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It's Day 2 of our ADHD-friendly Advent study, and you are NOT behind if you missed Day 1 - no one is ever behind here. This series is designed by an ADHDer for women with ADHD and anyone walking through a season of waiting, uncertainty, or refining fire while clinging to the hope of Jesus.
Today we're in Luke 1:1-7, looking at Elizabeth's story, barrenness, and what it means to carry a heavy, hidden burden while still living righteously before God. We talk about infertility, unanswered longings, the social weight of being childless in biblical times, and what it looks like to trust God when provision feels delayed or completely different from what you expected.
This week's song is "O Come, O Come, Emmanuel" (I especially love the version by Josh Garrels but Skillet's new version is PHEMONEMAL). Pause this video, go listen to the song, and then come back to sit with Scripture, reflect, and let God meet you in the tension of sorrow and hope.
Download your FREE ADHD-friendly Advent workbook here: https://go.rachelgrit.com/social
It's designed to be low-pressure and flexible, with:
- A guided daily passage
- A simple prayer to invite God in and ask for fresh eyes
- Journaling prompts (like today's question: do you feel like God is holding back or silent right now in an area of your life?)
- A suggested schedule that you can follow or completely ignore - no guilt either way
If you're in a season of job loss, uncertainty, or ongoing refining, you are in the right place. This is a space for honest wrestling, real life, and anchoring to the hope of Jesus in the middle of it all—not after everything is tied up in a bow.
If this encouraged you:
- Download the free workbook: https://go.rachelgrit.com/social
- Hit follow/subscribe so you don't miss the daily Advent videos
- Share this with a friend who needs hope this Advent
- If you'd like to support this free study, you can "buy me a coffee" via the link in my bio
Social Media Links:
Instagram: @rachelgrit
TikTok: @rachel.grit
Pinterest: @rachgrit
YouTube: @rachelgrit
By Rachel GritIt's Day 2 of our ADHD-friendly Advent study, and you are NOT behind if you missed Day 1 - no one is ever behind here. This series is designed by an ADHDer for women with ADHD and anyone walking through a season of waiting, uncertainty, or refining fire while clinging to the hope of Jesus.
Today we're in Luke 1:1-7, looking at Elizabeth's story, barrenness, and what it means to carry a heavy, hidden burden while still living righteously before God. We talk about infertility, unanswered longings, the social weight of being childless in biblical times, and what it looks like to trust God when provision feels delayed or completely different from what you expected.
This week's song is "O Come, O Come, Emmanuel" (I especially love the version by Josh Garrels but Skillet's new version is PHEMONEMAL). Pause this video, go listen to the song, and then come back to sit with Scripture, reflect, and let God meet you in the tension of sorrow and hope.
Download your FREE ADHD-friendly Advent workbook here: https://go.rachelgrit.com/social
It's designed to be low-pressure and flexible, with:
- A guided daily passage
- A simple prayer to invite God in and ask for fresh eyes
- Journaling prompts (like today's question: do you feel like God is holding back or silent right now in an area of your life?)
- A suggested schedule that you can follow or completely ignore - no guilt either way
If you're in a season of job loss, uncertainty, or ongoing refining, you are in the right place. This is a space for honest wrestling, real life, and anchoring to the hope of Jesus in the middle of it all—not after everything is tied up in a bow.
If this encouraged you:
- Download the free workbook: https://go.rachelgrit.com/social
- Hit follow/subscribe so you don't miss the daily Advent videos
- Share this with a friend who needs hope this Advent
- If you'd like to support this free study, you can "buy me a coffee" via the link in my bio
Social Media Links:
Instagram: @rachelgrit
TikTok: @rachel.grit
Pinterest: @rachgrit
YouTube: @rachelgrit