Tag Archives: God

Podcast Episode: Finding Peace In Uncertain Times

Get Encouraged is the kind of site that meets you in the cave before it hands you the canteen — and this week, Chris Miller brought both.

The posts this week move through some real human territory — rebuilding trust after betrayal, finding peace and strength when life feels unstable, and what it means to stop for someone who needs help.

Let’s start with the hardest one first — what it actually takes to trust again after you’ve been hurt.

Trust Rebuilds on an Unshakable Foundation

The post on rebuilding trust after heartbreak opens with a direct question: how do you trust again when the pain runs deep — whether from a relationship, a friendship, or even the church?

And the answer it lands on isn’t “try harder with people.” It points somewhere else entirely. The post quotes Isaiah 26:4 directly: “Trust in the LORD always, for the LORD GOD is the eternal Rock.”

That verse does real work in the piece. The argument is that human beings — even well-meaning ones — can disappoint, abandon, or break their promises. God’s character, by contrast, is not determined by what others do. He remains faithful regardless.

So trusting God isn’t a workaround for trusting people. It’s a different category of foundation altogether.

Right. And the post is careful to say this isn’t about pretending the hurt never happened. Choosing forgiveness is named as one practical step — not to excuse wrongdoing, but to free your own heart from carrying bitterness forward.

That distinction matters more than it might sound. Now, if trust is the foundation, the next question is what you build on top of it — peace, strength, and hope when life won’t hold still.

Peace, Strength, and Hope When Nothing Holds Still

“Finding Hope in Hopeless Moments” opens with the Psalmist in Psalm 77 asking raw, honest questions — and the post quotes them in full: “Has the Lord rejected me forever? Will he never again be kind to me? Is his unfailing love gone forever? Have his promises permanently failed?”

That’s not polished Sunday-morning language. Those are the questions people carry quietly.

Exactly — and the post names that directly. The turning point comes in verse 11: “But then I recall all you have done, O LORD.” The Psalmist doesn’t find hope by feeling better. He finds it by remembering — God’s deeds, His character, His power. The post even suggests keeping a written record of moments when God provided or guided, to revisit during hard seasons.

Memory as a spiritual practice. That’s less abstract than it sounds.

“When Life is Uncertain, Where Do You Find Peace and Strength?” builds on the same ground. It draws from Psalm 29:11 — “The Lord gives his people strength. The Lord blesses them with peace” — and anchors that promise in who is making it: the God who commands storms and spoke creation into existence.

The comfort is proportional to the source. A promise from someone powerless doesn’t carry much weight.

“An Unstable Life” follows David through seasons of running — from Saul, then from his own son’s rebellion — and shows how his confidence wasn’t rooted in stable circumstances but in the conviction that God still reigns. And “Tell Yourself the Truth” brings in George Washington Carver, who credited God for every discovery and said he’d be helpless without Him — as a frame for how honest self-talk grounded in Scripture can quiet fear without denying it.

All four posts are essentially asking the same question from different angles: where do you put your weight when the ground moves? Which brings us somewhere more outward-facing — not just what steadies you, but what you do for someone else who’s been knocked down.

Remembering Who Stopped — and Whether You Will

“Who Will Stop?” works through the parable of the Good Samaritan, and it opens the question from an unexpected angle — not “who is my neighbor” but whether you’ve ever been the wounded man on the road.

Which reframes the whole thing. You’re not just evaluating your generosity; you’re remembering what it felt like to need someone to stop.

The post puts it plainly: “A neighbor is anyone whose need crosses your path.” It traces the priest and the Levite — both of whom had reasons to keep moving — and names the Samaritan’s response as costly compassion, not convenient compassion. He used his own resources, stayed involved, and promised to return.

The post also reaches into history — Franz Stigler escorting a damaged enemy bomber to safety, Richard Kirkland carrying water to wounded soldiers on the opposite side at Fredericksburg. Mercy interrupting what hatred expects.

And the piece closes with a small story: a little girl who sat beside a man on the sidewalk and held his hand. When her father asked what she did, she said, “I helped him feel less alone.” That’s the scale most of it actually operates at.

