Many name fear, division, greed, and loneliness as today’s problems, but Scripture points to a deeper reality: God sent a King to address them all at the root. Jesus didn’t arrive merely to reduce our guilt; He came bringing a Kingdom that heals minds, mends relationships, and restores hope. The real question is whether we will trust His reign enough to bring our real problems under His rule. When the King is welcomed, His wisdom, power, and love begin to reorder what is broken. Open your hands today and invite His governance into the very place that feels most stuck right now [33:13]
Isaiah 9:6–7: A child is given to us, and the weight of leadership rests on His shoulders. People will call Him extraordinary in wisdom, strong with God’s power, fatherly without end, and the prince who brings wholeness. He will sit on David’s throne and establish a just and peaceful rule that keeps growing and never stops, and the Lord’s passion will make it happen.
Reflection: What specific problem in your life needs the King’s rule this week, and what is one practical way you can submit that area to Jesus today?
Incarnation means God put on flesh and stepped into our world to lead us into who we were made to be. He broke the long silence, sending angels and dreams to announce that He is near, not distant. Emmanuel means God is with us, for us, and—by His Spirit—within us. Because He is present, the word “impossible” no longer gets the final say. Name your “it can’t be done,” and let His nearness redefine the limits of what is possible [39:58]
Luke 1:35–37: The angel said the Holy Spirit would come upon Mary and the Most High would cover her with His power; the child to be born would be God’s own Son. Elizabeth, once called barren, was already six months along. With God, there is no such thing as “can’t.”
Reflection: Where do you feel most boxed in by “impossible,” and what small step could you take this week that expresses trust in God-with-us?
Jesus came with holy vengeance against the works of the devil and with a reward for His people. When He arrives, blind eyes open, deaf ears hear, weak legs leap, and dry places become streams. He makes a road for the redeemed—a highway of holiness—so cleansed people can walk forward without losing their way. Because He was born, He could die; because He died, we can truly live. Step onto His road today, choosing holiness and hope where despair once dictated the path [43:51]
Isaiah 35:4–8: Tell those with fearful hearts, “Be strong; your God is coming to set things right and to rescue you.” Then sight returns to the blind, hearing to the deaf, and the lame spring up like deer, while songs rise from former silence. Water breaks open in wastelands, and a roadway called holiness appears; it’s reserved for those made clean, and even the simple can travel it without getting lost.
Reflection: Where is your life most like a desert right now, and what concrete act of obedience or holiness would be a step onto the King’s highway this week?
Jesus offered one perfect sacrifice and then sat down, signaling the work of salvation was complete. From that victory He waits as every enemy is placed under His feet, and He invites His people to participate in that triumph. Weariness is real, but it is not the ending; the ending is the enemy beneath your feet. Hold the picture of God’s promised finish to fuel today’s perseverance. Keep walking—your steps in faith are making the road straight for the returning King [47:48]
Hebrews 10:10–13: By God’s will, we were set apart through the single offering of Jesus’ body—once, for all. Earthly priests keep standing and repeating sacrifices that can’t remove sin, but Christ, after one sufficient offering, sat down at God’s right hand. From there He awaits the moment when every opponent is made a footstool beneath His feet.
Reflection: What specific opposition has been wearing you down, and what daily practice (a prayer, a declaration, or a simple act of faith) will help you keep standing in Christ’s finished work this week?
Jesus is the firstborn of a brand-new human race, and in Him we are no longer merely “dust people” but bear the life of heaven. Because of this, we stop evaluating others by outward appearance and start seeing by the Spirit. If anyone is in Christ, the old has been displaced by a new creation, capable—by God in us—of addressing what sin broke. This identity doesn’t deny weakness; it announces a greater power at work within us. Live today from your new nature, and treat others as those Christ can make new [51:57]
2 Corinthians 5:16–17: From now on we refuse to size people up by outward measures; even our former way of viewing Christ no longer applies. If someone is joined to Christ, there is a new creation—the old order has passed away, and a new reality has begun.
Reflection: In one relationship where you’ve been focused on externals, how will you practically honor the other person’s God-given potential as a new creation this week?
We named so many of the wounds people feel today—fear, selfishness, identity confusion, deceit, loneliness, division, depression, idolatry, isolation, and more. I wanted us to hear those out loud so that we could also hear this: God sent Jesus to solve the world’s problems. Not in theory, but in a real body, in real time, under real pressure. That’s the Incarnation—God put on flesh. Emmanuel. When the King was born, the kingdom arrived, and with it came the wisdom, love, and power to free people from the grip of the enemy.
