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Immanuel: A Promise Bringing Hope This Christmas

All right then, the Lord himself will give you the sign. Look! The virgin will conceive a child! She will give birth to a son and will call him Immanuel (which means ‘God is with us’).
These words from Isaiah were spoken centuries before the first Christmas, yet they echo with remarkable clarity and hope today. In one short parenthetical statement—God is with us—Isaiah captures the heart of the Christmas story and the foundation of our faith.

God Is With Us—Right Now

Pause long enough to let that truth settle in: God is with us.
Not was with us.
Not will be with us someday.
But is with us.

Christmas reminds us that God stepped into our world—not as a distant deity watching from afar, but as a Savior who entered our humanity. He came into our pain, our struggles, our questions, and our everyday lives. He didn’t leave us to fend for ourselves or try to “figure it all out” on our own. Instead, He chose to walk beside us.

A Hope That Stays

The hope we receive because of Jesus isn’t fragile. It isn’t tied to our emotions, our circumstances, or the ups and downs of the world. Scripture tells us that this hope will never perish, spoil, or fade.

Political climates change. Life shifts. Cultures rise and fall. Our own plans sometimes crumble.
But the hope of Christ stands firm.

It is an eternal hope—the kind that anchors us when life feels uncertain, the kind that whispers peace when anxiety rises, the kind that reminds us that God’s promises are as steady today as they were on the night Jesus was born.

A Promise Fulfilled

That first Christmas night was more than a story of shepherds and angels. It was the moment God fulfilled His ancient promise spoken through Isaiah. The prophecy of a virgin giving birth wasn’t just a miraculous sign; it was God announcing that He would not abandon His people.

Jesus’ birth proves that God keeps His word—every time, without fail.

Why This Matters Today

When we feel alone, Christmas reminds us: Immanuel—God is with us.
When we feel overwhelmed, Christmas tells us: Hope has come and hope will stay.
When the world looks uncertain, Christmas whispers: God is still in control.

No matter what season you are in—joyful, weary, anxious, or hopeful—you can hold tightly to the truth that began in a manger and continues today: You are not alone.

Keeping Promises

It has been said promises are made only to be broken, and since we do not live in a perfect world, this holds true on many occasions. Someone with the best of intentions makes a promise to us, but the person is unable to keep it. For many, politics comes to mind as soon as they think of broken promises. An imperfect world leads to imperfect promises.

But what if I told you there was someone who always keeps promises. What if I told you there is someone who always tells the truth? There is! He is the Lord, and we see this lived out the night the shepherds heard of Jesus’ birth.

The stillness of their night had been interrupted by an angel giving them good news of great joy, so the shepherds went to investigate. Luke’s Gospel tells us, “They hurried to the village and found Mary and Joseph, and there was the baby lying in a manger” (Luke 2:16). They investigated the message they received from the angel and found that it was true. Everything was just like they had been told.

God doesn’t lie. He doesn’t change his mind or his character; he doesn’t go back on his word. Hebrews reminds us the Lord is the same yesterday, today, and forever more. He will always keep his promises. His word will always be true.

We can trust the promises given to us in the Bible. We can trust that the Lord will give us peace. We can trust that he will be with us. We can trust that he will provide for us and protect us. There is not one promise in Scripture which will be broken. God will always keep his word, so we can be like the shepherds, praising God for finding things just as we were told (Luke 2:20).

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Jesus: With Us to Save us

The man was rushed to the hospital where a CT scan revealed pools of blood on his brain. He was quickly transferred to a regional medical center, and placed under the care of a skilled Neurosurgeon. The doctor advised waiting a few days, then running another test to find the source of the bleeding. The time would allow the pooled blood to be absorbed by the body. Saturday slowly became Wednesday, and it was time for the test to be ran. The results were different than anyone was expecting.

It turns out the bleeding spot healed itself and was no longer bleeding. No Neurological procedure was needed. The Neurosurgeon explained it this way, “This happens sometimes.” Sometimes, miracles happen.

Have you ever witnessed a miracle? What was it? Miracles capture everyone’s attention; especially, during the Christmas season. Movies and TV shows have miraculous themes. The miracle of Christ’s birth is no exception. It has captivated mankind for centuries as everyone tires to answer the question, “Who is Jesus?”

Who is Jesus?

