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Daily Bread December 12

And Mary said…
Andrew Bolton of Leicester, England


    And Mary said,
“My soul magnifies the Lord,
    and my spirit rejoices in God my Savior…
He has shown strength with his arm;
    he has scattered the proud in the thoughts of their hearts.
He has brought down the powerful from their thrones,
    and lifted up the lowly;
he has filled the hungry with good things,
    and sent the rich away empty. -Luke 1:46-47, 51-53

And pregnant Mary sang these words to her cousin Elizabeth, also pregnant. In the moral, political, and economic crisis in Israel, Mary sings hope. Her country is being devastated by the brutal, greedy, and oppressive Roman Empire. Four miles away from Nazareth in the town of Sepphoris 2,000 Jewish men would be crucified around the time of the birth of Jesus. It was a warning to those who revolt. Poor peasant farmers were taxed up to 50% of their harvest. Bread was stolen from the children to feed the extravagant desires of the rich and powerful-the 1%. In a bad harvest, small farmers borrowed money on their land, and then when they could not pay, lost their land and became even more vulnerable to hunger.

Pregnant Mary in this crisis sings her hope of a new “kingdom of God” day dawning. First it will be a moral revolution of the heart, a conversion of the soul, from pride to humility and solidarity with the poor and oppressed. Second, it is an upending of the political. God will bring down the rich and powerful from their thrones and lift up the lowly-the kingdom of God is a political revolution. God is coming as king in a baby soon to be born. Third it is an economic revolution. God will fill the hungry with good things and send the rich away empty.

In the crisis of these pandemic times, with Mary, we can hope and work for the new normal, Zion normal. Let us seize this time, not to go back to the old normal of injustices but rebuild a new way of justice for all.

Prayer Phrase

“Trust what is being born.”

Spiritual Practice

Jesus, the Peaceful One

We have spent this year with a guiding question: Are we moving closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One? As we near the end of this calendar year, we review how this question has been shaping and forming us. In our thoughts, words, and actions, have we been embodying Jesus, the Peaceful One? What might it look like to move closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One as we make space in our lives for Christ incarnate this Advent season?

Today’s Prayer for Peace

Engage in a daily practice of praying for peace in our world. Click here to read today’s prayer and be part of this practice of peace.

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Daily Bread December 11

Expanding Expectations
Stassi Cramm, First Presidency


Let me hear what God the Lord will speak, for he will speak peace to his people, to his faithful,to those who turn to him in their hearts. -Psalm 85:8

As we enter another Advent season or time of expectant waiting, I feel like I’ve spent the greater part of 2020 waiting. The global pandemic has disrupted the world in ways I never expected. At the start, I failed to realize the seriousness of what the world was facing.

When leaders initially made decisions to physically distance and cancel in-person meetings and events, I thought this would be a short-term situation. I’m embarrassed to admit that my personal hope was that the world would be back to normal by May so I could attend the Broadway series, Hamilton, performance in St. Louis, Missouri, as planned. Clearly my initial expectations of what I was waiting for were gravely misguided.

Then when leaders had to make decisions about canceling camps and reunions while continuing to keep churches closed for physical gatherings, my understanding of the seriousness of the situation grew. My expectations of what we were waiting for became murkier.

Amid the uncertainty, I was amazed and profoundly grateful about how the church was rallying to meet people’s needs for community and support while complying with health guidelines to protect the most vulnerable. I was intrigued to hear stories of how numbers were growing, and many were finding new connections in ways never expected. I was profoundly grateful to witness the church supporting Mission Tithes through eTithing and other online means of giving.

Personally, I hoped it would be safe for family and friends to gather for our daughter’s wedding in August. Unfortunately, the wedding that we all expected had to be reimagined in a pandemic-friendly way. Most people joined virtually. Our son could not travel from Japan, so he watched online as his life-size cardboard cutout moved down the aisle.

I have learned may things this year about trust. Trusting others and God is important because clearly, I can’t control everything, and my expectations are often too limited. As we journey through Advent, I am trusting the Spirit to expand my expectations of what is being born and guide me in doing my part to help make it happen.

Prayer Phrase

“Trust what is being born.”

