A Christmas Prayer for Weary Expositors

The Expositor’s Life

A Christmas Prayer for Weary Expositors

Finding rest in the God who draws near.

Faithful Ministry
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By An Expositor

December takes more out of pastors than most will ever see. As the calendar fills and the needs of the flock intensify, the preacher may feel stretched, tired, and even a little frayed. Yet Christmas is not a season of pressure, but of grace, the God who comes near, not because we are strong, but because we are weak. This short prayer is offered for every weary expositor who longs for quietness of heart and renewed joy in Christ.

A Prayer for Weary Shepherds

Lord Jesus Christ,

We draw near to You at the end of another long year, thankful, yet tired. Our words have sometimes felt thin. Our strength has often been small. Our hearts, though Yours, have not always been warm. We confess that ministry has sometimes become a task to manage rather than a grace to receive.

And so we come to You, the One who took on flesh, who entered our weakness, who became like us in every way yet without sin. You know the weight we carry, the pressures we feel, the limits we cannot escape. You know the quiet battles, the hidden burdens, and the fatigue that settles in the soul.

“A bruised reed he will not break, and a faintly burning wick he will not quench.”

Lord, steady us again with this truth. You do not despise weakness. You meet us in it. You uphold us with Your strength. You gently restore what is worn and give rest to what is weary.

As we prepare to preach the wonder of Your birth, let the truth of the incarnation soften our hearts. Give us fresh amazement that You, the eternal Word, became a child in order to redeem us. Let this truth fall on us with weight and warmth.

Make our preaching simple, sincere, and full of Christ. Protect us from the pressures of the season, the expectations, comparisons, and fears that crowd out joy. Give us clarity when our minds feel full, and peace when our hearts feel scattered.

And as we shepherd Your people this month, let us remember that they, too, are weary. Help us speak with gentleness, lead with patience, and minister with compassion. Season our words with grace. Guard our tone. Make us instruments of Your comfort.

Lord Jesus, You are our rest. You are our peace. You are our joy. Lift our eyes from our limits to Your sufficiency. Renew us with the hope of the gospel we proclaim. And let this Christmas be marked not by our strength, but by Your mercy at work in fragile vessels.

In Your tender and mighty name,
Amen.

Simplicity In A Heavy Month

The Expositor’s Life

Simplicity in a Heavy Month

Learning to breathe again when December presses in on every side.

Faithful Ministry
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By An Expositor

December is not a gentle month for pastors. Expectations multiply, calendars swell, and emotions intensify. The very season that celebrates divine simplicity, the Word made flesh, often becomes the busiest, noisiest stretch of our year. In a heavy month, the gift we most need is simplicity.

The Hidden Weight of December

Church life in December pulls in every direction at once: special services, pastoral care, end-of-year pressures, family burdens, and the unspoken expectation to make Christmas “memorable” for everyone. Under all of this, the preacher must still prepare sermons, visit the sick, comfort the grieving, and shepherd those who quietly dread this time of year.

It is easy to feel stretched thin: Emotionally, spiritually, and physically. December exposes our limits. It reminds us that we are not as strong, not as organised, and not as tireless as we imagine ourselves to be. And perhaps that reminder is a mercy.

Sometimes the Lord uses the weight of a month to draw us again to the simplicity of Christ.

In seasons of excess pressure, simplicity does not reduce ministry, it purifies it. It clarifies what matters most.

The Simplicity of Christ in the Midst of Complexity

The incarnation is the divine embrace of simplicity. The eternal Son entered a world of noise, busyness, danger, and expectation, but did so in humility, quietness, and weakness. There were no crowds, no platforms, no pressure to perform. Only the steady, sovereign grace of God unfolding in obscurity.

We forget this easily. We imagine God works through our frantic energy. Yet His greatest work began in stillness. The incarnation is not only a doctrine to preach, it is a rhythm to recover.

When December becomes too heavy, we do not need to add more. We need to return to what is essential: Christ Himself. His gentleness steadies us. His sufficiency lifts the burden from our shoulders. His presence helps us breathe again.