“There’s Something Powerful about Remembering” connects this outward attention to Memorial Day — drawing on Joshua 4, where stones carried from the Jordan River became a memorial so future generations could ask what they meant. Remembering sacrifice, the post argues, is itself a biblical instinct: it keeps gratitude alive and reminds us we didn’t arrive where we are on our own.

Romans 13:7 ties it together: “Give to each one what you owe. If honor, give honor. If respect, give respect.” Stopping for someone, honoring someone — both are forms of the same refusal to look away.


Trust, peace, memory, mercy — it’s a pretty complete map of what it takes to stay human when things get hard.

And all of it starts with honesty — about the hurt, the fear, and the people on the road in front of you. More of that next time.

Podcast Episode: Finding Peace In Hard Seasons

You know that feeling at 2 a.m. when your brain decides it’s the perfect time to schedule a full audit of everything that’s ever gone wrong?

Chris Miller has been writing this week about the places where faith meets real pressure — sleepless nights, discouragement, and the quiet fear that God has stopped paying attention.

Which, honestly, covers most of a Tuesday.

Let’s start with the nights when anxiety won’t let you rest.

Anxiety And Rest

The question this post sits with is a practical one — when fear and insecurity take over at night, what does trust in God actually look like in the dark?

The post reaches for Proverbs 3 as the anchor, setting up the promise directly: “You can go to bed without fear; you will lie down and sleep soundly. You need not be afraid of sudden disaster or the destruction that comes upon the wicked, for the LORD is your security.”

The upshot is that security isn’t the absence of problems — it’s confidence that God is handling what you cannot. The post closes on Psalm 4:8: “In peace I will lie down and sleep, for you alone, O LORD, will keep me safe.”

And the practical steps in the post are grounded — name what’s actually weighing on you, remember past faithfulness, stop solving tomorrow’s problems at midnight.

That last one lands. Rest, the post argues, is sometimes an act of trust rather than avoidance. Which sets up a harder question — what about the weight that isn’t just nighttime anxiety, but accumulated discouragement?

Discouragement And Hope

This segment is about the moments that feel permanently broken — the spilled water you can’t scoop back up. The regret, the fractured relationship, the season you’d undo if you could.

“Don’t Drown in the Spilled Water” opens with David in the middle of family turmoil, and a wise woman’s words cut through: “Like water spilled on the ground, which cannot be recovered, so we must die. But that is not what God desires; rather, he devises ways so that a banished person does not remain banished from him.”

The word “devises” is doing real work there. Not passive acceptance — intentional planning. God is not waiting at a distance for you to clean yourself up first.

That’s exactly how the post frames it. The invitation isn’t “fix yourself, then return” — it’s simply “come back to Me.” Your past does not have the final word.

And “Fighting Discouragement and Hopelessness” pushes that further, into the emotional honesty the Psalms model. Psalm 42:5 is the hinge: “Why am I discouraged? Why is my heart so sad? I will put my hope in God. I will praise him again.”

What that post emphasizes is that choosing hope often precedes the feeling of hope. The Psalmist declared praise before the discouragement lifted. The post also makes a point worth noting — experiencing these emotions doesn’t make someone less faithful. David and Jeremiah both walked through deep sorrow.

So discouragement isn’t a detour from faith. Sometimes it’s the road.

Which connects naturally to the question underneath both posts — what do you do when discouragement shades into feeling genuinely forgotten?

Feeling Forgotten By God

This is the oldest version of the question — Israel in captivity, wondering if God had simply moved on. The post on “Where is God? Why is God not answering?” asks whether our circumstances today are really so different.

Isaiah 40 is the text, and the post pulls out verse 28 as its anchor: “Have you never heard? Have you never understood? The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of all the earth. He never grows weak or weary. No one can measure the depths of his understanding.”

So the plain-language version is: whatever is buckling you, it isn’t buckling Him. The post makes that contrast explicit — the pressures that exhaust us don’t cause God to flinch.

The post organizes Isaiah 40 into three movements. God is all-powerful. God desires to help — verse 29 says He gives power to the weak and strength to the powerless. And God will get you through, which the Israelites’ own story demonstrates.

The payoff is verses 30 and 31 — the eagle wings passage. The people asking “where is God” are the same people the text promises will run and not grow weary.

