One of the main things that helps me keep a good perspective through December is reading a Christmas or Advent devotional book.
Some years I’ve followed reading plans for Scripture that specifically deal with the coming of Christ, including the prophecies of His birth. I don’t have one on hand, but I’m sure there are plenty online.
Most years, though, I read an Advent devotional book usually in addition to, sometimes instead of, my usual devotional time. So I thought I’d share some of the ones I’ve enjoyed with you. I’ll link the titles back to my reviews.
Heaven and Nature Sing: 25 Advent Reflections to Bring Joy to the World by Hannah Anderson is the newest I’ve read, just published last year. It’s also one of my favorites. Reading this book set me to reading many of Hannah’s other books this year. The title comes from a phrase in Isaac Watt’s “Joy to the World.” Hannah took inspiration from this phrase and wrote twenty-five Advent devotions based on various aspects of nature connected with the birth of Christ. Each devotion is about five pages long and written in an easily readable style.
Sample quote: “Yes, the manger signals something about this baby, but it is not simply his poverty. By being placed in the manger, he is revealed as both the rightful son of Adam charged with caring for his creation and also the eternal Son of God who created them and who provides for them. So instead of filling the manger with hay or corn, he fills it with himself.”
A Christmas Longing by Joni Eareckson Tada is a gorgeous book filled with her art work, drawn by mouth due to her paralysis. It’s made up of 31 readings for each day in December centered on the theme of joy.
Sample quote:”Lives hinge and eternal destinies hang in the balance when men and women come face to face with Jesus the Christ. It isn’t always peaceful. It isn’t always painless. It isn’t always easy. But bowing the knee to Jesus Christ is always right. No matter what.”
The Women of Christmas: Experience the Season Afresh with Elizabeth, Mary, and Anna by Liz Curtis Higgs. The eight chapters here are longer, around twenty pages or more. So it might not work as a devotional unless you divided the chapters up. But I thoroughly enjoyed this one. Liz did tons of research and study, but the book is warm rather than technical and stiff.
Sample quote: “When I hear women rail that the Bible is misogynistic, I wonder if we’re reading the same book. God loves women, redeems women, empowers women – then and now. On the day we call Christmas, he could simply have arrived on earth, yet he chose to enter through a virgin’s womb. On the day we call Easter, he could have appeared first to his beloved disciple John, yet he chose as his first witness a woman set free from seven demons.”
Gospel Meditations for Christmas by Chris Anderson, Joe Tyrpak, and Michael Barrett is divided into 31 pages, one a day through the month of December (or any time, really, since these truths are eternal). Each page lists a Bible passage to read and then delves into some facet of the passage for a handful of paragraphs. The primary focus of the book is various aspects of the Incarnation
Sample quote: “Matthew begins his account of the good news with a record of Jesus’ ancestry. This isn’t some boring list of personal details that Matthew came across in research and decided to include as space-filler. No, this genealogy is Matthew’s attention-grabbing introduction, and it’s jam-packed with significance.”
Expecting Christmas is a 40-day devotional by multiple authors. I wished this one was 25 or 31 days so it would fit neatly in December. I didn’t know any of the author names except one (Jennifer Dukes Lee). The selections are short, which is appreciated in a month like December. Each began with a verse or two of Scripture, a page and a half to two pages (at least in the Kindle version) of text, then three questions for refection.
The readings cover a variety of Christmas topics, though several deal with light.
Sample quote: “Mary’s response was one of quiet introspection as she treasured the good news of the gospel in her heart. The shepherds, on the other hand, left young Jesus, glorifying God and praising Him with outward enthusiasm and passion. People celebrate the gospel in different ways.”
Joy to the World: Daily Readings for Advent is made up of excerpts from C. H. Spurgeon’s Christmas sermons. I had read a few books like this with lengthier portions from his sermons (like Good Tidings of Great Joy: A Collection of Christmas Sermons), but they were a little too much for morning devotionals. This one, however, had daily readings of just two to three pages on an iPad mini Kindle app.