The angels announced a throne and an unending kingdom. Isaiah promised a government and peace without end. Heaven had been silent for 400 years, and then God broke in with signs, dreams, and wonders because the age of the King had come. The mantra of the kingdom is simple: with God nothing will be impossible. That doesn’t erase struggle; it changes the end of the story. The end is not the devil dancing on your grave. The end is the enemy under your feet.
Jesus offered one sacrifice for sins forever, and then sat down—finished work. Our task is to apply His victory: wherever we find the enemy’s works—fear, deceit, despair—we put them under our feet in Jesus’ name. That’s why we don’t quit. We keep going because we know how this ends. Hope isn’t denial; it is sight. We see the King’s highway being made straight as we walk in obedience.
And there’s more. Jesus is the firstborn of a new human race. In Adam, we were dust—limited, reactive, easily dominated. In Christ, we are a new creation—born from above, conformed to the image of the heavenly man. That means we stop sizing people up by the flesh—skin color, gender, background—and start asking a deeper question: have you been born again? Christ in us is the only power strong enough to repair what we have broken. The Incarnation didn’t just bring forgiveness; it brought transformation. We are not spectators of a holiday; we are carriers of a kingdom.
So, in theology, the term that they use for what happened when Jesus was born in the manger, the term that they use is incarnation. Incarnation, and it's a kind of a compound word, in, of course, means in, and carn is the word for flesh. It's like a carnivore or carnivorous. It's incarnation means that God put flesh on and came down among us to lead us to who we're supposed to be. God himself came down in flesh, in a person, to draw us to himself, to lead us to himself, to lead us to become who we're supposed to be.
[00:33:45]
(55 seconds)
#WillYouBelieveAndFollow
And of his kingdom, I would underline kingdom, of his kingdom, there will be no end. So there's no doubt that God considered Jesus to be a king, that God sent Jesus and the angel who was sent from God, Gabriel, announced that God was giving this baby the throne and that his kingdom, of his kingdom, there will be no end. So in the mind of God, he sent Jesus to be the solution to every problem that humanity faces.
[00:36:46]
(42 seconds)
#KingdomWithoutEnd
There were no miracles from God. For 400 years from the Old Testament to the New Testament, nothing from God. But now, when Gabriel comes, when God is ready to send the king, now we start seeing the supernatural happening. Angels are starting to come. Dreams, God is giving people
[00:38:49]
(18 seconds)
#WindowsOfHeavenOpen
So there's no end to Christianity. There's no end to believing in Jesus. Of his kingdom, his government, and peace, there will be no end. And here we go again. So you see, Christmas is so important because we're reminding ourselves that the king has arrived. The king has come, he has been born, and with him came the power of his kingdom to liberate people, to set people free from everything that the devil has put upon us. Our
[00:41:41]
(46 seconds)
#ChristmasIsFreedom
Because one day the king is coming back. And before he comes, every crooked place has to be made straight. In other words, everything needs to be under his feet. Every high place needs to be brought low and every low place needs to be brought up. In other words, everything needs to be put under his feet. So when he comes, everything, it's a highway.
[00:45:51]
(21 seconds)
#PutOppositionUnderfoot
But if you just keep on remembering God's picture, that it's going to end with the devil under your feet. It's going to end with you treading on serpents and scorpions. It's going to end like God said it's going to end. And if you can get that picture in your mind, you can defeat anything that comes against you.
[00:47:23]
(20 seconds)
#PictureYourVictory
What do we regard? We regard the new man. We regard the spirit on the inside. Have you been born again? That's all that matters. It doesn't matter what color you are. It doesn't matter what sex you are. What matters is, have you been born again? Do you have Christ living on the inside? Now you are a problem solver. Now you have power to put the enemy under your feet.
[00:51:38]
(25 seconds)
#NewCreationInside
But if you're still just a dust man, if you're just still a dust man, the devil will keep you under his feet. Now, you can try to solve all the problems you want to, but you're just a dust man. You can spend all the money you want. You can drop all the bombs you want, but you're still just a dust man. You must be born again so that God in us is able to fix what we messed up. We can't fix it, but the incarnation God in us is able to fix what we messed up.
[00:52:02]
(43 seconds)
#NewRaceCreated
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