The gap between the question and the promise is where trust lives. Isaiah’s point isn’t that the hard season disappears — it’s that you don’t walk through it alone.


Sleepless nights, spilled water, silence from heaven — these posts are covering the full range of what it feels like when faith is under pressure.

And the consistent answer is that God is still moving, even when the evidence isn’t obvious yet. More of that next time.

Tell Yourself the Truth

What do you do when fear will not quiet down? When your mind keeps racing, your future feels uncertain, and the weight of life presses in from every direction?

In those moments, one of the most freeing things we can do is tell ourselves the truth.

George Washington Carver became one of his generation’s most honored and beloved scientists by focusing on something simple: a peanut. Carver eventually discovered more than 300 uses for this common item, and he credited God for every discovery.

Carver once remarked that he asked God to explain the universe to him, but sensed God telling him the task was too large. So Carver asked for something he could understand, and he believed God directed his attention to the peanut. Carver admitted he would be helpless if God did not pull back the curtain of truth.

There is something powerful and freeing about recognizing our place in God’s plans. The truth reminds us that we are not meant to carry the weight of the universe on our shoulders. We are dependent on the Lord, and that dependence is not weakness; it is where peace begins.

The truth is life contains fearful and anxious moments. Fear and anxiety may be part of your current circumstances right now. The pressure of bills, uncertainty about the future, difficult decisions, strained relationships, or the fear of things getting worse can leave us overwhelmed and exhausted.

David understood those feelings.

Some have suggested David wrote the Psalms as a form of therapy for his own soul. In Psalm 57, David is hiding in a cave while Saul relentlessly pursues him. Everything about the situation appears grim, yet David chooses to remind himself of a greater truth.

David writes, “I am surrounded by fierce lions, who greedily devour human prey, whose teeth pierce like spears and arrows, and whose tongues cut like swords.” There is no question David felt fear and anxiety in that cave. He did not pretend the danger was not real.

We should notice something important here: David was honest about his emotions, but he did not allow fear to become the final voice in his life.

Instead, David looked at the bigger picture.

He writes, “My heart is confident in you. My heart is confident. No wonder I can sing your praises… I will thank you, Lord, among all the people. I will sing your praises among the nations. For your unfailing love is as high as the heavens. Your faithfulness reaches to the clouds.”

David was still in the cave, but he knew God was beside him. David was still being chased, but he believed God was shielding him. In the middle of fear and anxiety, David reminded himself of the truth concerning God’s presence.

We can do the same today.

When anxiety rises, tell yourself the truth:

  • This situation may be difficult, but God has not abandoned me.
  • I may not understand everything happening right now, but God still sees the bigger picture.
  • Fear may be present, but it does not have to control my thoughts.
  • My circumstances are uncertain, but God’s faithfulness is not.

Like Carver, we often overwhelm ourselves trying to understand the entire universe at once. We worry about tomorrow, next month, and every possible outcome. Yet God often gives us grace for today, not for every imagined future.

Sometimes the most faithful thing we can do is focus on the next step in front of us.

Instead of trying to solve everything, ask:

  • What is one faithful step I can take today?
  • What truth from Scripture do I need to repeat to myself today?
  • What evidence of God’s faithfulness can I thank Him for right now?

The freedom comes when we stop letting fear define reality and start allowing God’s truth to shape our perspective.

You may still feel like you are in a cave today. The pressure may not disappear overnight. But like David, you can develop a confident heart, not because life is easy, but because God is still with you.

Amid your fears and anxieties, remind yourself of the truth of God’s presence.

The truth is freeing.

Be sure to subscribe for daily encouragement.

Priceless Creation: A Craftsman at Work

Did you know you are priceless in the Lord’s eyes? Here’s a reminder from Psalm 139.

For you created my inmost being;
you knit me together in my mother’s womb.
I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made;
for your works are wonderful,
I know that full well.
My frame was not hidden from you
when I was made in the secret place,
when I was woven together in the depths of the earth.
Your eyes saw my unformed body;
all the days ordained for me were written in your book
before one of them came to be.