Spiritual Practice

Jesus, the Peaceful One

We have spent this year with a guiding question: Are we moving closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One? As we near the end of this calendar year, we review how this question has been shaping and forming us. In our thoughts, words, and actions, have we been embodying Jesus, the Peaceful One? What might it look like to move closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One as we make space in our lives for Christ incarnate this Advent season?

Today’s Prayer for Peace

Engage in a daily practice of praying for peace in our world. Click here to read today’s prayer and be part of this practice of peace.

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Daily Bread December 10

Gifts from God
John Wight, senior president of seventy


We know that all things work together for good for those who love God, who are called according to his purpose. -Romans 8:28

My wife and I recently had the opportunity to spend a week with our recently-born twin grandsons (and their mommy and daddy, too). The experience caused me to reflect on a number of things relative to our theme of “Trust What Is Being Born.”

First, it caused me to remember the journey to their birth. Our daughter had been told by medical professionals that she would not be able to have children. This was a great disappointment to her and her husband. But they had adjusted to this knowledge and were moving ahead with life. Then the happy news arrived: she was pregnant. And not with just one baby, but two. We all felt this was an answer to prayer and a wonderful gift from God.

As the pregnancy continued, there were a few complications, so grandma and grandpa had some concerns about “what was being born.” Then the boys entered the world, still with a few complications and concerns.

As I held and fed Cruise and Valentin over that week, I got acquainted with two beautiful little people. Despite the complications and concerns, here they were in my arms being the children they were created to be, full of vim, vigor, and vitality-and curiosity. It became clear that we all could have trusted what was being born, even with the concerns and complications.

And all of that has caused me to think about the journey we are on as a church. Yes, it is a journey of metamorphosis brought about by a number of factors, and it is filled with questions, concerns, and complications. But just like with the twins, I have realized that we can, indeed, trust what is being born. As we seek guidance through discernment, we can trust that God is with us and that if we follow that guidance, what is born will be a gift from God. It will be a gift that is new and exciting and perhaps even unexpected. And it will be full of vim, vigor, and vitality as we seek to fulfill our role in the mission of Jesus Christ which “is what matters most for the journey ahead” (Doctrine and Covenants 164:9f).

Prayer Phrase

“Trust what is being born.”

Spiritual Practice

Jesus, the Peaceful One

We have spent this year with a guiding question: Are we moving closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One? As we near the end of this calendar year, we review how this question has been shaping and forming us. In our thoughts, words, and actions, have we been embodying Jesus, the Peaceful One? What might it look like to move closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One as we make space in our lives for Christ incarnate this Advent season?

Today’s Prayer for Peace

Engage in a daily practice of praying for peace in our world. Click here to read today’s prayer and be part of this practice of peace.

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Daily Bread December 09

Froher Advent!
Michael Botts of Hannover, Germany


The way of the righteous is level; O Just One, you make smooth the path of the righteous. In the path of your judgments, O Lord, we wait for you; your name and your renown are the soul’s desire. My soul yearns for you in the night, my spirit within me earnestly seeks you. For when your judgments are in the earth, the inhabitants of the world learn righteousness. O Lord, you will ordain peace for us, for indeed, all that we have done, you have done for us. -Isaiah 26:7-9,12

In Germany where I live, we say “Froher Advent,” (Happy Advent) at this time of the year, and the Advent season is very prominent here. Lighting the Advent candles, Advent calendars where a door is opened every day from December 1-24, and all the other Advent preparations say, “Christ is coming! Prepare for the birth of Jesus, who will change the world! A time of expectation and joy and happiness!”

The coming of Jesus signals a change. Jesus will change our lives and the way we understand God. Change can bring joy and happiness!

However, we sometimes tend to be more wary and careful when changes are coming. How often do we dig trenches, close the windows, and lock the doors when we hear a change (or metamorphosis) is coming?

Thankfully, the Advent season is not like that! Lights are glowing, music surrounds us, and almost everyone is happy. We are waiting for the birth of Jesus! We are waiting for the world to change in a very positive way!

Maybe we could take some of this Advent joy, some of this change-is-coming happiness with us when we look to the future and metamorphosis in the church. If we look at the future as we look at Advent, we will have a much more positive attitude toward change and becoming a butterfly. God does not call us to dig trenches, lock doors, or hide. Our call is to open our hearts and souls to God’s love.

