God With Us

Steve Vickers Avatar
A quiet, rustic stable interior at night, empty but clearly prepared for a newborn. A simple wooden manger sits in the center, with hay gently spilling from it. Warm, soft light filters in from a nearby opening, casting gentle shadows across the wooden beams and floor. The atmosphere feels intimate, humble, and peaceful. No people are present, but the scene conveys a sense of presence, sacredness, and anticipation. The focus is on texturesโ€”the rough wood, soft hay, and warm ambient glowโ€”evoking reflection and reverence.

God With Us

โ€œThe virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuelโ€ (which means โ€œGod with usโ€).

One of the greatest truths in all of Scripture is also one of the simplest to overlook: Christmas, and Christianity, is summarized in the message of the Angel to Josephโ€”โ€œGod with us.โ€

That statement is overflowing with the revelation of our God, who He is, His heart, and His nature.

Why would Godโ€”the One and Only God, the Creator of heaven and earthโ€”have any desire to be with us? Why?

Because that is Who God isโ€”He is love.


The God Who Comes Near

And because of His great loveโ€”a love that is without condition, a love with โ€œno strings attachedโ€โ€”He wanted, He had, to be:

The God who is with us.

He did not shout His love from heaven.
He did not rescue us from a distance.
He stepped into our worldโ€”fragile, vulnerable, wrapped in human flesh.

The God of majesty chose a manger.
The Creator of the universe chose to be cradled in the arms of a young girl.
The Eternal One chose a path that would lead to rejection, suffering, and ultimately the cross.

And He chose it for one reasonโ€”Love moved Him toward us, to be with us.

When we could not reach Him, He came to us.
When we were lost, He came searching.
When hope was beyond our grasp, He wrapped hope in human flesh and sent Him to us in a manger.


Godโ€™s Nearness Today

Jesus did not enter a perfect worldโ€”He entered a broken one.
A world of political turmoil, deep fear, and much uncertainty.
A world surprisingly similar to the one we live in today.

Perhaps your own heart feels a bit like Bethlehemโ€™s stableโ€”crowded, messy, not at all what you wish it were.

Yet that is exactly where God chooses to make His home.

He is near to the weary, the lonely, the broken, and the worried.
He is near to the ones whose prayers are whispered through tears and pain.
He is near to those who feel forgotten, overlooked, or alone.

He comes to the unqualified and the unworthy.
He makes His home with the invisible ones no one sees or notices.

That is the God who came near that first Christmas.

This Christmas, may His nearness become your peace.
May His presence quiet your fears.
And may His love remind you that you matter deeply to the God who stepped into the world for youโ€”so He could be God with us, with you.

From Denice and me, may you feel His arms around you this season. And may Immanuelโ€”God with usโ€”be God with you.