Preparing Room for the Hope That’s Coming
Making gentle space in our hearts as we move toward His arrival
There’s something quiet that happens in the middle of December.
Something that settles into the heart when you’re not trying to make it happen. For me, it usually shows up in little pockets of the day: early morning before the house wakes up, standing in line at the store, or even while I’m driving down a familiar road.
It’s the awareness that Christmas is coming—not just the holiday, but the reminder of who is coming. And I feel this gentle nudge inside:
“Make room. Slow down. Prepare your heart for the One who’s drawing near.”
Not in a pressured way. Not in a “fix yourself before Jesus arrives” kind of way. Just an invitation. A soft clearing of space so hope has somewhere to land.
This year, that invitation feels especially meaningful. Maybe because life feels full, or maybe because I’m noticing more and more how easy it is to move through the day without stopping long enough to breathe. But the deeper I get into December, the more I sense that preparing room for Christ isn’t about doing more—it’s about opening the small places in my everyday life where He already wants to meet me.
Hope Moves Toward Us Before We Move Toward It
One thing I know as I walk in my faith is that preparation is less about effort and more about awareness. When the Bible talks about Jesus’ birth, so much of what happens is quiet. Simple. Unexpected.
A small town.
A manger.
A handful of people paying attention.
Nothing flashy. Nothing that would’ve made headlines. But God was moving, and hope was already in motion long before anyone realized it.
And that’s still true today.
Isaiah 9:6 reminds us:
“For to us a child is born, to us a son is given…”
To us.
Not because we were ready, but because we needed Him.
Hope didn’t wait for a perfect moment.
Hope stepped into an imperfect world, right where people were already busy, already burdened, already unsure.
So preparing room for Jesus isn’t about trying to feel spiritual. It’s about noticing—really noticing—the ways He’s already drawing near.
Real Life Doesn’t Pause for Advent, So We Prepare in the Middle of It
A few mornings ago, I was grabbing something at the grocery store. There was a line forming, people shifting from foot to foot, holiday displays everywhere. I wasn’t thinking deep spiritual thoughts—I was just trying to get through my list and move on with my day. But then this older gentleman in front of me turned around, smiled, and said, “You go ahead—these lines always take longer than I think.”
It was such a small thing, but it softened something in me.
A moment of kindness.
A moment where the pace slowed just enough for me to feel steady again.
On the drive home, I realized: that’s the kind of moment where Christ draws near. Not in the perfect quiet, not in the curated “holy moments,” but in the real places where life hums along and our hearts are simply open enough to notice.
Preparing room for Him isn’t about isolating ourselves from the world. It’s about letting the world’s ordinary rhythms become the place where hope can settle.
Making Space Begins With Small Shifts
I used to think preparing room for Jesus meant adding more—more devotions, more reading, more structured quiet time. But what’s helping me now is something much simpler: shifting where I’m already standing.
Here are a few gentle, practical ways I’m learning to prepare room without over-complicating it:
1. Letting one moment be unhurried
Not an hour. Not a full morning.
Just one moment where I pause long enough to say, “Lord, I know You’re here.”
Sometimes it’s while the coffee is brewing.
Sometimes it’s sitting in my car before I walk into work.
Sometimes it’s a slow breath at the end of the day.
It’s amazing how quickly peace finds you when you give it just one open space.
2. Paying attention to what softens my heart
A line of Scripture.
A kind word from a stranger.
A simple act of generosity—from me or toward me.
These things shift something inside. And I’m starting to see them as God’s way of preparing room without me even realizing it.
3. Choosing one thing to put down
Not everything. Just one.
Maybe it’s overthinking.
Maybe it’s the habit of checking my phone first thing in the morning.
Maybe it’s the internal pressure to hold everything together.
Putting down one small thing creates just enough breathing room for Jesus to settle in.
4. Making space for quiet—even if it’s only a few minutes
Not silence for the sake of silence, but quiet that lets the heart breathe. Sometimes the smallest quiet moments become the most sacred ones.
Christ Comes Close to the Places We Make Available
One of the most comforting parts of the Christmas story is how Jesus chose to enter the world: not in a palace, not in a temple, not in a picture-perfect setting—but in a manger, in a place no one expected, surrounded by people who didn’t have much to offer but themselves.
That tells me something important:
Jesus is glad to enter the places we make available, even if they don’t look impressive.
A heart that’s tired?
He’ll meet you there.
A mind that’s overwhelmed?
He’ll meet you there.
A life that feels a little too full?
He’ll meet you there.
The point of preparing room isn’t to have a flawless spiritual life. It’s simply to have enough openness to recognize Him when He arrives.
And He always arrives.
A Thought That Keeps Coming Back to Me This December
Over the past couple of weeks, something keeps settling quietly on my heart. Not a loud realization or some dramatic moment—just a steady awareness that rises in the middle of my day and makes me pause.
This December feels different. Not because life suddenly became easier, and not because everything feels perfectly lined up. It’s more that I’m noticing things I might have hurried past in years before. I’m paying attention to the small nudges, the gentle reminders, the little shifts in my spirit that whisper, “Slow down… He’s close.”
Hope doesn’t always walk in with fanfare. Sometimes it grows in the unnoticed places—those tiny, almost hidden moments where your heart softens just enough to recognize God reaching toward you.
And the more aware I become, the more I realize:
Hope doesn’t just arrive on Christmas morning. It gathers as we move toward Him, one small open space at a time.
Where could you open just a little more space today for Christ to draw near?
With gratitude and faith,
Patti



Yes, this message is so beautiful written. It sincerely touched my soul. I feel everything that was mentioned in this message.
God is preparing me to walk humbly and quiet into the upcoming New Year and the years ahead...🙏
This really inspired me:
" Faith is that preparation is less about effort and more about awareness." - I can relate to this 😇
" It's amazing how quickly peace finds you when you give it just one open space." This is a true story for me as well." Thank you!💕
May God continue to bless you richly.🙏
Yolanda 💜
Beautiful just beautiful. Thank you for your reminder 🙏😎💃