Sample quote: “The tabernacle of old was not full of truth, but full of image, and shadow, and symbol, and picture; but Christ is full of substance. He is not the picture, but the reality; he is not the shadow, but the substance. O believer, rejoice with joy unspeakable for you come to Christ, the real tabernacle of God.”
Finding Christ in Christmas: An Advent Devotional by From the Writings of A. W. Tozer has readings for December 1 – 25, ranging from just a paragraph to little more than a page. So the selections are easily readable. I felt the selections were a little haphazard, taken out of context, and some left the reader hanging a bit. But the book contained several great nuggets. Tozer’s writing is not warm and cozy, but it makes one think.
Sample quote: “The Law was given by Moses, but that was all that Moses could do. He could only ‘command’ righteousness. In contrast, only Jesus Christ produces righteousness. All that Moses could do was to forbid us to sin. In contrast, Jesus Christ came to save us from sin. Moses could not save anyone, but Jesus Christ is both Savior and Lord.”
From Heaven: A 28-Day Advent Devotional by A. W. Tozer is similar to the book above and overlaps it a bit, but has some different excerpts.
Sample quote: “Even though you may still be unconverted and going your own way, you have received much out of the ocean of His fullness. You have received the pulsing life that beats in your bosom. You have received the brilliant mind and brain within the protective covering of your skull. You have received a memory that strings the events you cherish and love as a jeweler strings pearls into a necklace and keeps them for you as long as you live and beyond. All that you have is out of His grace. Jesus Christ, the eternal Word, who became flesh and dwelt among us, is the open channel through which God moves to provide.”
Come Thou Long Expected Jesus:Experiencing the Peace and Promise of Christmas, compiled by Nancy Guthrie, is one I have enjoyed several times. It contains 22 selections on various aspects of Advent, from Mary to conception by the Holy Ghost to Joseph to the shepherds to Jesus’s humility and others, from such teachers and preachers as Charles Spurgeon, Augustine, Martyn Lloyd-Jones to Tim Keller, John MacArthur, J. I. Packer, and Ray Ortland. I don’t know all of the authors, so I wouldn’t endorse everyone 100%, but I don’t think I read anything in this particular volume that I had a problem with.
Sample quote from J. I. Packer: “The Christmas message is that there is hope for a ruined humanity–hope of pardon, hope of peace with God, hope of glory–because at the Father’s will Jesus Christ became poor and was born in a stable so that thirty years later he might hang on a cross. It is the most wonderful message that the world has ever heard, or will hear.”
Let Every Heart Prepare Him Room: Daily Family Devotions for Advent by Nancy Guthrie is another I’ve read several times. It designed for families to read together, but works well read by individuals, too. There are 31 readings, each ending with a prayer, some discussion questions, and a few more Scriptures on the topic of the chapter.
Sample quote: “Sometimes we are given a gift that we think is not really useful to us, and therefore we never take it out of the box. We stash it away in a closet or on a shelf somewhere in case we need it someday. Sadly, that’s what some people do in regard to Jesus. They want to keep him handy for when something comes along that they can’t handle on their own, but for now they have no interest in making him part of their day-to-day lives, and so they put him on the shelf. They simply don’t believe he is as good as the Bible says he is, and so they have no real or lasting joy in having received this great gift.”
Those are all the ones I can remember reading or find mention of on the blog.
Do you have any favorite Christmas or Advent devotionals? I’d love to hear your recommendations.
(I often link up with some of these bloggers.)











One of my new favorite devotionals is “Preparing Our Hearts: An Advent Devotional to Draw Closer to God at Christmas” by Jessica Brodie. 🙂 Have a blessed day!
Thanks for sharing! I’ve not heard of that one.
