I usually associate the word sacrifice with Easter, remembering Christ’s death on the cross for our sins. At Christmas I may think of giving in a financially sacrificial way to an individual, cause, or organization. However, reading the definitions of the word sacrifice changed my thinking this Christmas season.
To sacrifice may mean not only giving something up but also foregoing something valued for the sake of something else or permitting injury or destruction to. The holidays are a mixed blessing for me. I want to enjoy and appreciate all of the good things and yet I struggle with limitations such as being unable to do as much baking, socializing, or decorating as I would like, or eating all of the beautiful sweets that I love. But I can forego these pleasures and give these desires up as a gift to God.
I also pondered the fact that God the Father made a huge sacrifice of love for us that first Christmas. He willingly allowed Jesus to leave the splendor and majesty of His heavenly home to live in poverty and rejection. This sacrifice involved 33 years of separation and a life of pain and suffering for His Son, culminating in death on the cross. If Father and Son both gave so sacrificially for me that first Christmas, surely I can give up whatever desires I have this holiday season that will not be fulfilled.
God has allowed me, for whatever reasons, to have these physical trials. I can become angry, depressed, or frustrated this holiday season and feel sorry for myself, or I can choose to willing yield whatever I must for the sake of His perfect will, knowing that the celebrations in heaven will more than compensate for my disappointments here. And hopefully the gift of sacrificial praise that I give this Christmas will not be a one-time gift but an ongoing one, a small token of my thankfulness and love to Him who gave so much.
Prayer: Heavenly Father, I thank you for all Your wonderful blessings. I willingly choose to offer you my gift of sacrificial praise through this Christmas season.
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