A Prayer of Praise for Emmanuel—God With Us - Your Daily Prayer - December 10

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A Prayer of Praise for Emmanuel—God With Us
By Rachel Wojo

Bible Reading:
The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel" (which means "God with us"). - Matthew 1:23

Listen or Read Below:

I remember sitting in a hospital waiting room at 3 AM, watching the automatic doors slide open and closed as medical staff rushed past. My hands were wrapped around a Styrofoam cup of terrible coffee that had gone cold an hour ago, but I kept holding it because it gave me something to do with my hands.

The waiting room TV was playing a loop of cheerful holiday shows and movies. Families laughing around perfectly decorated trees. Children opening gifts with squeals of delight. And there I was, alone in a fluorescent-lit room, waiting for news about someone I loved, feeling like I was living in a completely different universe than the one on that screen.

As I flipped through a holiday magazine, large font words jumped from the page just as I turned it: Emmanuel: God with us. It gave me pause. 

Here too. In this awful waiting room. In this fear. In this moment that felt so far from any holiday season I'd ever imagined. God with us wasn't just a title for the manger scene. It was a promise for the hospital waiting room.

Emmanuel doesn't mean "God with us when Christmas feels magical" or "God with us when we're gathered around the tree with cocoa and carols." It means God with us in the hospital waiting rooms. God with us when we're holding cold coffee at 3 AM. God with us when the holiday we're experiencing looks nothing like the one we planned.

The incarnation isn't just a theological concept; it's God's radical response to human loneliness. When He could have sent instructions or blessings from a distance, He chose to be with us. To enter into our actual lives with all the pain and chaos and disappointment.

The word "Emmanuel" is explicitly used in this prophecy because it not only describes what Jesus would do, but also describes who He would be. His very presence, His very nature is "God with us." Every moment of His life on earth was a declaration: I am here. I am with you. I will not leave you alone.

Let's Pray:

Heavenly Father,

Thank You for Emmanuel, for choosing to be with us instead of remaining at a comfortable distance. Thank You that when You saw our loneliness and pain, You didn't just send help. You came Yourself.

Lord, I praise You for entering into the full reality of human life: the exhaustion, the disappointment, and the moments when joy feels impossible to find. Thank You that Your presence isn't reserved for my best days or my picture-perfect holiday moments. You are Emmanuel in the hospital waiting rooms and the hard conversations, in the Christmases that don't go as planned, and the nights when fear keeps me awake.

Help me to recognize Your presence in the ordinary and hard moments today. When loneliness whispers that I'm going through this alone, remind me that Your name is "God with us." 

Thank You that I never have to face anything without You. You are with me in the fluorescent-lit rooms, in the overwhelming circumstances, in the grief that doesn't pause for holidays, and in every moment when life looks nothing like I thought it would. Emmanuel, God with us, God with me, right now.

In Jesus' name, amen.

Share your reflections on today’s devotional in the Your Daily Prayer discussion on the Crosswalk Forum.

Photo Credit: ©iStock/Getty Images Plus/udra 

Rachel WojoRachel Wojo is an inspirational author, public speaker, and podcaster known for her popular blog, rachelwojo.com. Through her biblical approach and personal life experiences, Rachel empowers women to discover strength and hope in everyday situations. Despite enduring the loss of her mother, adult special needs daughter, and father, Rachel remains resilient. She has authored the uplifting book,  Desperate Prayers: Embracing the Power of Prayer in Life's Darkest Moments  and a new beautiful, spiral-bound prayer journal, Praying the Promises of God,  Rachel is crazy in love with her husband, Matt, and cherishes her motherhood with six children on earth and two in heaven.

Rachel Wojo

Related Resource: What If God’s Heart Toward You Is Kinder Than You Think?

In this episode of Talk About That, you will laugh along with stories about children’s books, volleyball mornings, St. Patrick’s Day, and even the questionable legacy of the Power Team, but underneath the humor is a thoughtful conversation about one of the deepest questions of faith: how God truly sees us. John and Jonnie reflect on weakness, mercy, and the struggle many believers feel in accepting that God is not only patient with them, but genuinely pleased to call them His own. It’s an honest, encouraging reminder that our relationship with God is not built on performance, perfection, or “having it all together,” but on His love, grace, and fatherly delight in His children. You'll come away challenged to see yourself less through the lens of self-criticism and more through the steady, compassionate eyes of a God who knows you fully, loves you deeply, and may just be rooting for you more than you realize. If you laughed out loud listening to this episode, be sure to follow Talk About That on Apple and Spotify!

