Jerusalem on a donkey,
that He is coming with His eyes set like a flint on the cross. He means
to be our Savior, to conquer death, hell, and every sin that so easily
besets us.
The waiting gives us time to repent, to prepare for the Savior of the world to be born, not just in manger, but in our hearts.
The season of Advent
teaches
us to live in expectation and repentance—to yearn for Him, to remember
what it was like to live in darkness and to give thanks to the One who
is always shattering the night.
We are desperate for the One who comes.
Read more at
http://www.lifeingraceblog.com/2013/12/why-we-need-advent-so-desperately-week-1/#Y4X6fJHExybB9BDp.99
We
beg Him to break in—to find us, to shatter our idols, to rescue us from
sin and death, to pursue us in our depravity and wandering. He must
come to us for we are unable and unwilling to come to Him. Advent
answers our despair and our self-righteousness with the beautiful
mystery of Christ’s incarnation. We are not waiting in vain! We learn
on the first Sunday of Advent, as He rides in to Jerusalem on a donkey,
that He is coming with His eyes set like a flint on the cross. He means
to be our Savior, to conquer death, hell, and every sin that so easily
besets us.
The waiting gives us time to repent, to prepare for the Savior of the world to be born, not just in manger, but in our hearts.
The season of Advent
teaches
us to live in expectation and repentance—to yearn for Him, to remember
what it was like to live in darkness and to give thanks to the One who
is always shattering the night.
We are desperate for the One who comes.
Read more at
http://www.lifeingraceblog.com/2013/12/why-we-need-advent-so-desperately-week-1/#Y4X6fJHExybB9BDp.99