Maybe we can use this Advent season of 2020 as a time to launch us into the next time of changes. Let us join together in celebrating the new and being open to the love and joy and hope and peace that lies in the future!

So “Froher Advent”! May we trust in what is being born. God with us.

Prayer Phrase

“Trust what is being born.”

Spiritual Practice

Jesus, the Peaceful One

We have spent this year with a guiding question: Are we moving closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One? As we near the end of this calendar year, we review how this question has been shaping and forming us. In our thoughts, words, and actions, have we been embodying Jesus, the Peaceful One? What might it look like to move closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One as we make space in our lives for Christ incarnate this Advent season?

Today’s Prayer for Peace

Engage in a daily practice of praying for peace in our world. Click here to read today’s prayer and be part of this practice of peace.

Click here to comment or read online.

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Daily Bread December 08

Birthing the Peaceable Kingdom
Michael Wright of Rome, Italy


Come to him, a living stone, though rejected by mortals yet chosen and precious in God’s sight, and like living stones, let yourselves be built into a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. -1 Peter 2:4-5

Recently on a weekend trip, we headed to higher and cooler temperatures with our dog Domingo into the Apuan Alps in northwestern Tuscany. I had always wanted to visit the city of Carrara, famed for its marble production. The five-hour car ride was a flat drive that ended in a climb up the mountain road: a slow, long, and windy path where we started to gradually see what looked like snowy peaks that eventually revealed themselves as mountains of marble.

We stopped to observe the site of the Roman quarry that has been in production since the first century BCE, the site that produced the marble for Roman monuments such as the Pantheon, the Pyramid of Cestius, and Trajan’s Column. These are the same mountains that produced the marble for the Medieval and Renaissance Cathedrals of Italy, sacred spaces such as the Baptistry of Florence and the Cathedrals of Siena and Pisa. Michelangelo came to Carrara for the first time in 1497 as a young man to choose the marble that would become his Piet\xc3\xa0 sculpture. As I stared at the exposed precious, brilliant, and veiny stone in the mountain, I could not help but think of Michelangelo’s famous quote: “The sculpture is already complete within the marble block before I start my work. It is already there; I just have to chisel away the superfluous material.”

With Michelangelo’s quote in mind, I stared at the mountainside searching in sacred pause to see the masterpiece within, already present, but in need of vision to be born. This made me think about Zion, the Kingdom that is already here yet in need of a prophetic people to chisel away superfluous material and work with God to reveal what God has already created and desires to reveal fully. A prophetic people will catch a vision and sense of the kingdom to come and will announce it before others can see it fully. In faith, they work as a community to free the sanctuary that is the Peaceable Kingdom: a living stone, a spiritual house sculpted by God’s servant people.

Prayer Phrase

“Trust what is being born.”

Spiritual Practice

Jesus, the Peaceful One

We have spent this year with a guiding question: Are we moving closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One? As we near the end of this calendar year, we review how this question has been shaping and forming us. In our thoughts, words, and actions, have we been embodying Jesus, the Peaceful One? What might it look like to move closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One as we make space in our lives for Christ incarnate this Advent season?

Today’s Prayer for Peace

Engage in a daily practice of praying for peace in our world. Click here to read today’s prayer and be part of this practice of peace.

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Daily Bread December 07

Stop! Don’t Worry! Trust God!
Mary Jacks of Redmond, OR, USA


When your willingness to live in sacred community as Christ’s new creation exceeds your natural fear of spiritual and relational transformation, you will become who you are called to be. The rise of Zion the beautiful, the peaceful reign of Christ, awaits your wholehearted response to the call to make and steadfastly hold to God’s covenant of peace in Jesus Christ. -Doctrine and Covenants 164:9b

STOP! DON’T WORRY!

I had been sequestered in my home since March and much of the cultural and physical world around me was in turmoil. On June 10 I woke up with red lights flashing “Stop!” Then, in green neon lights, “Don’t Worry!” Being a facilitator in dream groups and getting my certificate in dreams, I was puzzled that I really had no idea what I had been dreaming about before. How could I forget “Stop!  Don’t Worry!“?  I had never experienced anything like this before in a dream. I decided to live with it to see where it would lead since most dreams are for healing and wholeness and we usually dream five to seven times a night.

