Advent 2021:

Come and Worship

A Free Online Advent Calendar and Devotional Journey

Advent is more than a countdown to Christmas Day. It’s a season to prepare our hearts to celebrate the incarnation of our Savior, Jesus Christ. Thankfully, this kind of preparation doesn’t require a lot of time, tinsel, ingredients, or wrappings. The only thing needed is to come and worship.

May these Advent devotions be your daily opportunity to respond to that invitation. Visit the calendar below for new devotionals each day or subscribe to receive them directly in your inbox, along with some fun surprises and free downloadables along the way!

December 13
Laugh!

*Scroll down for free printable Christmas art!*

Excerpted from The Greatest Gift, by Ann Voskamp

It happens just at the time God knew it would and should. You hear it in the middle of Advent, a whole string of notes that just come along and untie you: “Fa-la-la-la-la, la, la, la, la.”

Notes like an echo of laughter.

Like children throwing back their heads and letting laughter, this oxygenated grace, cascade and cascade.

Like an old woman who cradles the unexpected, who cradles grace, who looks into the impossible mad possible and laughs with the miraculous because that is what the relieved and re-livers do: “God has brought me laughter.” You can almost see it—her wrinkles and weariness waning away, her lips cradling this smile.

God brings the weary woman laughter. Laughter is His gift—oxygenated grace.

“Joy, which was the small publicity of the pagan, is the gigantic secret of the Christian,” writes G. K. Chesterton.7

The gigantic secret gift that He gives and we unwrap, that we never stop unwrapping—we who were barren now graced with the Child who lets us laugh with relief for all eternity. There is nothing left to want. There is nothing left to fear: “All fear is but the notion that God’s love ends.”8 And His for you never will. So loosen up, because the chains have been loosed, and laugh the laughter of the freed.

Laughter—it’s all oxygenated grace.

In the press of a dark world, laughter comes to the Sarahs and the sufferers and the stressed as the reliever and then the reminder—that ache is not the last word for those who believe God. Jesus is. Jesus is the last word, and we rejoice and rejoice again and re-joy again because grace is our oxygen now.

“Angels can fly because they take themselves lightly,” writes G. K. Chesterton.9

And somewhere a weary soul lets go of weight. And laughs thanks for the grace and takes more lightly—and it’s like the sound of wings.

Like somewhere between heaven and earth, there is mirth—the echo of angels.

Unwrapping More of His Love in the World

Try keeping a smile on your face all day. Look for three opportunities today to make three different people laugh with you. We are the joy-filled people! We’ve been given the Son!

You have as much laughter as you have faith. —Martin Luther


7. G. K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy (New York: Simon & Brown, 2012), 163.

8. Voskamp, One Thousand Gifts, 161.

9. Chesterton, Orthodoxy, 121.

Enjoy this vintage-inspired artwork from A Christmas Carol: An Engaging Visual Journey. Right-click on the image below to download, or click here to download from a new tab.

The Greatest Gift

Unwrapping the Full Love Story of Christmas

by Ann Voskamp