Practices of Simplicity for the Heavy Month

1. Shorten your list

Not every good idea is a God-given requirement. Ask: “What has the Lord actually called me to this month?” Let the rest fall away.

2. Preach shorter, clearer sermons

December does not demand complexity. Your people need clarity, hope, and Christ, not an encyclopaedia of seasonal insight.

3. Guard quiet moments

Protect small pockets of silence. Even ten minutes of unhurried prayer can recalibrate a whole day.

4. Let others help

Delegation is not weakness, even Christ chose twelve to share His work. Let the body be the body.

5. Rest without guilt

Rest is obedience. Rest is worship. Rest is resistance to the lie that everything depends on you.

A Prayer for December

Lord, teach us simplicity in a heavy month. Calm our restless minds. Quiet our anxious hearts. Help us to find joy in the essential things, Your presence, Your Word, Your promises. Make our ministry this December gentle, clear, and full of Christ. Let the simplicity of the incarnation steady us again.

Holy Awe

The Expositor’s Life

Holy Awe

Why the preacher must guard a trembling joy before the God who speaks.

Faithful Ministry
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By An Expositor

The closer we draw to Advent, the louder the world becomes. Yet for the expositor, these weeks invite not frenzy but awe—a renewed trembling before the wonder of the God who took on flesh. Preachers need more than clever outlines and polished delivery. We need holy awe.

The Quiet Disappearing of Awe

Ministry can make us efficient but empty. The relentless pace of preaching, pastoral care, administration, and spiritual burdens can slowly diminish our sense of wonder. We grow accustomed to holy things. Familiarity becomes a kind of dullness.

There is a danger here. When awe evaporates, preaching becomes mechanical. The pulpit becomes a place we perform rather than a place where we tremble. We handle the Bible with professional confidence instead of reverent joy. The loss is not only ours; it is our congregation’s as well.

The people of God are helped most by preachers who have first been humbled, stilled, and astonished before the face of God.

We cannot manufacture awe. But we can neglect it. And neglect is often the first step toward spiritual dryness.

The God Who Inspires Awe

Advent reminds us that the God of majesty descended into frailty. The eternal Word became flesh. Angels rejoiced; shepherds trembled; Mary pondered. The world did not receive a theory or a theme but a Person. The incarnation is the great rebuke to every preacher who has grown casual with holy things.

This season confronts us with the staggering truth that the One who spoke galaxies into being became a child upheld by a young mother. The holy God drew near—not as we might expect, but in humility, weakness, and mercy. If anything can restore awe, it is this.

True awe is rooted not in emotional surges but in beholding God as He reveals Himself. Awe is the fruit of revelation. It grows where the Word is opened, pondered, and believed.

Awe in the Life of the Expositor

Awe changes us. It slows us down. It steadies us. It rescues us from the restless ambition that quietly fuels so much ministry. Awe takes our eyes off ourselves—our abilities, our weaknesses, our comparisons—and fixes them on the glory of Christ.

When a preacher recovers awe:

  • His sermons gain weight—not heaviness, but gravity.
  • His tone gains warmth—truth spoken with adoration is different from truth spoken with mere accuracy.
  • His heart gains peace—because awe draws him nearer to the One who holds all things together.

Awe does not make us theatrical. It makes us genuine. People can sense the difference.

Practices That Cultivate Awe

1. Slow Down Before the Word

Read until something arrests you. Sit with the text until you feel its weight. Do not rush to outlines or commentaries.

2. Pray Beyond Utility

Ask not simply for a sermon but for a sight of Christ. Awe rises when prayer deepens beyond requests into worship.

3. Confess Cynicism

Weariness breeds unbelief. Name it before the Lord. Awe grows where honesty opens space for grace.

4. Embrace Silence

Quiet is not a luxury but a necessity. Awe cannot survive constant noise. Resist the urge to fill every moment with motion.

A Prayer for Holy Awe

Lord, restore in us a trembling joy before You. Rescue us from the dullness that comes with familiarity. Let Your Word arrest us, humble us, soften us, and renew us. Make us preachers who tremble at Your Word, who proclaim Christ with sincerity, and who shepherd Your people with reverent compassion. Give us holy awe as we enter this Advent season.