A month later I woke up with a profound sense of gratitude. Again, I couldn’t recall what I had been dreaming about. Two days later I again woke up with such an overwhelming sense of gratitude. With my spiritual director, I decided to trust what was evolving in my life. What was going on in this darkness of night while I was sleeping? I was reminded of a quote from Joan Chittister: “Darkness deserves gratitude. It is the alleluia point at which we learn to understand that all growth does not take place in the sunlight.”

I decided to let go a little more and let God move within me in this darkness. Trusting God has always been difficult for me for I have experienced much in life. Still, I had made inroads on this path of trust. What was birthing in me that was happening in this darkness at night? Was it going deeper in trust?

Long-ago woundedness and shame came up to be healed. I surmised that I couldn’t really be healed without forgiveness. As Henri Nouwen states: “Hiding our pain we also hide our ability to heal…” (“No Hiding.” August 29, 2020). When I read that the True Self cannot be hurt, I went inside and knew I was connected to the Whole, as Rohr states, that is inexhaustible and unhurtable. My “True Me” is indestructible. All my hurts and feelings of being offended come from my separate self (Nouwen, “Trusting in the ‘True You,'” September 2, 2020). My journey of reconciliation has begun. What else is there to be grateful for as I continue this cyclical journey of trust in this time of turmoil as I go into the darkness?

Trust Me, Mary! Is this what is birthing in me at this time of Advent? I will put on my “Trust God!” t-shirt!

Stop! Don’t Worry! Trust God!

Prayer Phrase

“Trust what is being born.”

Spiritual Practice

Jesus, the Peaceful One

We have spent this year with a guiding question: Are we moving closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One? As we near the end of this calendar year, we review how this question has been shaping and forming us. In our thoughts, words, and actions, have we been embodying Jesus, the Peaceful One? What might it look like to move closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One as we make space in our lives for Christ incarnate this Advent season?

Today’s Prayer for Peace

Engage in a daily practice of praying for peace in our world. Click here to read today’s prayer and be part of this practice of peace.

Click here to comment or read online.

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Daily Bread December 06

Prepare the Way of the Lord
David Nii, Council of Twelve Apostles


He will feed his flock like a shepherd; he will gather the lambs in his arms, and carry them in his bosom, and gently lead the mother sheep.  -Isaiah 40:11

A quote is attributed to Jonathan Swift: “The power of fortune is confessed only by the miserable, for the happy impute all their success to prudence or merit.” Swift probably was referencing a financial or tangible definition of fortune; however, his quote points out a common misguided perception. Many people believe success and happiness are solely results of their proper actions. Likewise, misery is the condition of undeserving people because of their actions. These assumptions can blind us to the nature of God.

My life as a youth was easy. Food, shelter, clothing, and safety never were prevailing concerns. Participation in school, sports, social life, and family was effortless. Being the youngest of five siblings, I, admittedly, was spoiled. It was fairly easy to celebrate God when I deceived myself into thinking God was on my side more than on others’. 

Reality, however, has a way of unveiling our misperceptions. Struggling through college because of personal and external decisions was an awakening. Adulthood brought familiar themes of undeserved gifts, dashed hopes, surprising recognitions, unfulfilled expectations, broken relationships, joy-filled serendipity, financial stress, and pain. Loved ones died too soon. Unforeseen events brought significant life changes. What was God about, then? Was God looking over me with judgment, or was a much deeper life lesson being experienced?

God was about being present. The nature of God is not one of granting blessings and issuing punishments. It is one of merciful presence and comfort in all of life. When we pay attention to life around us, we acknowledge it rains on the just and unjust. Bad things happen to good people, and good things happen to bad people.

Acknowledging God’s presence and concern for us even when we are not deserving is a transforming experience. God’s care and comfort for us, in easy and in struggling situations, is the divine nature. We don’t control grace. Suffering and pain arise with and without merit. When we surrender ourselves to God’s grace, all of life can be received with gratitude because gifts arise with and without merit. The people of God aren’t more deserving; they are ones who recognize God’s companionship in every step of life. This assurance of companionship is divine comfort. As you wait in the darkness of Advent, may you find comfort and assurance in divine companionship.

