It's a Wonderful Life in Christ - Part 3
1 Peter 1:3
Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead,
Christmas hope is not a wish or a mood; it is a living hope anchored in the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Peter says, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ… He has caused us to be born again to a living hope” (1 Peter 1:3). In a world loud with bad news and thin solutions, I wanted our hearts to hear this: hope in Scripture is not crossing our fingers; it is confidence that God will do what He promised. That confidence steadies us when life feels like George Bailey’s—when one phone call, one loss, one failure makes our “wonderful life” feel impossible.
God’s answer to human despair wasn’t a pep talk; it was a Person. He sent a baby into the darkness, and in Jesus the Light entered our world. That light doesn’t deny pain; it moves into our neighborhoods of deepest failure and begins a holy reversal—darkness gives way to light, uncertainty to stability, and death to life. Because of that, we shake the gloom in three ways. First, by remembering we can’t yet see the full worth of a life lived for Christ. There will be fruit we never knew about and a “well done” we’ve only dreamed of. Second, by leaning into relationships and sacrificial love. The Wexhall family learned that when a neighbor family brought gifts and dinner to a home that had “no Christmas.” Generosity is how we push back the night. Third, by clinging to a relationship with God through Jesus. The Spirit witnesses that we belong. The Lord hears and is close to the brokenhearted.
I also named five thieves of hope—pleasure, performance, possessions, position, and frantic pursuits. They promise life but cannot deliver it. Only Jesus can say, “I am the resurrection and the life… I am the way… I came that they may have life abundantly.” He is the Shepherd who lies across the opening—“I am the door”—our safety, our access, our home.
Without Jesus, Christmas is an empty box—a tradition without the treasure. With Him, even an empty life is filled with forgiveness, purpose, and joy. So make room for Him. Clear the noise. Let the living hope arise in you by the power of the Holy Spirit. And then let that hope spill into simple, concrete love: sponsor a child, serve a meal, visit the lonely, give quietly. The God of hope will fill you with all joy and peace in believing, so that you abound in hope.