Conservatives and liberals agree Jesus existed. He made a mark in mankind’s history which cannot be erased. When it comes to his identity though, there is much disagreement. Ask who is Jesus, and you will receive numerous answers.

A college professor gave this assignment to his students. They were to ask 20 people who is Jesus. Here are just a few of the answers.

  • A good guy.
  • A guy in history.
  • A guy in the Bible. What else is there to know.

In Matthew 1, we find the Bible’s answer to this question. Matthew explicitly states Jesus is God with us to save us.

God with us.

Matthew 1:23 quotes Isaiah 7:14 which states, “The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel” – which means, “God with us.”

The idea of God being with us is not a new thought. From the very beginning, we see God being with us. He walked with Adam in the coolness of the day in the Garden of Eden. Sin creeped in and destroyed this perfect communion, so God pulled himself back to the Holy of Holies. That is, until the miracle of Christmas. Christmas brought God back to us in the form of a baby. The fullness and completeness of God came on Christmas night.

  • Philippians 2:6-8 says, “Christ, being in very nature God, did not consider equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing. Taking on the very nature of a servant.”
  • In his Gospel, John says, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God. He was with God in the beginning,” according to 1:1-2. Verse 4 goes on, “In him was life, and that life was the Light of men.” Then verse 14 says, “The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only who came from the Father full of grace and truth.”

The Creator became the creation to save it. You see, Jesus is God with us. He is God with us to save us.

To save us.

The angel tells Joseph in Matthew 1:21, “She will give birth to a son, and you are to give him the name Jesus because he will save his people from their sins.”

Jesus’ name links back to Joshua. In the Old Testament book of Joshua, the account of the leader helping God’s people by leading them out of wilderness into the land of Canaan, their promised land, is told. Like Joshua, Jesus came to lead his people out of the wilderness of lostness into the promise of freedom in Christ’s grace and truth.

2 Corinthians 8:9 says, “For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ that though he was rich, yet for your sakes, he became poor, so that you, through his poverty, might become rich.” You see, Jesus came to save us.

Our answer.

C. S. Lewis has said, “Jesus was either telling the truth about his identity or he was a lunatic. A man running around claiming to be God in the flesh is either telling the truth or is a lunatic. No one in his right mind would make such a claim unless it was true. We have to decide.”

According to Matthew’s Gospel, Jesus is God with us to save us. Thus, the IVP New Testament Commentary Series remarks, “By the cross we are invited to worship a God who accepted the ultimate vulnerability. Jesus was born as an infant to poor and humiliated parents into a world who was hostile to his presence. His oppressors must hate such a God. For his abandonment of power for love is contrary to everything they believe, but the broken and depressed find in him a God they can trust in a world where trust is dangerous. Of all the world’s faiths, Christianity is the only one who presents a God who shares in our pain.”

The birds helped him understand.

There is an old story told by radio personality Paul Harvey of a man and a flock of birds. There was a good man. He tried to do everything right. He was a good husband, excellent father, and he had an upstanding reputation in the community. He was just a good man.

He could not wrap his mind around Jesus’ birth. The miracle of Christmas seemed out of touch to him. A baby being able to save him was just hard for him to grasp.

One Christmas eve, the man told his wife he was not going to attend the Christmas eve service, but he would wait up for her. He hugged his wife goodbye, and closed the door behind her. As he did, he noticed it was snowing. He stood at the window for a few moments enjoying the beauty of the snow before retiring to his chair by the fireplace.

A few minutes later as the man was lost in the chapters of a good book, he was startled by a thud on the window. Thud, thud, thud came the sound. The man investigated to find a flock of birds trying to break the glass to escape the warmth of the dark, cold night. They were attempting to enter the light and warmth of his home, and the man thought, “I can’t let the poor creatures freeze.”

Dawning his coat and shoes, the man went outside to help. He opened his barn door hoping the birds would fly into the hay stack, but no luck. The birds just continued to fly toward the window.

The man turned on the light in the barn, but the birds didn’t head that way. He tried leaving a trail of food to the barn and chasing the birds, but they didn’t understand what he was doing.

“If only I was one of them,” the man thought, “they would not be afraid of me, and I could show them the way to the safety of the barn.”

Just then, the church clock clanged midnight. The chimes began playing O Holy Night, and the man fell to his knees in the snow.

He had it. The man understood the miracle of Christmas; he understood God left everything to become one of us. He understood Jesus is God with us to save us. What is your answer? Who is Jesus?

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