Tag Archives: Immanuel

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.

God With Us: The Miracle of Immanuel and the Heart of Christmas

Matthew 1:23 quotes the ancient prophecy of Isaiah 7:14:
“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 dwelling with His people is woven throughout the entire story of Scripture. In the Garden of Eden, God walked with Adam in the cool of the day—a picture of perfect fellowship. But when sin entered the world, that close communion was broken. God’s presence withdrew to the sacred space of the Holy of Holies, accessible only through sacrifice.

Then came the miracle of Christmas.
In a manger on a quiet night, God stepped back into our world—not in thunder or fire, but in the form of a child. The fullness of God wrapped in human flesh. Heaven touching earth. Immanuel, God with us.

Scripture reinforces this wonder:

  • Philippians 2:6–8 reminds us that Christ, “being in very nature God… made himself nothing, taking the very nature of a servant.”
  • John 1:1–2, 4, 14 proclaims, “In the beginning was the Word… In him was life, and that life was the Light of men… The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us.”

The Creator became part of His creation for one purpose—to save it.
Jesus is God with us.
He is God with us to redeem, restore, and rescue.

That is the true miracle of Christmas.