Prayer Phrase

“Trust what is being born.”

Spiritual Practice

Jesus, the Peaceful One

We have spent this year with a guiding question: Are we moving closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One? As we near the end of this calendar year, we review how this question has been shaping and forming us. In our thoughts, words, and actions, have we been embodying Jesus, the Peaceful One? What might it look like to move closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One as we make space in our lives for Christ incarnate this Advent season?

Today’s Prayer for Peace

Engage in a daily practice of praying for peace in our world. Click here to read today’s prayer and be part of this practice of peace.

Click here to comment or read online.

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Daily Bread December 05

We Wait
Bruce Lindgren of Independence, MO, USA


I will praise the Lord as long as I live; I will sing praises to my God all my life long. Happy are those whose help is in the God of Jacob, whose hope is in the Lord their God, who made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that is in them; who keeps faith forever; who executes justice for the oppressed; who gives food to the hungry. The Lord sets the prisoners free; the Lord opens the eyes of the blind. The Lord lifts up those who are bowed down; the Lord loves the righteous. -Psalm 146:2, 5-8

I live on the edge of the Great American Desert. (It’s an old nineteenth-century term for the arid western part of the Great Plains.) If I drive west for about an hour and a half, I will enter a landscape completely unlike the American Midwest, where I have lived my entire life.

With a few small exceptions, I will encounter an open, treeless vista all the way to Denver, Colorado; and the drive will take all day. I have friends who consider this drive almost unbearable. I happen to find it peaceful. If I want to visit the Rocky Mountains, it would be much more efficient to fly, but that’s not how I like to do it.

I prefer the slow transition, the long, quiet wait. More often than not, I worry about things too much: about the fate of the world, about my family, about what we’ll have for dinner when evening comes. The long, slow drive lets my worries fade away. For much of the time, it is quiet. I don’t want to have the radio playing music or the latest news all day long. I’m in an unfamiliar landscape, and I enjoy watching it go by. At the end of the day, we’re in the mountains and totally at peace.

Most of the time, we hate to wait. It’s like being in a dry, seemingly lifeless place where nothing is happening. If we’re in a hurry, it’s almost painful. But waiting has its uses. If we break an arm or leg, we wait for it to heal. At any given time, it seems like nothing is happening; but with enough time the body renews itself and we move on restored.

We live in a time of waiting that seems like it may last forever; but this, too, shall pass. Will we arrive at our destination refreshed and ready to begin life in a new place, or will we just keep complaining about the wait?

The good news of Jesus promises new life, and new life is possible for us if we settle into our waiting and allow it to prepare us for the new day. If we must wait, we can embrace the waiting. We can help to ease the way for those who may not be able to complete the journey on their own, those who may not have the means to complete their waiting.

Like the butterfly waiting to emerge, like the bread waiting to rise, we wait and look to be transformed into something new.

Prayer Phrase

“Trust what is being born.”

Spiritual Practice

Jesus, the Peaceful One

We have spent this year with a guiding question: Are we moving closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One? As we near the end of this calendar year, we review how this question has been shaping and forming us. In our thoughts, words, and actions, have we been embodying Jesus, the Peaceful One? What might it look like to move closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One as we make space in our lives for Christ incarnate this Advent season?

Today’s Prayer for Peace

Engage in a daily practice of praying for peace in our world. Click here to read today’s prayer and be part of this practice of peace.

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Daily Bread December 04

Where Do We Find Beauty?
Petra Wagner of Augsburg, Germany


Do not be afraid. I bring you good news that will cause great joy for all the people. Today in the town of David a Savior has been born to you; he is the Messiah, the Lord. -Luke 2:10-11

Morihiro Harano of Drill, Inc. created a wooden marimba in the midst of Kyushu, Japan’s woodlands as part of an advertisement campaign for the NTT Docomo Touch Wood phone. When a wooden ball was launched at the highest point, the beginning of the marimba, gravity allowed it to play Bach’s Cantata 147, “Jesu, Joy of Man’s Desiring.”  (The Forest Xylophone is the title of the video [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2BWrmNhyXU].)

As I listened to the music in the video, I asked myself why the wooden ball produced the melody of Bach’s cantata in a Japanese forest. We might regard it as a culture clash or sign of a globalized world.