A Craftsmen at Work

Intentional. That’s how we can describe God’s attitude in forming us. It was a personal, thoughtful design. He was a craftsman hard at work creating a masterpiece. Every gene thoughtfully woven; every part wonderfully placed. Our hair color was thoughtfully chosen. The color of our eyes was skillfully picked. Each of us is God’s handywork.

We aren’t accidently made; the Lord intentionally created us. We aren’t generically produced on an assembly line. Each of us is uniquely crafted to fulfill a plan and purpose only we can. This means you are God’s masterpiece. The Lord sees you as someone who is priceless!

Dwell on this truth today. How does viewing yourself as God’s masterpiece help you battle the criticisms of the world?

The Search for True Wisdom in a Knowledge-Driven Age

We live in an age overflowing with information. A few taps on a screen brings access to facts, research, and opinions from around the world. Yet for all our advances, a timeless question remains: Where does true wisdom come from? Knowledge can tell us what is possible, but wisdom tells us what matters.

This question is not new. Job wrestled with it in the midst of suffering, confusion, and unanswered questions. In Job 28, he pauses from describing his pain to reflect on the source of wisdom—and his conclusion is as relevant today as it was then.

Humanity’s Search for Wisdom

In Job’s day, humanity had already made impressive discoveries. Mining was common, and people had learned how to extract precious metals and gems from deep within the earth. Rivers were explored, hidden treasures uncovered, and mysteries of the natural world brought to light. Human ingenuity pushed boundaries and revealed wonders previously unseen.

Yet Job observed something striking: despite all these discoveries, wisdom itself remained elusive. People could uncover gold and silver, but they could not mine wisdom from the earth. They could explore the depths of the sea, but they could not find understanding hidden there.

God Alone Is the Source of Wisdom

In Job 28:23–28, Job points us to the true source of wisdom:

“God understands the way to it
and he alone knows where it dwells…
Then he looked at wisdom and appraised it;
he confirmed it and tested it.
And he said to the human race,
‘The fear of the Lord—that is wisdom,
and to shun evil is understanding.’”

Wisdom does not originate from human effort, innovation, or discovery. It originates with God. He sees the ends of the earth, governs creation, and fully understands what wisdom is and how it should shape our lives. According to Scripture, wisdom begins not with intelligence, but with reverence.

Wisdom for Today

Although humanity has advanced far beyond the world Job knew, the source of wisdom has not changed. True wisdom is still found in the Lord, and He has graciously made it accessible to us through His Word.

  • Psalm 119:105 reminds us that “Your word is a lamp for my feet, a light on my path.” God’s Word provides direction when the way forward feels uncertain.
  • Hebrews 4:12 declares that “the word of God is alive and active.” Scripture does not merely inform—it penetrates our hearts, exposes our motives, and shapes our thinking.

Within the pages of the Bible, God offers wisdom for every area of life: relationships, family, marriage, finances, work, and how we live in society. It is not outdated or irrelevant. It is living, active, and powerful.

A Call to Seek Wisdom

If we desire wisdom, we must spend time with its source. That means opening the Bible, reading it prayerfully, and allowing God to teach, correct, and guide us through His Word. Wisdom is not gained overnight, but it grows as we walk daily with the Lord and learn to trust His ways above our own.

Take time this week to seek wisdom where it truly dwells. Open God’s Word—and let Him lead your path.

Where Our Help Comes From in the New Year

Ushering out 2025 and welcoming in 2026 may bring mixed emotions. The beginning of a new year often does. Hope, uncertainty, and resolve just to name a few. Turning the calendar always gets us thinking, and we may be whispering to ourselves: “What if we need help? Where is it found?”

If this is your question today, the Bible helps answer.

“I lift my eyes up to the mountains –
Where does my help come from?
My help comes from the Lord,
the maker of Heaven and earth.”

The Psalmist offers great encouragement in these words.

“I lift my eyes.” – Choosing Where to Look

As we start 2026, goals, plans, finances, health, and world events are all battling for the spotlight. Each creates an emotional roller coaster, but Psalm 121 challenges us to make the Lord our focal point.

The Psalmist says, “I lift my eyes.” By lifting his eyes, the Psalmist shows he was intentional in placing his focus on the Lord. This is no accident. Amid everything clamoring for attention, the Psalmist chooses to focus on the Lord.

