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December 21, 2025

Practicing Depth

Mindy McGarrah Sharp   |   Read Matthew 1:18-25

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Lectionary Week
December 15–21, 2025
Scripture Overview

This week’s texts invite reflecting about depth as a practice not a product, a process not a destination. What does going deeper feel like? What does it require in a fast-paced world of split-second discernment about where and whom to engage? Isaiah goes to the king of Judah to prophesy about the boy called “Immanuel.” The psalmist cries out to God for restoration. Paul’s words root Jesus in the line of David. And Matthew tells of the angel’s visit to Joseph. These texts seek signs in depths, yearn for deep relief from ravages of war, recall deep generational and geographical connections, and stir deep stories of messy births in a messy world.

Questions and Suggestions for Reflection

• Read Isaiah 7:10-16. When have you asked for a sign from God? How do you recognize signs from God?
• Read Psalm 80:1-7, 17-19. When have you been consumed by your own fuming grief and rage? How has this been acknowledged? In the presence of bitter tears, how do you start to imagine and pray for a different future?
• Read Romans 1:1-7. How do you hold together deep joy and deep trauma at Advent? How many generations and in what land(s) can you trace joys and aches backward and forward in time and place?
• Read Matthew 1:18-25. Who holds and tells origin stories in your community and in your family? Does your community tell stories about births? Where do they begin? What details about the risks, vulnerabilities, and wrestling around birth are included or left out?

Respond by posting a prayer.

Matthew 1:18-25

18 This is how the birth of Jesus Christ took place. When Mary his mother was engaged to Joseph, before they were married, she became pregnant by the Holy Spirit. 19 Joseph her husband was a righteous man. Because he didn’t want to humiliate her, he decided to call off their engagement quietly. 20 As he was thinking about this, an angel from the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said, “Joseph son of David, don’t be afraid to take Mary as your wife, because the child she carries was conceived by the Holy Spirit. 21 She will give birth to a son, and you will call him Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins.” 22 Now all of this took place so that what the Lord had spoken through the prophet would be fulfilled: 23 Look! A virgin will become pregnant and give birth to a son, And they will call him,Emmanuel. (Emmanuelmeans “God with us.”) 24 When Joseph woke up, he did just as an angel from God commanded and took Mary as his wife. 25 But he didn’t have sexual relations with her until she gave birth to a son. Joseph called him Jesus.

Unless otherwise indicated, scripture quotations are from the Common English Bible. Copyright © 2011 Common English Bible. Used by permission.

On this year’s longest night, Matthew brings us into the conscious and unconscious wrestling with decisions. Jesus’ beginning story is full of seemingly impossible situations: Mary is pregnant by the Holy Spirit, Joseph is attempting to make sense of this pregnancy in a context that would spurn if not stone...

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God, help me stay in love. Help me dream and then awaken, guided by shared dreams. Empower me to enact love. Amen.


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