Daily Devotionals

  • Devotional – Christmas Eve 2025

    As we consider once again “Peace on Earth,” I remind us that we are co-creators with God for such peace.  

    May the One who was born into our midst, lived among us, taught us well, seep into our very spirits. And may we always seek to live into our best expectations of ourselves. 

    Isaiah 9:2, 6-7

    The people who walked in darkness and despair have seen a great light; Upon those who lived in a land of deep shadows—light is shining!

    You have multiplied the people, you have increased their joy; they rejoice before you as with joy at the harvest.

    For a child has been born for us, an heir given to us; authority rests upon their shoulders; This One shall be called Wonderful Counselor, The Strength of God, Eternal Protector, Prince of Peace.  

    This peace will grow without end, sustained with justness and fairness, now and forever.

    Peace Be With You. – Paul

  • Devotional – December 23, 2025

    It’s assumed that Mary rode on a donkey, but the Bible doesn’t say she did. 

    It’s assumed there was an innkeeper, but it doesn’t mention one anywhere. 

    It’s assumed there were three Magi, but it doesn’t give a number of those who showed up. 

    It’s assumed there was a star overhead when Jesus was born, but it doesn’t say that either. 

    It’s assumed that Jesus was born in a stable, but all it says is that He was laid in a manger – and that could’ve been any number of places. 

    Christmas comes with many assumptions—some helpful, some not so much. 

    Spirituality also comes with many assumptions, and the ones that fail us are the ones we make about what it’s supposed to look like, who is worthy for it to happen to, and what kind of outcome it’s supposed to have for us. Assumptions like . . . 

    You should be more than you are now to be pleasing to God. 

    Your weaknesses are in the way of God’s plan for your life. 

    Your lack of religious excitement disqualifies you from divine participation.

    You’re probably not doing it right.

    Other spiritual people have something you don’t have.

    Our assumptions hinder our spiritual journey in all kinds of ways, and the antidote to assumption is surprise. The surprise of Christ’s incarnation is that it happened in Mary’s day as it is happening every day in your lack of resources, your overcrowded lodging, your unlit night sky, your humble surroundings. 

    It’s a surprise that life can come through barren places.

    It’s a surprise that meek nobodies partake in divine plans. 

    It’s a surprise that messengers are sent all along the hidden journey of life to let you know you are not alone.

    It’s a surprise that you will be given everything you need to accomplish what you’ve been asked to do.

    It’s a surprise that nothing can separate you from the love of God.

    Nothing can separate you from love.

    Your assumptions believe there must be something that can . . . But surprise! 

    Nothing can. 

    May you thank God with joyful surprise at how much you have assumed incorrectly. 

    (author unknown)

    Peace Be With You. – Paul

  • Devotional – December 22, 2025

    From Dr. Heather Thompson Day:

    May the wells you dug in 2025

    Produce living water for you in 2026.

    Peace Be With You. – Paul

  • Devotional – December 19, 2025

    “Gratitude unlocks the fullness of life. It turns what we have into enough, and more.” -Melody Beattie from grateful.org

    Peace Be With You. – Paul

  • Devotional – December 18, 2025

    From Rev. Paul Dazet: 

    We keep looking for God in extraordinary moments, but Jesus kept pointing to bread, wine, soil, seeds, meals, and touch.

    Incarnation means nothing is merely secular anymore.

    Your kitchen table can be holy ground.

    Your tired body can be a sanctuary.

    The sacred isn’t rare – it’s everywhere, waiting for attention.

    Peace Be With You. – Paul

  • Devotional-December 17, 2025

    From St. Alban’s Episcopal Church, El Cajon, CA

    Night Meditation

    Oh, how easy, my beloved God, do I believe

    that I am in charge of my life,

    that this day has succeeded because of my efforts.

    With humility I acknowledge that you have been the sacred source of the good that I have done and the evil I have avoided.

    To raise that awareness, I now ask your gracious assistance as I pray for the following intentions (please name your intentions and concerns here.)

    Tired of body but full of gratitude,

    I prepare to enter into the healing embrace of sleep.

    May this night be salve for both body and soul;

    May it fill me with energy and grant rest to my mind.

    Blessed are you, O Harvest of My Heart,

    Sacred Source of All Life,

    Ever-watchful Guardian of my sleep.

    Text taken from “Prayers for a Planetary Pilgrim,

    A personal menu for prayer and ritual.”

    by Edward Hays ~

    Peace Be With You. – Paul

  • Devotional – December 16, 2025

    From thetinyjoyproject:

    Hey, look around for a second. 

    There are lights everywhere. 

    On trees, in windows, in people. 

    Someone somewhere is stirring cocoa like it’s a spell. 

    Someone is wrapping a gift with tape that won’t behave. 

    The world’s a little softer right now. 

    Let it land on you.

    Peace Be With You. – Paul

  • Devotional – December 15, 2025

    From Howard Thurman:

    “I will light candles this Christmas.

    Candles of joy, despite all the sadness. 

    Candles of hope where despair keeps watch. 

    Candles of courage where fear is ever present.

    Candles of peace for tempest-tossed days. 

    Candles of grace to ease heavy burdens. 