Lifting our eyes is an act of faith. It is choosing to start 2026 with peace and stability rather than anxiety and uncertainty. Where we focus determines how we start the year.

“Where does our help come from?” – An Honest Question

A new year often exposes our struggles and challenges. The goals we have and difficulties we face may require help. The world events of which we have no control may cause angst. The result is our cry for help. An honest, open request answered in Psalm 121.

“My help comes from the Lord.” – A Confident Answer

The Psalmist answers his own cry for help with assurance. “Where does my help come from?” he asks, and immediately responds, “My help comes from the Lord.” There’s no doubt in this response. It is fully confident. The Psalmist knows the Lord is going to help him.

The same is true for us. Help is present, tailored to our needs.

Think back. How has the Lord helped you in 2025. If he helped you then, he will certainly help you in 2026. We can walk into the new year with confidence. Our help comes from the Lord.

“Maker of Heaven and earth.” – Power Behind the Promise

Notice the last phrase of our passage; “the maker of Heaven and earth.” The Lord, who helps us, is also the creator of the universe. Nothing in the coming year will be beyond his authority and awareness. If he hung the stars in the sky and birthed the universe, the Lord can certainly sustain us in the coming days. Allow this truth to anchor your hope in overwhelming circumstances.

Walking Into the New Year with Lifted Eyes

Psalm 121 reminds us we do not have to face 2026 alone. We may not have all the answers, or know everything that is going to happen, but we have assurance of help. The Lord will help us, so make a daily choice to lift your eyes. The Lord has helped us before, and he will help us again!

The Long-Awaited Promise Fulfilled: Celebrating Jesus, God’s Greatest Christmas Gift

For centuries, the world waited. Generation after generation clung to a promise spoken by God himself—a promise whispered in the Garden of Eden, echoed through prophets, and carried forward by faithful hearts. When the time finally drew near, God sent the angel Gabriel to announce that the waiting was over. The promise had arrived. His name was Jesus.

From Nathan to Isaiah to King David, God repeatedly assured his people that a Savior was coming—one who would rescue, restore, and redeem. Christmas is not merely the celebration of a birth; it is the celebration of a fulfilled promise. God delivered what he had promised, and the gift was his Son.

The writer of Hebrews captures the significance of this moment beautifully:

“Long ago God spoke many times and in many ways through our ancestors the prophets, and now in these final days, he has spoken to us through his Son. God promised everything to the Son as an inheritance, and through the Son, he created the universe. The Son radiates God’s own glory and expresses the very character of God, and he sustains everything by the mighty power of his command. When he had cleansed us from our sins, he sat down in the place of honor at the right hand of the majestic God in heaven” (Hebrews 1:1–3).

Jesus is the one generations longed to see. They trusted he would come. Today, we rejoice because he has come. Jesus is God with us—and in his coming, he brings life, help, peace, forgiveness, and hope.

Jesus Brings Life

Jesus declared his purpose clearly:

  • “I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full” (John 10:10).
  • Hebrews reminds us that Jesus became fully human so that through his death he could break the power of death and free us from the fear that enslaves us (Hebrews 2:14–15).

Christmas marks the moment when eternal life stepped into human history.

Jesus Brings Help

Jesus did not come for angels—he came for us.

  • “He came to help the descendants of Abraham” (Hebrews 2:16).
  • Because he suffered and was tested, Jesus understands our struggles and is able to help us when we face trials (Hebrews 2:18).

No matter what you are facing today, you are not alone.

Jesus Brings Peace

The peace Jesus offers is unlike anything the world can provide.

  • Philippians 4 reminds us that the peace of God—beyond all understanding—guards our hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.

Christmas peace does not depend on circumstances; it rests in Christ.

Jesus Brings Forgiveness

Forgiveness required sacrifice.

  • Jesus became like us in every way so he could serve as our merciful and faithful High Priest, offering himself to take away our sins (Hebrews 2:17–18).
  • “God made him who had no sin to be sin for us, so that in him we might become the righteousness of God” (2 Corinthians 5).

At Christmas, forgiveness was set in motion at the manger and fulfilled at the cross.