I am grateful that Jesus can be experienced in so many ways with people at various places, in diverse situations, and at different times. Jesus has always been there, is here now, and will be with us until the end of the world. This gives me great joy particularly during the Advent season. But it is also a source of strength in times of struggle, difficulties, and challenge. We have been faced with the COVID-19 pandemic for many months with different timelines and progressions in numerous parts of the world. Many of us have been very creative, too, finding ways to celebrate Jesus in online services when regular church gatherings were not possible. There have been many ways to keep in touch thanks to digital media. But when we were able to meet again with our church group in Augsburg on June 14, we felt very blessed by the ties of Christian love, support, empathy, and strength. This is the joy within us in good times and in times of trouble. This is the everlasting joy of Christ among us.

Prayer Phrase

“Trust what is being born.”

Spiritual Practice

Jesus, the Peaceful One

We have spent this year with a guiding question: Are we moving closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One? As we near the end of this calendar year, we review how this question has been shaping and forming us. In our thoughts, words, and actions, have we been embodying Jesus, the Peaceful One? What might it look like to move closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One as we make space in our lives for Christ incarnate this Advent season?

Today’s Prayer for Peace

Engage in a daily practice of praying for peace in our world. Click here to read today’s prayer and be part of this practice of peace.

Click here to comment or read online.

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Daily Bread December 03

Share Your Story
Chantal M\xc3\xbcller-Mukamurera of Munich, Germany


The wilderness and the dry land shall be glad, the desert shall rejoice and blossom; like the crocus it shall blossom abundantly, and rejoice with joy and singing. Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf unstopped; then the lame shall leap like a deer, and the tongue of the speechless sing for joy. And the ransomed of the Lord shall return, and come to Zion with singing; everlasting joy shall be upon their heads; they shall obtain joy and gladness, and sorrow and sighing shall flee away. -Isaiah 35:1-2a, 5-6a, 10

This year everything seems to be slowing down to me. But still my life is not enough to do justice to all the people to whom my heart belongs. A scripture in the Book of Mormon says, “It is not necessary that people run faster than they have strength.”

The following quote is my wish not only now in Advent: “A true friend is the one who takes your hand but touches your heart” (Gabriel Jose Garc\xc3\xada M\xc3\xa1rquez). This Colombian writer and literature Nobel Prize winner is a great example to think about in this time of Advent. He was born in 1927. In his early life he was raised by his maternal grandparents. His grandmother told him traditional stories as if they were real. It sounded amazing to him, and they influenced how he would tell stories. Many of his stories were influenced by his hometown and those rich and sometimes fanciful stories told by his grandparents.

His grandfather told him about the events of war. When he was nine years old, his grandfather died and he returned to his parents. He studied law but was not happy. He started his career as a journalist. His childhood dream was to be a writer. His first book, Leaf Storm (La Hojarasca), was published in 1955. One Hundred Years of Solitude was published in 1967. The Nobel Prize in Literature was awarded to him in 1982 for his novels and short stories. For him, this award was for all Latin Americans because his country taught him all he wrote about.

So as Gabriel Jose Garc\xc3\xada M\xc3\xa1rquez reminds us: be a true friend and touch the heart of someone. In this special season it is important to focus on things money can’t buy. Share time, tell stories to children, listen to stories of elderly people who have so much experience and wisdom. All those acts will be held in the memory of your friends, and they will tell stories to future generations.

Build a community of love and start to tell your own story; each life matters, each story is important. “Go tell it on the mountains, over the hills and everywhere.” Be a welcoming congregation and help to be a place of healing and reconciliation.

Prayer Phrase

“Trust what is being born.”

Spiritual Practice

Jesus, the Peaceful One

We have spent this year with a guiding question: Are we moving closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One? As we near the end of this calendar year, we review how this question has been shaping and forming us. In our thoughts, words, and actions, have we been embodying Jesus, the Peaceful One? What might it look like to move closer to Jesus, the Peaceful One as we make space in our lives for Christ incarnate this Advent season?

Today’s Prayer for Peace

Engage in a daily practice of praying for peace in our world. Click here to read today’s prayer and be part of this practice of peace.

Click here to comment or read online.

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