    Candles of love to inspire all of my living. 

    Candles that will burn all the year long. “

    Peace Be With You. – Paul

  • Devotional – December 12, 2025

    A reading about Advent from Anne Lamont.  A little lengthy, but an excellent read. – Paul

    Here is a piece on Advent I wrote years ago:

    We are now in the third week of Advent, which is a big time of year for my Jesusy people. It is a time of preparation and waiting, because even as everything is dying and falling asleep and falling off, something brand new is coming. Hope is coming. And so one of the messages of Advent is, don’t weep over leaves.

    The belief is that enough hope and tenderness will lead to world peace, one mind at a time. All nations will come together in kindness and justice, swords will be beaten into plowshares, spears into pruning hooks. This is a little hard to buy with a world stage occupied by—well, I’m not going to name names. But setting aside one’s tiny tendency toward cynicism, in the meantime — in Advent — we wait; and hope appears if we truly desire to see it. Maybe it’s in tiny little packets here and there, hidden in the dying grasslike winter wildflowers, but we find it where we can, and exactly as it comes to us, while the days grow dark. We remind ourselves that you can only see the stars when it is dark, and the darker it is, the brighter the light breaking through. Advent is about the coming of Emmanuel, which means “God with us,” and so as the fields outside our windows go to sleep, we stay awake and watch, holding to the belief that God is with us, is close and present, and on duty.

    I want that belief, and that patience; I checked the box on the form choosing that. But it has not been forthcoming. I have instead been feeling a little — what is the psychiatric term? — cuckoo. My mind has been doing a worry chant, WORRYworryworryworryworryworryworryworryWORRYworryworry … It’s not that I don’t have a lot of faith. It’s just that I also have a few tiny  mental issues. And I want to fix them all, and I want to do that now, or at least by tomorrow afternoon, right after lunch.

    I thought about calling our pastor and trying to get her to try to fix me, but she had left town for a little R&R. This is just intolerable. I have told her more than once that we wouldn’t have hired her if we’d known that she was a minister with boundaries. So I started calling all the other religious people I know, but discovered that, even though God may be ever present and close by, none of His or Her spokespeople were in very good moods.

    The first Protestant pastor I reached seemed bitter. “Can we talk about God?” I asked.

    “Who’s that?” he said.

    So I called a Jewish friend, who usually makes me laugh, but I could tell right away she was in a terrible mood. Her children were keening in the background.

    “You should rush to ER and get your tubes tied today,” I said warmly.

    “Tell me about it.”

    “I was wondering if you could tell me if there’s a Jewish equivalent of Advent; what spiritual preparation is called for in the weeks before you light the first Chanukah candle.”

    There was a long silence. “This is a joke, right?” she asked.

    “No, no, talk to me. So, well, you’re Reform, right?”

    “Of course we’re Reform. We’ve got a crucifix on our front door. Look,” she said, “call me tomorrow. My child just drew with Magic Markers on the TV screen. Tomorrow we’ll have an invigorating talk about the menorah, about Judas Macabee casting the Syrian thugs out of the Holy Land. And I don’t mean Miami Beach.”

    I called another minister. “My mind is on the fritz,” I said. ”I want God to reach down with His or Her magic wand and restore me to my former luster.”

    “Good luck, Bubbie. Here’s the only thing I’m sure of: Go take care of God’s children today, and God will take care of you.”

    “Does it say that somewhere?”

    “Yes, it’s right here, under ‘Secret of Life’ in my Owner’s Manual.”

    ”I never got an Owner’s Manual.”

    “Fundamentalists would say you did: It’s the Bible.”

    “Pretty darn great to be so sure of things, huh?”

    “I heard a joke once, maybe it will cheer you up: A godly woman dies and goes to her reward, and is being shown around heaven by St. Peter. They walk through meadows and fields filled with people of all ages and colors, warmed by a gentle sun, lulled by the strains of soft sweet music — black and white and Asian and Indian people, Hindus, Jews, Muslims, all of a family, laughing, resting by ponds, playing, listening to each other, being. And then they come to a great walled portion of heaven, miles of land surrounded by tall thick walls“

    ‘What’s this?’ the woman asks.

    “‘Oh, that’s where the fundamentalists stay,’ said Peter. ‘It’s only nice for them when they think they’re the only ones who got in.’”

    I laughed. “I’m going to go eat a thousand candy bars now.”

    “Atta girl. Sorry I can’t help. Why don’t you try a Catholic?”

    So I called my Jesuit friend, Tom, who is a hopeless alcoholic of the worst sort, sober now for 22 years, someone who sometimes gets fat and wants to hang himself, so I trust him. I said, “Tell me a story about Advent. Tell me about people getting well.”

    He thought for a while. Then he said, “OK.”

    In 1976, when he first got sober, he was living in the People’s Republic of Berkeley, going to the very hip AA meetings there, where there were no fluorescent lights and not too much clapping — or that yahoo-cowboy-hat-in-the-air enthusiasm that you get in L.A., according to sober friends. And everything was more or less all right in early sobriety, except that he felt utterly insane all the time, filled with hostility and fear and self-contempt. But I mean, other than that everything was OK. Then he got transferred to Los Angeles in the winter, and he did not know a soul. “It was a nightmare,” he says. “I was afraid to go into entire areas of L.A., because the only places I knew were the bars. So I called the cardinal and asked him for the name of anyone he knew in town who was in AA. And he told me to call this guy Terry.”

