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Welcome, friend! I’m so glad you’re here!

Shalene Roberts
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Advent – Day 5

“But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah, though you are small among the clans of Judah, out of you will come for me one who will be ruler over Israel, whose origins are from of old, from ancient times.” – Micah 5:2

Little town of Bethlehem. We sing it in our carols, and we teach it to our children. It’s where the hopes and fears of all the years are met, where the morning stars proclaim the savior’s birth. And it’s probably one of the most-well known ancient cities. Ask anyone what happened in Bethlehem, and it’s a safe to say the majority of people could answer that question correctly. 

But it wasn’t always that way. In the days of Jesus’ birth, Bethlehem was an insignificant town. Specifically, the Bethlehem of Jesus’ birth was known as Bethlehem Ephrathah. The latter part of the name denoted the district, and as Dr. Thomas Constable wrote, this helped “distinguish this Bethlehem from other Bethlehems in the Promised Land.” This Bethlehem was also the hometown of David, which is why Joseph (a descendant of David) returns here during the census. 

Bethlehem certainly wasn’t where anyone expected a king to hail from. Yet in God’s compassion, he sent his son to be born in this sleepy pastoral town. Approximately 700 years ago, Micah 5:2 prophesied that the messiah would come out of Bethlehem. “But you, Bethlehem Ephrathah, though you are small among the clans of Judah, out of you will come for me one who will be ruler over Israel, whose origins are from of old, from ancient times.”

Now 7 centuries later, we remember Bethlehem and celebrate the divine event that occurred there. Jesus’ birth changed Bethlehem from a lowly town to a place of monumental historical (and eternal) importance. This itself is a providential picture of what Jesus does for us. He receives us in our lowly state and then redeems and transforms us.

In The Expositor’s Bible: The Book of the Twelve Prophets, Vol. I, George Adam Smith writes, “We may conceive how such a promise would affect the crushed peasants for whom Micah wrote. A Saviour, who was one of themselves, not born up there in the capital, foster-brother of the very nobles who oppressed them, but born among the people, sharer of their toils and of their wrongs!—it would bring hope to every broken heart among the disinherited poor of Israel. Yet meantime, be it observed, this was a promise, not for the peasants only, but for the whole people.”

The promise of the birth in Bethlehem is a promise for us all. And it is this promise we remember during the Advent season. Jesus wasn’t born among the powerful or the kings or the authorities. He was born among the lowly and the common and the insignificant. He was born to peasants and shepherds. He was born to us, and he is a Savior who is familiar with our suffering and our sorrow. He is acquainted with our tender longings. He can empathize with our trials and can sit with us in our pain, because he sat in the lowly places too.

Today, take some time to reflect on the fact that Jesus arrived in an insignificant, common town, rather than a place of power and prominence. What does this mean for your personally? How does the place of Jesus’ birth further reveal the depths of the kindness of God? Dear Lord, thank you for your great compassion and for sending your son to be born in the town of Bethlehem. You sent him from a throne in Heaven, to the mess of a manger, and he came, willing, humble, and servant-hearted. We receive that gift today with a heart of immense gratitude.  

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Looking for a Christmas gift for the children in your life? Check out my children’s book, Bruce the Brave, available on Amazon! Want to connect? Find me on Facebook and Instagram. To get a free copy of “Five Ways to Build Faith in Your Children”, drop your e mail in the subscribe box. You can also follow me on BlogLovin’.

 

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You are never too far gone. #seekjesus #womenoff You are never too far gone. 

#seekjesus #womenoffaith #godisgood #bygracethroughfaith #jesus
Three years ago, my brothers and I with our famili Three years ago, my brothers and I with our families met at a vacation home to surprise our parents for their 70th birthdays. It’s still one of my favorite memories, and the older I get, the more I realize what a true gift it is to simply have everyone beneath one roof.

#grownandflown #christianmom #womenoffaith #momlife #motherhoodunplugged
Don’t looks away. Don’t silence the headlines. Don Don’t looks away. Don’t silence the headlines. Don’t close your ears to the anguished cries of people created in the image of God.

Now more than ever, bring these people before the throne of God. Get on your knees and pray with fervor for the people of the Middle East. For their protections. For their freedoms. For their wholeness. For their salvation and their sanctification. 

Pray that the darkness would be banished and the light would dawn. Pray that the Gospel of Jesus Christ would go forth. That it would take root in hearts across the region and bear fruit. Pray that chains would drop, that slaves would be set free, that captives would be liberated. Pray that the goodness and the grace of Christ would saturate the hearts of people who are living in darkness. 

And do not tell me that prayers don’t work. Because ultimately the struggle in the Middle East is not against flesh and blood. It’s against “the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms”. (Ephesians 6:12) And the only way to fight a battle against the spiritual forces of evil is to get on our knees and fight it with the tools of spiritual warfare. 

(This isn’t a political post, and comments that seek to incite political hate one way or another will be deleted.)

#prayforthemiddleeast #iran #israel #womenoffaith #imagodei
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For the one who feels like you don’t measure up … For the one who feels like you don’t measure up … at home, at school, at life, at work. Consider these three things, then set your mind on Christ.

1️⃣ Where am I finding my worth?

It’s easy to define our worth by the world’s standards … success, wealth, influence, intelligence. But these standards will always leave us empty because they rely on WHAT we are, not WHO we are. When we allow our worth to be defined by who we are as a child of God and a daughter of the king, it radically changes our understanding of our value.

2️⃣ What voices am I allowing to speak into my life? 

Are we constantly listening to voices of the world? Or are we seeking the truths of scripture and the life-giving affirmations of other believers?

3️⃣ Am I cultivating a heart of gratitude? 

It’s tempting to feel like we don’t measure up when we fail to cultivate gratitude for what we do have and for the intricate ways God has gifted us. When you start to feel the threat of comparison or inadequacies seeping in, combat it by thanking God for all he has so graciously gifted you! 

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