 

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A Prayer of Praise for Emmanuel—God With Us - Your Daily Prayer - December 10

Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

your daily prayer devotional art


A Prayer of Praise for Emmanuel—God With Us
By Rachel Wojo

Bible Reading:
The virgin will conceive and give birth to a son, and they will call him Immanuel" (which means "God with us"). - Matthew 1:23

Listen or Read Below:

I remember sitting in a hospital waiting room at 3 AM, watching the automatic doors slide open and closed as medical staff rushed past. My hands were wrapped around a Styrofoam cup of terrible coffee that had gone cold an hour ago, but I kept holding it because it gave me something to do with my hands.

The waiting room TV was playing a loop of cheerful holiday shows and movies. Families laughing around perfectly decorated trees. Children opening gifts with squeals of delight. And there I was, alone in a fluorescent-lit room, waiting for news about someone I loved, feeling like I was living in a completely different universe than the one on that screen.

As I flipped through a holiday magazine, large font words jumped from the page just as I turned it: Emmanuel: God with us. It gave me pause. 

Here too. In this awful waiting room. In this fear. In this moment that felt so far from any holiday season I'd ever imagined. God with us wasn't just a title for the manger scene. It was a promise for the hospital waiting room.

Emmanuel doesn't mean "God with us when Christmas feels magical" or "God with us when we're gathered around the tree with cocoa and carols." It means God with us in the hospital waiting rooms. God with us when we're holding cold coffee at 3 AM. God with us when the holiday we're experiencing looks nothing like the one we planned.

The incarnation isn't just a theological concept; it's God's radical response to human loneliness. When He could have sent instructions or blessings from a distance, He chose to be with us. To enter into our actual lives with all the pain and chaos and disappointment.

The word "Emmanuel" is explicitly used in this prophecy because it not only describes what Jesus would do, but also describes who He would be. His very presence, His very nature is "God with us." Every moment of His life on earth was a declaration: I am here. I am with you. I will not leave you alone.

Let's Pray:

Heavenly Father,

Thank You for Emmanuel, for choosing to be with us instead of remaining at a comfortable distance. Thank You that when You saw our loneliness and pain, You didn't just send help. You came Yourself.

Lord, I praise You for entering into the full reality of human life: the exhaustion, the disappointment, and the moments when joy feels impossible to find. Thank You that Your presence isn't reserved for my best days or my picture-perfect holiday moments. You are Emmanuel in the hospital waiting rooms and the hard conversations, in the Christmases that don't go as planned, and the nights when fear keeps me awake.

Help me to recognize Your presence in the ordinary and hard moments today. When loneliness whispers that I'm going through this alone, remind me that Your name is "God with us." 

Thank You that I never have to face anything without You. You are with me in the fluorescent-lit rooms, in the overwhelming circumstances, in the grief that doesn't pause for holidays, and in every moment when life looks nothing like I thought it would. Emmanuel, God with us, God with me, right now.

In Jesus' name, amen.

Share your reflections on today’s devotional in the Your Daily Prayer discussion on the Crosswalk Forum.

Photo Credit: ©iStock/Getty Images Plus/udra 

Rachel WojoRachel Wojo is an inspirational author, public speaker, and podcaster known for her popular blog, rachelwojo.com. Through her biblical approach and personal life experiences, Rachel empowers women to discover strength and hope in everyday situations. Despite enduring the loss of her mother, adult special needs daughter, and father, Rachel remains resilient. She has authored the uplifting book,  Desperate Prayers: Embracing the Power of Prayer in Life's Darkest Moments  and a new beautiful, spiral-bound prayer journal, Praying the Promises of God,  Rachel is crazy in love with her husband, Matt, and cherishes her motherhood with six children on earth and two in heaven.

Rachel Wojo

Related Resource: What If God’s Heart Toward You Is Kinder Than You Think?

In this episode of Talk About That, you will laugh along with stories about children’s books, volleyball mornings, St. Patrick’s Day, and even the questionable legacy of the Power Team, but underneath the humor is a thoughtful conversation about one of the deepest questions of faith: how God truly sees us. John and Jonnie reflect on weakness, mercy, and the struggle many believers feel in accepting that God is not only patient with them, but genuinely pleased to call them His own. It’s an honest, encouraging reminder that our relationship with God is not built on performance, perfection, or “having it all together,” but on His love, grace, and fatherly delight in His children. You'll come away challenged to see yourself less through the lens of self-criticism and more through the steady, compassionate eyes of a God who knows you fully, loves you deeply, and may just be rooting for you more than you realize. If you laughed out loud listening to this episode, be sure to follow Talk About That on Apple and Spotify!

 

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