CT Daily Briefing – 12-24-2024

December 19, 2024
CT Daily Briefing

Today’s Briefing

Beyond Christ’s birth, the Incarnation brings the renewal of all creation.

In the midst of Nazi resistance, Bonhoeffer compared Advent waiting to a prison cell.

A devotional reading for Christmas Eve: The shepherds glimpse the glory of the Good Shepherd.


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In Other News


SPONSORED CONTENT FOR MORE PRODUCTIONS

In affirmation of its artistic excellence and spiritual storytelling, The 21 has been named to the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences shortlist for Best Animated Short Film. The…


Today in Christian History

December 24, 1223: Francis of Assisi stages history’s first living nativity scene, complete with live animals, in a cave near Greccio, Italy (see issue 42: Francis of Assisi).


in case you missed it

IF YOU’VE EVER HAD the enjoyable (and chaotic) experience of being involved in a children’s Christmas play, you probably remember the scene at the inn. Perhaps you…

To see how much we really want to peer into the mystery of the Incarnation, go to a Christmas pageant and note whether there’s a plastic doll in the manger…

For liturgy-loving Christians, Advent is a season of anticipation, marked by a posture of hopeful and expectant waiting. But for many evangelicals, it may pass by almost unnoticed and unobserved,…

Here’s a holiday tradition we should abandon: Well, actually-ing Nativity scenes in Christmas art and song. It’s true that baby Jesus wasn’t surrounded by a petting zoo, that Mary didn’t…


in the magazine

As this issue hits your mailboxes after the US election and as you prepare for the holidays, it can be easy to feel lost in darkness. In this issue, you’ll read of the piercing light of Christ that illuminates the darkness of drug addiction at home and abroad, as Angela Fulton in Vietnam and Maria Baer in Portland report about Christian rehab centers. Also, Carrie McKean explores the complicated path of estrangement and Brad East explains the doctrine of providence. Elissa Yukiko Weichbrodt shows us how art surprises, delights, and retools our imagination for the Incarnation, while Jeremy Treat reminds us of an ancient African bishop’s teachings about Immanuel. Finally, may you be surprised by the nearness of the “Winter Child,” whom poet Malcolm Guite guides us enticingly toward. Happy Advent and Merry Christmas.

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