    Terry, as it turned out, had been sober for five years at that point, so Tom thought he was God. They made arrangements to go to a meeting that night in the back of the Episcopal Cathedral, right in the heart of downtown L.A. It was Terry’s favorite meeting, full of low-bottom drunks and junkies — people from nearby halfway houses, bikers, jazz musicians. “Plus it’s a men’s stag meeting,” says Tom. “So already I’ve got issues.

    “There I am on my first date with this new friend Terry, who turns out to not be real chatty. He’s clumsy and ill at ease, an introvert with no social skills, but the cardinal has heard that he’s also good with newly sober people. He asks me how I am, and after a long moment, I say, ‘I’m just scared,’ and he nods and says gently, ‘That’s right.’

    “I don’t know a thing about him, I don’t what sort of things he thinks about or who he votes for, but he takes me to this meeting near skid row, where all these awful looking alkies are hanging out in the yard, waiting for a meeting to start. I’m tense, I’m just staring. It’s a whole bunch of strangers, all of them clearly very damaged — working their way back slowly, but not yet real attractive. The people back in Berkeley AA all seem like David Niven in comparison, and I’m thinking, Who are these people? Why am I here?

    “All my scanners are out. It’s all I can do not to bolt.

    “Ten minutes before the meeting began, Terry directed me to a long flight of stairs heading up to a windowless, airless room. I started walking up the stairs, with my jaws clenched, muttering to myself tensely just like the guy in front of me, this guy my own age who was stumbling and numb and maybe not yet quite on his first day of sobriety.

    “The only things getting me up the stairs are Terry, behind me, pushing me forward every so often, and this conviction I have that this is as bad as it’s ever going to be — that if I can get through this, I can get through anything. Well. All of a sudden, the man in front of me soils himself. I guess his sphincter just relaxes. Shit runs down onto his shoes, but he keeps walking. He doesn’t seem to notice.

    “However, I do. I clapped a hand over my mouth and nose, and my eyes bugged out but I couldn’t get out of line because of the crush behind me. And so, holding my breath, I walk into the windowless, airless room.

    “Now, this meeting has a greeter, which is a person who stands at the door saying hello. And this one is a biker with a shaved head, a huge gut and a Volga boatman mustache. He gets one whiff of the man with shit on his shoes and throws up all over everything.

    “You’ve seen the Edvard Munch painting of the guy on the bridge screaming, right? That’s me. That’s what I look like. But Terry enters the room right behind me. And there’s total pandemonium, no one knows what to do. The man who had soiled himself stumbles forward and plops down in a chair. A fan blows the terrible around the windowless room, and people start smoking just to fill in the spaces in the air. Finally Terry reaches out to the greeter, who had thrown up. He puts his hand on the man’s shoulder.

    “Wow,” he says. “Looks like you got caught by surprise.” And they both laugh. Right? Terry asks a couple of guys to go with him down the hall to the men’s room, and help this guy get cleaned up. There are towels there, and kitty litter, to absorb various effluvia, because this is a meeting where people show up routinely in pretty bad shape. So while they’re helping the greeter get cleaned up, other people start cleaning up the meeting room. Then Terry approaches the other man.

    “My friend,” he says gently, “it looks like you have trouble here.”

    The man just nods.

    “We’re going to give you a hand,” says Terry.

    “So three men from the recovery house next door help him to his feet, walk him to the halfway house and put him in the shower. They wash his clothes and shoes and give him their things to wear while he waits. They give him coffee and dinner, and they give him respect. I talked to these other men later, and even though they had very little sobriety, they did not cast this other guy off for not being well enough to be there. Somehow this broken guy was treated like one of them, because they could see that he was one of them. No one was pretending he wasn’t covered with shit, but there was a real sense of kinship. And that is what we mean when we talk about grace.

    “Back at the meeting at the Episcopal Cathedral, I was just totally amazed by what I had seen. And I had a little shred of hope. I couldn’t have put it into words, but until that meeting, I had thought that I would recover with men and women like myself; which is to say, overeducated, fun to be with and housebroken. And that this would happen quickly and efficiently. But I was wrong. So I’ll tell you what the promise of Advent is: It is that God has set up a tent among us and will help us work together on our stuff. And this will only happen over time.

    “For you, Crabby Miss, and for me; together, over time.”

  • Devotional – December 11, 2025

    From The United Methodist Church Advent Devotions:

     As Advent has us reflecting upon on how we welcome Christ’s presence among us, we also look for the ways in which we welcome one another into the community of faith. Let us pray together, leaning on the words of Romans 15: 5-7…

    “May the God of steadfastness and encouragement grant you to live in harmony with one another, in accordance with Christ Jesus, that together you may with one voice glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Welcome one another, therefore, just as Christ has welcomed you, for the glory of God.”

    Peace Be With You. – Paul