Christmas Continued: Reversal, Refuge, and Revelation
The Christmas story doesn’t end with angels and manger scenes - it continues into fear, flight, and forced exile. When Joseph hears the words “escape to Egypt,” God overturns assumptions about safety, enemies, and where refuge can be found. This message from Robyn Elliott explores how Christmas is a story of reversal, vulnerability, and a God who meets us in the wilderness to make something new.
Discussion Questions:
1. What words or phrases make your own “blood run cold,” and why do you think they carry so much power over you?
2. Where in your life have you experienced disorientation, when what you believed about God or yourself was shaken?
3. Egypt represented trauma and fear for Joseph. What “Egypts” exist in your story - places or situations you’d never expect to find God?
4. Have you ever found safety, healing, or wisdom in a place or from people you once feared or rejected?
5. How does the idea that Jesus was safer among outsiders challenge your understanding of faith, belonging, or community?
6. When you’re in a wilderness season, do you tend to assume you’ve done something wrong, or can you imagine it as a place of new beginning?
7. In what ways do comfort and familiarity shape where you expect God to work?
8. How does this part of the Christmas story reshape what “peace” really means to you?
9. What might it look like for you to follow Jesus into vulnerability rather than control or security?
10. As we put Christmas back into boxes, what if the real question is whether Christmas has been packed into us? Will we keep choosing love over hate, conversation over confrontation, and relationship over retaliation when the season no longer reminds us?
