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Wednesday
Dec312025

Reflecting the Grace of God

In sharp contrast to the image of Jacob, who wrestles with an angel and prevails, the Lord redeems Jacob from hands too strong for him. Jacob does not always prevail. We too are reminded that it is not our own strength but God’s power that blesses, strengthens, fills, gives, and grants peace. God has the power to bring together and to scatter. God creates family not because we are God’s blood relatives but through adoption. In baptism we are claimed, redeemed, and forgiven. We receive wisdom and are lavished with grace. We are marked with the seal of the Holy Spirit. We receive an inheritance. Through God’s powerful gift, we are gathered up, become children of God, and receive grace upon grace.
  

Receiving this gift of grace we are called to live as children of the light. In this holy calling we have John the Baptist as our guide. You can tell the story of Jesus leaving out all sorts of important details. In John’s gospel the shepherds, angels, and manger are all absent. But the gospel writers agree, you cannot tell the story of Jesus without John the Baptist. You simply must have the one who comes solely to point others to Jesus. This is our calling as well. We who are forgiven and redeemed, we who are claimed and called, are the ones who point to Jesus. We do this with our lives; we do this with our words. We point to Jesus when we feed the hungry, when we invite those we know and love to know the gift of grace we see in Jesus. We point to Jesus when we allow the holy light of the season to shine through all we do and all we are.

Theological Reflection

At Christmas we get a clue about the identity of the church. John the Baptist testified as a witness to the light (John 1:6-7). The resurrected Jesus later told the disciples that they were witnesses (Luke 24:48; Acts 1:8), and the early church claimed this identity (Acts 2:32, 10:39-41). Witnesses tell what they have seen.

Where do we continue to witness God’s illumination? How is being witnesses a core part of our being as the church? In what ways do we testify to God’s ongoing work in the world?

From Sundays & Seasons

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