Christmas 2023

Most pastors who’ve been at it for 20+ years find a stocking full of challenge when it comes to telling the same story every Christmas. We seek the Lord and ask — with yule log passion — what fresh word do your people need to hear this year (that I haven’t already said)? Don’t get me wrong: the story of God’s salvation, from the wretched fall of humanity, making us all grinches (Romans 3:23) to the promise of new life in Christ (1 Corinthians 5:17) is a powerful story that we need to hear again and again. All humans ache for renewal, and the Christmas story, told in tandem with the story of Christ’s life, death, and resurrection, brings us to new life if we want it.It is the Holy Spirt who makes the story fresh in our hearts as He stirs the slushy waters of our cold souls which, over time, are littered with the gross grey snow that clutters every every road until mid-March.

We’ve all imagined taking a flamethrower to our driveways to conquer the permafrost, wondering if our local government issues a permit for that kind of pyrotechnic weapon. God is a consuming fire (Hebrews 12:29) that melts snow, ice, and refines us so that yes, our small hearts change and grow three sizes that day (Seuss 7:41).

I’m glad to say that our family finds itself in a time of renewal and healing — the kind that can only come from the glorious effect of God incarnate in Jesus. As I look back to Christmas 2020 and think about the disaster that the 7 of us faced, though not knowing each other then as we do now, I can say again that God is doing a new thing. There’s more joy than a moose-mug full of Grizwold eggnog in our home, and that’s because God is God and God is good. All glory to Him, this Christmas and always.

We hope that this season finds you well. Not just “well” as in “we hope it was a pretty good year”, but that you know the love of God and are in a place where you, too, can experience newness of life, the bombardment of Light in overwhelming darkness. If you don’t have the evidence of that yet, hold on to your faith, keep your eyes on Jesus, and trust that God is always working to do good things, even in the impossible.

What you see in our family photos is a husband and wife who love each other and love Jesus most. You see 5 kids who will all have, legally speaking, a mom and a dad. Of course, the pictures can only tell part of the story. The bigger story is one that includes you, too, our family and friends, who have been a blessing to us. We pray that you are encouraged, strengthened, and richly blessed this Christmas and in the coming year. May you find peace in Christ — appearing as a shining little light in a manger that cannot contain the Majesty of the Holy, who chose the path of humility and meekness to redeem us.

Merry Christmas, dear family and friends. We love you!

Adam, Brittany, Mac, Carter, Zac, and Cam.

PS: Lexi wants nothing to do with trotting out to the woods to take pictures, but she’s a big part of our hearts and home, too. She’s still smiling and hugging joy into anybody who needs it, and we love her!

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A Two-Headed Day

Yesterday was a two-headed day. On one hand (head), we’ve got young Zac’s 15th birthday. On the other, the 3 year mark of Shawn’s passing, my wife’s husband and the father of two of my kids.

As far as family function goes, its a study in contrast. It means that 3 years ago, on Zac’s 12th birthday, we (my 3 kids and I) were celebrating as Zac blew out candles and opened presents that I tried really hard not to wrap in Christmas paper. All of us were oblivious to what the day would mean then, nor what it means now.

As he desired, Zac and his friends traveled downtown by limo to enjoy a fancy meal at a swanky restaurant where the menu prices don’t have decimals. That was the day before his birthday. He woke up the next morning and didn’t go to school, another part of his gift — truancy. For his birthday, he got a classic Beach Boys vinyl album (I’m raising them analog) that he’s wanted for a long time, which Brittany found online in her own style, a way that makes everything complex look unreasonably easy, the same way she “whipped up a peanut butter pie — it’ll only take 5 minutes” and served it in graham cracker crust with protruding candles. We sang. He’s only 15 but he’s the size I was at age 21, so I count this as the last birthday where he’s not towering over me in a way that brings me 99% pride and 1% intimidation.

