My wife and I opened our presents already. Yes… already! We love some spontaneity at times and with us going to dinner on Christmas Eve with her side of the family and then lunch the next day with my side of the family, we thought we would have a special time reserved for us to open our gifts.
With a muted Polar Express flashing on the TV screen and Shane and Shane’s Glory in the Highest Christmas album playing, we settled in and decided to read Luke 1 and 2, the story of Christmas. We got the birth of John the Baptist in there, as well. But, once we got to the part where the angels appeared to the shepherds and the shepherds were so amazed that they went to see the newborn Jesus, our hearts worshipped. The phrase, “But Mary treasured these things in her heart” jumped out twice and we wondered aloud how Mary would have felt knowing that her son was really the Son of God. After our reading, we prayed. We prayed for us to experience the gift of Christmas. We thanked the Lord for His coming to this world and to our lives. We prayed that in the next year, we would glorify God with our lives and that peace would reign in our home. We prayed for those in our family who have yet to know Him. We thanked God for the gifts that we were about to open. He has been good to us. We prayed for those who would open a gift these next few days and still will not be satisfied because their hearts yearn for a better gift. We asked the Holy Spirit to magnify Christ in their lives and reveal Him to them. Then, we opened gifts, chatted some more and nodded off to sleep. It was a wonderful time, really.
My wife and I are by no means perfect. We have our share of conflict and sin in our marriage and in our personal lives, so the paragraph above must seem utopian and idyllic, romantic and perfect; like if we have it all together. Not so. Not so at all. We take this life day by day, as you do.
Today, I encourage you to really focus on God’s love for you in the incarnation of Christ brought to you through the power of the Holy Spirit. In times past, we have not really paid much attention to the real reason of Christmas. We probably have only mumbled a prayer with one eye closed and the other eye opened, fixed on the gifts underneath the tree that we will “get.” Today, remember that God’s love for you exceeds any monetary value. Christ was born! Let us rejoice in Him! Spend time with family, eat as many tamales as you can (I am having my share already!), kiss your spouse, hug your children, open gifts, and have a great time. But, in all your eating and gifting, remember that Christ’s presence is there to be embraced and worshipped.
So, if you don’t know what to do, read Luke 2 or pray with your family for a few minutes. Let your children see the value that you put on the arrival of Christ and ask them to participate in meeting Christ, the real gift, with you. Teach and model what it is to “treasure these things in your heart” (Luke 2:19, 51). This time will look different for you than the time we had last night. And it’s ok. We are all different. The idea is not to appear to have it all together, but to attempt to glorify God in all we do.
If you need some help in this, check out these posts I’ve written the last few days and let them stimulate in you a desire for Christ’s fullness:
- Advent: Introduction
- Christ’s Fullness is Divine
- Christ’s Fullness is Accessible
- Christ’s Fullness is Full of Grace and Truth
- Christ’s Fullness is Glorious
Merry Christmas to you and your family!
“Glory to God in the highest,
and on earth peace among those with whom he is pleased!”
-Luke 2:14

As we continue to remember Christ’s birth, we are filled with joy that God so loved us that He gave His only Son for us. So many implications come from that. There is freedom, deliverance, joy, peace, hope! We could write thousands of blog posts, articles, books about what Christ’s birth has brought us and what it all means, but one thing I always remember is that when Christ came, He came full of grace and truth. Grace and truth. What a paradox, we might say. This is a contradiction, others may say. How can it be that there can be truth but at the same time grace? How can I be corrected (truth) of some fault but at the same time with love and be granted forgiveness (grace)? Christ is our best example of how this happens. John 1:14 tells us,

