Melanie Stevenson

The Night That Changed Everything

Snow falls this hallowed eve, blanketing the earth with mounds of white, muting sound and creating the kind of silent night we sing about this time of year. Two thousand years after the extraordinary night Christ was born, we slip on our coats and mitts to trudge down the hill to our stone-steepled church in the square. Others join the nighttime parade, their voices mingling with the hundred-year-old bells clanging carols through the frosty air. The stained-glass windows glow with rich, subdued colour, the panes depicting the promise of God’s embracing love.

As we descend the hill, snowflakes—each one its own miniature miracle—drift down from darkened sky, insulating the earth in quietness. Holiness. Sacredness. Hushing us like a baby in his mother’s arms. Silently covering the darkness with white as though mimicking what the Christ child born this night came to do. The miraculous night when heaven held its breath as the event that changed everything unfolded on earth.

Inside the church, our voices rise in greetings amid the flicker of candles and excitement. Centuries later, and even now, this is no ordinary night. Though not visible, the anticipation is palpable, as though the choir of angels’ voices echoes through time to mingle with the organ and our feeble attempts of praise. We stand beneath the nave’s beams, hewn by those whose faith preceded ours, our hearts kindled by His love, sinners made sacred by the Son.

On a night like this, when snowflakes fell and cattle called, God sent His Son to us. A night where pitch black fields, stretched before shepherds minding their sheep, were illuminated by God’s glory. When angels appeared and spoke to trembling humans to tell them of Christ’s birth. When a radiant light directed the star studiers to an unlikely town and baby. When a young, ordinary woman gave birth to the Saviour of the world in a room shared with animals. A night that changed everything. The night when the Promised One came to us.

An ordinary night turned holy night that left its mark on the world—by the calendar and the years—but also on our hearts. Once we experience such pure love—God’s love—we cannot be the same. Deep within us, like the illuminated shepherd’s field, we too are brightened by His love. Transformed by Love in human form, born that sacred night. His life that gives us life is a gift we tightly embrace.

Indeed, the greatest gift we will ever receive came in the form of a baby who reached through time and hearts and hurts to find us, and who entered our human existence to live alongside us. To do for us what we could never do for ourselves. To die in our place and rescue us.

Even now, the babe wrapped in blankets wraps his love around us. His love is infinitely enough—everything we search for and all we ever need. A purifying, sacrificial love that made a way for us to the Father and seeks to live with us. Love that never leaves us nor forsakes us. No other love can compare to this.

This Christmas, as we gather in churches and around tables and trees, may we thank God anew for the miraculous gift of Jesus, the divine gift of His love, and the gift of abundant life we have in Him both here and now and in the life to come. May we allow this season to kindle our faith, embrace God’s love more fully, and freely share that love with those around us. May we collectively praise God with arms and hearts open wide for what He did on the night that changed everything.

12 Ways to Grow Deeper in Your Faith

Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled. ~ Jesus

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A young mom recently asked me, “How can I do some deep work with God?”

What a beautiful question! I picture God smiling ear-to-ear over His kids who are seeking a climb-up-on-His-lap kind of intimacy.

I mentioned some ways to grow closer to God, such as setting time aside each day to read His word, prayer, and keeping a prayer journal, but thought it deserved a more thoughtful answer. Below are some of the specific ways that have helped me enrich my relationship with the Lord. I write them here as an encouragement to you.

  1. Read and study the Bible. Approach God’s word expectantly. What I mean by this is when you sit down to read the Bible, expect to hear from God. If a verse stands out to you, write it in a prayer journal or underline it in your Bible. Memorization also helps to hide His word in your heart for future use and timely encouragement.
  2. Pray.  Both the fall-on-your-knees and cry out to God kind, and the breath-by-breath throughout the day kind. Pray away from the crowds – just you and God, but also with other faithful, believers who expect God hears and answers in miraculous ways.
  3. Keep a prayer journal. I use my prayer journal to write prayers to God. In it I tell Him about what I’m struggling with, significant requests, and verses that stand out to me. It is amazing to look back and see God’s faithfulness documented and dated.
  4. Listen. Be still long enough to hear God’s hallowed in-between reply. The whisper in your spirit from His. The knowingness that God passed by and you didn’t miss the exhale of His Spirit releasing reassurance, peace, or a drop of deeper understanding. Let His voice be the loudest in your life.
  5. Praise.  Tell God how much you love Him. Be mindful of His many attributes. Speak, sing, dance, play, paint, or write your exclamations of praise – your worship to Him. Use your gifting for His glory. Your joyful offering pleases God and fortifies faith.
  6. Go to church. “Do not give up meeting together, as some are in the habit of doing, but encouraging one another- and all the more as you see the Day approaching.” (Hebrews 10:25) Go to church to hear God’s word, to be encouraged, to meet with His saints and worship together. Meet regularly with other believers outside of the church walls too. Hear their victory stories, pray for them in their struggles, and love them.
  7. Choose/Practice forgiveness. “But if you do not forgive others their sins, your Father will not forgive your sins.” (Matthew 6:15) Jesus did it, so must we. It is a choice; a determined effort. It’s hard, they may not deserve it, but doing so frees us to live in the fullness of love and abundance Jesus died to give us.
  8. Be thankful. Don’t forget to thank God for ALL He has allowed in your life, the good, the bad, and the ugly. All of it is being used to form you into Christ-likeness. Nothing  is wasted. “But we all, with open face beholding as in a glass the glory of the Lord, are changed into the same image, from glory to glory, even as by the Spirit of the Lord.” (2 Cor 3:18) Even in the middle of the largest battle, we can choose thankfulness, and even in the midst of the most mundane moments we can be thankful.
  9. Choose joy. It can be found in the most heartbreaking, painful situations or can be chosen in the monotony of the day-to-day. Joy that isn’t based on circumstances but is rooted in faith that, no matter what, the God of the universe has “got” this and everything else. Choosing joy changes the atmosphere both within and without.
  10. Find a mentor/Be a mentor. Walk alongside a trusted someone who is a little further on in their journey than you. Learn from them, hear their stories, be encouraged by their triumphs and failures. Do the same for another newer or younger believer. We were not meant to walk alone.
  11. Serve and care for those in need. “Pure and genuine religion in the sight of God the Father means caring for orphans and widows in their distress and refusing to let the world corrupt you.” (James 1:27) Some sacrifice and inconvenience will be required, and you will be reminded that it’s not all about you, but your time and care will be priceless and of eternal value.
  12. Persevere. No matter the hardships, the fiery trials, the repeated mess-ups, the hurt, harm and misunderstandings, do not let anything or anyone come between you and God. Don’t let the truth of how precious and loved by God you are be stolen from you. You will, at times, be a partaker in Christ’s sufferings (see 1 Peter 4:12-14), but stay the course to end and great will be your reward (see Matthew 5:10-12).

I bless you as you do some deep work with God.