Hours later that evening, Shawn’s son Carter and I went out and drove the back roads of Ottawa County. It was all about time together with his adoptive dad. Talk, music, seeing if the truck can peel out, and the like. Unstructured. Memories. 3 years — a lifetime ago, yet yesterday. So much life has been crammed into the last 1,096 or so days. He and I talked about what it’s like to lose a parent, as my mom passed almost 13 years ago and yes, I think about her every day. You’re never quite the same, but you press on, unaware of the capabilities one has to do what you were convinced was impossible at the time. All of this, we discussed, is by God’s grace. I see God answering prayers in my son Carter’s life, and I stand in awe. There’s less anger with God, more thankfulness for what he’s got now in spite of the circumstances.

Cam and I talked about Daddy Shawn, a concept that he both grasps and gets confounded by. I have two sons that have experienced loss and trauma. They mix in nicely with my three other kids who have experienced the same popsicle, just of a different flavor. I imagine that Cam and I will talk about these things for the rest of our days together, just as with Carter. I’ll regularly remind them of the love and support that their Dad Shawn had for them, and that I am no replacement. Yet, I take my role as dad seriously. It’s a calling, a project, a position and ministry in life that displays God’s trust in getting us involved in the healing process, while pushing us to desperation that would not otherwise be there.

Brittany and I consider ourselves to be on a rescue operation, being their other parent who, as far as we can control it, will simply be here, loving our kids, some of which are ours and some who aren’t, but all of whom are our kids.

By God’s grace, we do this together and with tons of love and lots of grit and the occasional sparky frustration — whether it’s remembering a world-crushing loss or celebrating a fantastic kid’s birthday.

Even on days when we’re doing both at the same time.

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[RadCast] Advent: Cloth (Luke 2 & 23)

The gospels mention Jesus being wrapped in cloths two times… remember both times as you gather ’round the manger this Christmas…

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[RadCast] Advent: Don’t Be Afraid (Matthew 2:19-21)

It’s frustrating that God doesn’t defend himself by answering for every fear we have. I’m afraid of x, y, z… and God simply says
1) Don’t be afraid, for I am with you
2) There’s a bigger story unfolding and you’re in it
3) Salvation is here

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[RadCast] Advent: Just Say No (Titus 2:11-14)

Waiting for second Advent is made more difficult by the fact that we have all kinds of “outs” to temporarily numb the brokenness of the world and our own souls.
I know Christmas is a tough time for some of us. All kinds of good and bad, trauma and healing, joys and sorrows, are wrapped together. So we cope — sometimes in good ways, sometimes not.
God calls us to live a certain way and gives us power to do so. I’m glad for that, and I’m glad for you.

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[RadCast] Advent: Rescue from Fragments (Colossians 3)

Do we lose our nature as image bearers of God? No, but we sure look different… until the new creation of Christ happens.

We’re waiting for Jesus Messiah, the one who will come and rescue us from the fragments, including our own fragmented self. Until then, we’re all works in progress.

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[RadCast] Advent: You’d Better Watch Out (Luke 1:28b-29)

If you ever pray “Lord, just be with me today…” you’d better be real careful, because if He answers that prayer, even with the same nonchalance that you and I say it, stuff’s gonna happen.

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[RadCast] Advent: Breakthrough via the Peculiar


John the Baptist, a somewhat peculiar man who is for us a voice of Advent. models self-sacrifice and obedience to God’s plan. We need to do the same.And/Or
Is there a John the Baptist type person in your life that kind of annoys you and yet… they’re speaking Truth?

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[RadCast] Advent: Waiting and Working (Titus 2)


I’m waiting for Christ’s return and I don’t like my job.
I’m supposed to have joy but my life is monotonous.
I’m supposed to have hope but it feels like I’m stuck in this broken mess.
What are we supposed to do besides… stand around and wait? Are we supposed to be joyless and hopeless?

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[RadCast] Advent: Praying to a Friend (John 15)

E.M. Bounds writes that “the main object of [Jesus] choosing us as his disciples and of friendship for him was that we might be better fitted to bear the fruit of prayer.”
In other words, the power of prayer shouldn’t be wielded unless we know what we’re dealing with, and we can’t know what we’re dealing with unless we know *who* we’re dealing with — as a friend.
Your thoughts?

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