First United Methodist Church

Service Times

9am Contemporary | 11am Traditional

Advent Devotion: Good News of Great Joy

Good News of Great Joy | Rev. Philip Allred

The angels announce it plainly in the Christmas story: “I am bringing you good news of great joy for all people.” Not a command. Not a task. Not something to achieve or manufacture. Joy arrives as good news, a gift given before anyone asks for it, earns it, or even knows what to do with it.

So often we treat joy like a responsibility. We assume we have to feel it, create it, or prove it. But Advent reminds us that joy comes to us the same way Christ does. Unexpected, unearned, and beyond our control. The gospel is not advice about what we must do, it is news about what God has already done. Joy flows from that reality. It is rooted in the truth that God has come near, that love has taken on flesh, and that the world is being healed from the inside out.

We cling to control, especially in anxious seasons. We prefer producing to receiving because producing gives us a sense of power. Receiving requires surrender. And that is what makes joy difficult for many of us. Joy asks us to loosen our grip, to stop striving, and to trust that God’s gift is enough. Grace changes us precisely because we cannot control it. It meets us where we are and transforms us from the inside.

This Advent, you do not have to create joy. You do not have to feel joy on demand. You do not have to prove joy with a smile or a song. You are simply invited to receive it. Let the good news of great joy penetrate your heart. Let it interrupt your fear, soften your resistance, and reshape your life. The beauty of Christ coming to save us is that it means we could not do it on our own.

Joy has come.
The gift has been given.
The question is…

Will you receive it?

Advent Devotion: See Love, Choose Love

This past week, I have felt love all around me. Our theme from Sunday tells us that God loved us enough to send his one and only Son to be our Savior, our Lord, our Friend. And that gift came from a place of love; not anger or disappointment.

Over this last busy week, I have watched LOVE show her face in places big and small. I have watched my children forgive each other and show kindness. I have watched the love of three daughters and a wife who grieve the loss of a loved one be swept up in the love of this church and community. I have watched love shared through the talents of music and worship during an incredible Festival Gloria Sunday. The pastors shared God’s love with our young friends at MSEE through Chapel as we told the story of the birth of Jesus. I have felt the love of my parents who help care for my children during an afternoon of church meetings and then I ended the week learning more about the love of unexpected blessings at Residing Hope and the youth whose lives are transformed there.

Love has been in most places that I have taken the time to look for it in. And isn’t that the story of the Gospel?! When you seek, you will find. God is there, sharing, showing and spreading love in the most unexpected ways. So let us pause with this truth for a moment longer, because the busyness of this holiday season moves us along too quickly. I invite you to sit with this and don’t move past this, because so much in us asks us to move faster and forward to the next big time. But what if love is best felt in the small, mundane moments where grief, or anger or busyness reside? What if we are missing out on love because we are afraid to wade into the uncomfortable moments during this season? What if that is where love is hiding all along? If it is, how are you actively looking for the love in the midst of sadness or shame? How are you tuning your ears to hear the embrace of the Spirit in the times that we aren’t at our best or we have let someone down?

On Tuesday, I spent the day at Residing Hope, formally known as the Florida United Methodist Children’s Home. I have served on their Board since I was pregnant with Charlie, and will therefore be starting my 8th year this Summer. I continue to serve this organization because I see God show up in the most unexpected ways and transform lives again and again. During our Ministry Moment, our Chaplain introduced us to a young girl who had a message to share. All of the youth at Residing Hope had entered a T-shirt designing contest and this young girl, who had at that time only lived at Residing Hope three weeks, decided to design a T-shirt and enter the contest. This young girl ended up winning the contest and designed the shirt that I am wearing in this picture. It says, “Say No to Hate, and Yes to Love” on the front. On the back she wrote, “You are unique and special in your own way because that’s how God made you so be proud of that.”  What an important reminder in today’s world. This simple message acknowledges that there is both Love and Hate, but that we get to choose what we fuel, what we spend energy on and what we will to be known by.

Love takes more work, I can promise you that. But it is where God shows up and where transformation takes place. Sometimes we need to slow down to see it. Other times we have to focus our eyes and our ears to speak it and share it, but through the gift of Jesus, who showed up in an unexpected way, we have the ability to say YES to love each and every time.

May the God of grace help you see LOVE and choose LOVE today.

Advent Devotion: Where I See Hope

Where I See Hope  |  Rev Philip Allred
Revelation 21

Advent invites us to watch for hope in a world that is often weary. It reminds us that God is still writing the story, that light keeps breaking through the darkness, and that Christ comes to make all things new. This is why Revelation 21 is such a beautiful Advent passage. It is not about escape. It is about promise, presence, and renewal.

Pastor David preached on this passage on Sunday, so I want to remind us that God’s future is not something we wait for passively. It is a future already breaking into the present, a future we are invited to see and embody. John’s vision shows us the world as God intends it to be. A world where God dwells with humanity. A world where God wipes every tear from every eye. A world where death, mourning, crying, and pain are no more.

In this season, I find hope because God has already begun this work in Christ. Jesus comes among us as Emmanuel, God with us, not to abandon creation but to renew it. The Advent story is the beginning of Revelation’s promise. The same God who draws close in Bethlehem will one day bring all creation to wholeness.

Which leads to the question: where do we see signs of this hope now? Sometimes hope comes quietly, like a candle in the dark. Other times it looks like people choosing compassion instead of fear, welcome instead of suspicion, presence instead of distance. Hope becomes visible whenever we participate in God’s renewing work, even in small but meaningful ways.

This year, our church has a chance to embody that hope for refugee families in our community. Many of these families have lost homes, countries, and loved ones. Some have carried deep grief and uncertainty into a new life in Central Florida. Yet we believe that God’s promise in Revelation 21 is for all.

A Christmas party may seem simple, but for these families, it can be a glimpse of joy. A reminder that they are not alone. A sign that there are people who will stand with them and celebrate with them. When we offer food, laughter, a safe place for children to play, and a community of welcome, we take part in God’s renewal work. We help wipe away tears, even if only for an afternoon. We give them a moment of belonging. And we ourselves are shaped by the hope we give.

As we wait for Christ to come again, we step into the promise that God is making all things new. And we look for hope right where we are, trusting that God is already present, already healing, already drawing creation toward its restoration.

If you want a tangible way to live this out, here is an opportunity to do just that.


Refugee Ministry Christmas Party
In partnership with Summit Church and Africans Family and Community Outreach. Come help with a Christmas party for refugee families. Volunteers will help manage activities like a bounce house and face painting, serve food, or assist with set-up and clean up. This opportunity is for adults 18 and older.

Leader: Clay Mitchell
Location: Summit Church, 735 Herndon Ave, Orlando, FL
Date and Time: December 20, 11am to 3pm

May we see hope in the Word who became flesh, and may we become hope for those God places in our path.