Jesus Brings Hope

Hope looks beyond today.

  • Jesus promised in John 14 that he is preparing a place for us and will return to take us to be with him.
  • Paul reminds us that our present troubles are light and temporary compared to the eternal glory that awaits us (2 Corinthians 4).

Because Jesus came, our future is secure.

The long-awaited promise has been fulfilled. God gave us Jesus for Christmas.

Take a moment today to thank God for his gift. Thank him for his faithfulness, his goodness, and his love. And as you reflect on the miracle of Christmas, may your heart be filled with gratitude and joy.

Embracing Faith: The Call to New Journeys

Stepping into the unknown is rarely comfortable. We like clarity, certainty, and well-marked paths. Yet throughout Scripture, God often invites His people to move forward before they know where the road will lead. Christmas reminds us that faith frequently begins not with answers—but with obedience.

The Courage to Begin the Journey
The Magi’s journey led them to unfamiliar places and introduced them to new people. When they noticed a new star in the sky, something stirred within them. Their anticipation and desire to seek the newborn King compelled them to leave what was familiar and follow where the star was leading.

They did not know exactly where the journey would end, but they were willing to go. The path may have been unnerving and disruptive, yet the Magi chose obedience. They followed the star.

When God Calls Us Forward
The Lord may be pointing you toward a journey right now. It could be accepting His grace in a deeper way, speaking with a friend about that grace, or making a sacrificial decision that feels costly. Perhaps He is calling you to extend forgiveness.

Forgiveness can be especially difficult when the hurt runs deep. Yet someone must place the first stone to begin building a bridge of reconciliation. The step may feel disruptive. It may feel unsettling. Still, the Lord calls us forward.

We Are Not Alone on the Road
Though these journeys can be frightening, Scripture reminds us that we are never alone. God has always worked through people willing to step into new places.

Abraham was called to leave his homeland and enter unknown territory.
Noah was called to begin a project that made little sense to those around him.
Daniel was called into an unexpected leadership role.
The first disciples were called to leave their careers behind.
Paul was called into a radically new public life.

Each journey required trust—and each revealed God’s faithfulness.

Your Next Step of Faith
What journey is the Lord asking you to take today? Ask Him for the courage to begin. Ask Him to remind you that He goes before you and walks beside you as you step into new places.

Discovering Forgiveness This Christmas Season

Have you ever had a moment when something suddenly clicks—when hope, long waited for, finally shows up? The Christmas story is full of those moments, and one of the most overlooked yet powerful ones comes from an elderly woman named Anna. Her brief appearance in Scripture offers a life-changing reminder for anyone carrying guilt, regret, or a longing for a fresh start.

Anna’s Message of Redemption

It was an exciting day at the temple. Mary and Joseph brought eight-day-old Jesus to fulfill the law regarding circumcision, and much had already taken place. Simeon had just spoken words of comfort and peace over the child—words that left Mary and Joseph marveling. Then Anna arrived.

Luke 2:38 tells us, “Coming up to them at that very moment, she gave thanks to God and spoke about the child to all who were looking forward to the redemption of Jerusalem.”
While Simeon saw comfort and peace, Anna saw something equally profound: forgiveness.

For Anna, the word redemption carried the weight of Israel’s history—Egyptian bondage, Passover, and God’s mighty rescue. Passover ultimately pointed forward to Jesus, who would redeem His people from the slavery of sin. The moment Anna saw Jesus, she couldn’t stay silent. She thanked God and began telling anyone who would listen that the Redeemer had come.

A Savior for Those Who Need a Fresh Start

Maybe this has been your year of mistakes. Maybe regret follows you around like a shadow, reminding you of what you wish you could undo. If so, Anna’s message is for you.

Jesus offers forgiveness—real forgiveness.
The angel said it best on the night of His birth: “Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you. He is the Messiah, the Lord.”

Forgiveness began on the first Christmas. Freedom from the past is part of the gift.

Pause and Receive the Gift of Grace

Take time today to breathe in the truth Anna celebrated:
Through Christ, forgiveness is yours.

Thank you for reading. If this encouraged you, please share this post with someone who could use a reminder of God’s redemption.

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.