Christmas
-
Epiphany

Epiphany marks the moment when presence becomes recognition. God has come near, remained, and now is seen. The Magi remind us that revelation is found by those who watch the horizon and respond with alignment, not certainty. Christmas ends not with resolution, but with vision that sends us back into ordinary days attentive to the… Continue reading
-
First Sunday of Christmas

Advent has given way to arrival. The First Sunday of Christmas invites us to dwell rather than rush ahead. God has not only come near, but has chosen to remain. Dwelling is not achieved by effort, but received as presence. Christmas teaches us to stay, to trust what has been given, and to live from… Continue reading
-
St. John the Evangelist
St. John the Evangelist bears witness through endurance rather than martyrdom. After love arrives and is tested, John shows what it means to remain. His faith is not dramatic, but faithful. Love abides across years, holding to what was true from the beginning and refusing to withdraw when the story grows long. Continue reading
-
St. Stephen’s Day
St. Stephen’s Day follows Christmas without sentiment. Love has arrived, and now its cost is named. Stephen, the Church’s first martyr, bears witness without retreat or bitterness. His faithfulness shows that the Incarnation does not promise safety, but presence. Love remains true, even when it is costly. Continue reading
-
O Holy Night

O holy night! The stars are brightly shining, It is the night of our dear Saviour’s birth. Long lay the world in sin and error pining, Till He appear’d and the soul felt its worth. A thrill of hope, the weary world rejoices, For yonder breaks a new and glorious morn. Fall on your knees! Continue reading
-
Merry Christmas

Christmas Day does not rush us forward. What Advent promised has arrived, and God has come near. This is not a day for explanation or response, but for dwelling. The Word became flesh and remained. Stay here. The world is different now, even if it does not yet know it. Continue reading
-
Silent Night

“Silent Night” was born from limitation, not spectacle. Written in a weary postwar world and first sung with guitar, it carries a theology of quiet arrival. Peace does not erase the darkness. It enters it gently. Christmas begins not with force, but with stillness, presence, and light that does not announce itself loudly. Continue reading
-
From a God We Hardly Knew | Repost
The article argues that the true Christmas story isn’t about our generosity but about receiving an unimaginable gift from a God we barely know. Instead of affirming self-sufficiency and giving, the nativity highlights our need to receive grace. It challenges pride and calls us to acknowledge our indebtedness to divine love. Continue reading

Advent Adventure Agency Albums Andrew Huberman Apostle James Apostle Paul Aristotle Art of Manliness Benjamin Franklin Books Breathing C.S. Lewis Challenges Character Christianity Christmas Courage Creativity Culture Desert Island Music Discipline Emerson Epictetus Failure Faith Focus Frederick Buechner G.K. Chesterton Goals God Goethe Goodreads Gratitude Habit Hammock Health & Fitness History Honor Hope Humility Industry Interviews J.R.R. Tolkien Jack London James Clear Jeff Olson Jesus John Eldredge Justice Kipling Laird Hamilton Leadership Love Manliness Marcus Aurelius Mark Twain Mental Toughness Mindfulness Money Music Music 80’s Music 1980 Music 1981 Music 1987 Non-fiction Oliver Wendell Holmes Orison Swett Marden Oswald Chambers Peace Personal Development Politics Prophet Isaiah Quotes Recovery Resolution Resurrection Band Rick Rubin Routines & Rituals Rush Saint Augustine Saint Thomas Aquinas Samuel Johnson Self-Reliance Seneca Silence T. S. Elliot The Choir Theodore Roosevelt The Police Thomas A Kempis Thoreau Tim Ferriss Training U2 Virtue Willpower Winston Churchill WODs Writers