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Context: Today is Christmas Day, and we are reading Job 19–20. It might not feel like a “typical” Christmas passage, but it delivers a Christmas-sized truth: hope is not a mood. Hope is a Person.
Job is worn down by loss, misunderstanding, and pain. The people who should have comforted him have become critics. And yet, in the middle of his darkness, Job speaks a line that shines through the centuries: “I know that my Redeemer lives.” Christmas answers that cry. We celebrate that God did not stay distant. He stepped into our world, into suffering, into the mess, and He came close.
That matters because Christmas is sometimes treated like it should fix everything emotionally, as if grief should take the day off. But the Bible tells the truth about the world: brokenness is real, and God’s response is deeper than quick fixes. Christmas is God showing up because things are broken. Job’s confidence is not that circumstances will improve on his timetable. Job’s confidence is that his Redeemer is alive, and that God will have the final word.
Then we hear from Zophar in Job 20. He speaks with certainty and formulas. He believes God is predictable, and that righteousness and suffering always line up neatly in the moment. But Christmas exposes the limits of that kind of thinking. God’s answer to suffering is not instant explanation. God’s answer is incarnation. Not a theory, not a lecture, not a spreadsheet. A Savior.
If you are carrying sorrow today, you do not have to pretend. You do not have to understand everything to say, “I know my Redeemer lives.” That is Christmas hope: not fragile, not shallow, but hope that refuses to die.
Be sure to check out the Lifespring! WhyChristmas show, and the latest Verses We Missed episode.
If this daily walk through Scripture helps you keep truth in view, and you’d like to support what I do here, that’s what Value for Value is all about. No pressure, just gratitude. Learn more at support.lifespringmedia.com.
Job, Redeemer, Jesus Christ, Christmas, Bethlehem, Herod the Great, Rome, Charles Wesley (mentioned in series context), Lifespring!, Steve Webb, Riverside California
Key takeaway: Job’s confession, “I know that my Redeemer lives,” aligns with Christmas as God’s answer to suffering through incarnation. Hope is anchored in a living Redeemer, not in changing circumstances.
By Steve Webb5
55 ratings
Context: Today is Christmas Day, and we are reading Job 19–20. It might not feel like a “typical” Christmas passage, but it delivers a Christmas-sized truth: hope is not a mood. Hope is a Person.
Job is worn down by loss, misunderstanding, and pain. The people who should have comforted him have become critics. And yet, in the middle of his darkness, Job speaks a line that shines through the centuries: “I know that my Redeemer lives.” Christmas answers that cry. We celebrate that God did not stay distant. He stepped into our world, into suffering, into the mess, and He came close.
That matters because Christmas is sometimes treated like it should fix everything emotionally, as if grief should take the day off. But the Bible tells the truth about the world: brokenness is real, and God’s response is deeper than quick fixes. Christmas is God showing up because things are broken. Job’s confidence is not that circumstances will improve on his timetable. Job’s confidence is that his Redeemer is alive, and that God will have the final word.
Then we hear from Zophar in Job 20. He speaks with certainty and formulas. He believes God is predictable, and that righteousness and suffering always line up neatly in the moment. But Christmas exposes the limits of that kind of thinking. God’s answer to suffering is not instant explanation. God’s answer is incarnation. Not a theory, not a lecture, not a spreadsheet. A Savior.
If you are carrying sorrow today, you do not have to pretend. You do not have to understand everything to say, “I know my Redeemer lives.” That is Christmas hope: not fragile, not shallow, but hope that refuses to die.
Be sure to check out the Lifespring! WhyChristmas show, and the latest Verses We Missed episode.
If this daily walk through Scripture helps you keep truth in view, and you’d like to support what I do here, that’s what Value for Value is all about. No pressure, just gratitude. Learn more at support.lifespringmedia.com.
Job, Redeemer, Jesus Christ, Christmas, Bethlehem, Herod the Great, Rome, Charles Wesley (mentioned in series context), Lifespring!, Steve Webb, Riverside California
Key takeaway: Job’s confession, “I know that my Redeemer lives,” aligns with Christmas as God’s answer to suffering through incarnation. Hope is anchored in a living Redeemer, not in changing circumstances.

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