My friend Angela and I talk about her brand new Advent companion, Wonder in the Waiting – https://lindastoll.substack.com/p/the-bookbag-angela-and-i-chat-about
Thanks for sharing!
I don’t know that I’ve ever read a specifically Christmas devotional book! Thanks for these suggestions; if you enjoyed them I trust that opinion. I’m currently reading a new one Joni has coming out, Practicing the Presence of Jesus (not specifically Christmas). I would probably enjoy her Christmas one you mentioned.
I’ll have to look up that one from Joni! I’ve enjoyed everything I’ve read from her.
I only have read one of these and they all sound wonderful! I wish I had read this post the beginning of November as I see several I would love. This year I am working my way through “In the Manger” by Max Lucado.
Somehow I have not read anything by Max Lucado, except, I think, a children’s book when my boys were younger.
Barbara, my “wish list” on Amazon just increased by several books. I already have several Advent devotionals, but not the ones that you mentioned, with the exception of the one I am using this year…Heaven and Nature Sing by Hannah Anderson. Thank you for sharing a quote from each of these as well as sharing what each one holds.
I’d love to hear what other advent devotional you’ve enjoyed. I’m still wrestling with whether to reread one of these or something else. Some of the others I’ve looked at seem too academic or sermonic. Nothing wrong with that, but that’s not what I want in a devotional book, particularly a Christmas devotional book.
The one Carroll and I used last year was The Dawn of Redeeming Grace by Sinclair Ferguson. It’s daily devotions for Advent and each chapter is about 5 pages long. And we have also used Ann Vos Kamp’s The Greatest Gift several years. Looking ahead to Lent we have also really enjoyed To Seek and To Save…Daily Reflections on the Road to the Cross by Sinclair Ferguson. We really enjoy his writing.
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I only own one Advent devotional but I can’t remember the name of the author because it’s tucked away still with some other fave Christmas classics. One thing we made sure our girls heard through the first 5 days of December was the real St Nicholas story. We didn’t stress Santa Claus in our family although we have no problem displaying little santa tins or gnomes around the house. We didn’t lie to the girls and say santa brings the gifts; however, because my mom’s side is half Dutch/German we did teach them about the real St Nicholas and we did the tradition of st Nicholas day with their wooden shoes from Holland. We stopped doing this tradition once they graduated from college 🙂 although both girls have kept their wooden shoes. We stressed during Advent the gospels of Luke and Matthew. Currently my oldest daughter and I are doing an online study (since she no longer lives with us) on various Scriptures that are used in classic Christmas carols. That’s a good one. And I’m in an online group with church friends who are all doing one called Demystifying Christmas with various Scriptures about the start of Advent: waiting, gratitude, giving, etc. I would love to read the first one you listed. I’ll have to look for that!
I’ve been wrestling with whether to reread one of these this year or read something else. In looking for other ideas, I saw a few based on Christmas carols.
We felt the same about Santa Claus–we didn’t want to lie to the kids, but we treated him like any storybook character. How fun to have the real St. Nicholas in your heritage.
Well St Nicholas was actually Turkish which we are not, but the tradition of the shoes was passed down to the Netherlands area (what is the Netherlands today I mean) and sine my inlaws actually visited Holland they knew I was part Dutch so bought the girls the hand painted wooden shoes. It’s all fun. I never had my girls sit on Santa’s lap either because….well…..that just didn’t “sit” well with me (no pun intended) but we had no issues waving to him/her, etc. I think you’ve inspired me to dash over to our local Christian book store (our area only has 1!) and look for an Advent devotional. I’d like to own one that isn’t geared for children. hahah
What an amazing collection, Barbara! That Joni one sounds really good. Thanks for sample quotes.
A great line up Barbara, thank you for these recommendations.
Blessings, Jennifer
This is timely Barbara. I have been searching for an Advent devotional this year and was having trouble deciding which one to go with. I really appreciate these suggestions.
Thanks bunches for sharing this with Sweet Tea & Friends this month my friend.