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2025 Christmas Christmas Calendar English Jul Julekalender

Christmas Calendar Story – Day 24: The Best Gift Is Giving of Yourself

Christmas Eve morning came at last. Snow lay thick on the ground, and the world outside felt hushed, as if waiting. Inside the houses of 7B, the day began with the same sentence written on everyone’s calendar sheet: “Mission #24 – The best gift is giving of yourself.”

For the first time, there was no task to do — only one to understand.
At Emma’s breakfast table, her family lit the Advent candles and took a few minutes to talk about what they’d learned through the project. “I think helping others made the month go faster,” Emma said. Her father nodded. “Strange how giving slows the stress down, doesn’t it?”

Jonas wrote one last note and placed it under the tree: “I’m thankful for everyone who stayed patient with me this year.” Ida spent a quiet moment by the window, whispering a small prayer for her family and for peace in the world. In every home, the reflections looked different, but the feeling was the same — calm, gratitude, light.

When evening came and bells rang across the valley, each of them understood what Ms. Larsen had meant from the start: that Christmas isn’t found in wrapping paper or lights, but in the time, kindness, and care we share with others.

And as they sat down with their families — the smell of pine and roast filling the air — it didn’t matter who remembered all the missions or who had finished every one. What mattered was that something in them had changed. They had learned the oldest truth of Christmas:
The greatest gift you can give is yourself.

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2025 English Jul Livssyn Religion

The Christmas Gospel

(Luke 2:1-20).

The Birth of Jesus

At that time, Augustus Caesar sent an order to all people in the countries that were under Roman rule. The order said that they must list their names in a register. This was the first registration[a] taken while Quirinius was governor of Syria. And everyone went to their own towns to be registered.

So Joseph left Nazareth, a town in Galilee. He went to the town of Bethlehem in Judea. This town was known as the town of David. Joseph went there because he was from the family of David. Joseph registered with Mary because she was engaged to marry him. (Mary was now pregnant.) While Joseph and Mary were in Bethlehem, the time came for her to have the baby. She gave birth to her first son. There were no rooms left in the inn. So she wrapped the baby with cloths and laid him in a box where animals are fed.

Some Shepherds Hear About Jesus

That night, some shepherds were in the fields nearby watching their sheep. An angel of the Lord stood before them. The glory of the Lord was shining around them, and suddenly they became very frightened. The angel said to them, “Don’t be afraid, because I am bringing you some good news. It will be a joy to all the people. Today your Savior was born in David’s town. He is Christ, the Lord. This is how you will know him: You will find a baby wrapped in cloths and lying in a feeding box.”

Then a very large group of angels from heaven joined the first angel. All the angels were praising God, saying:

“Give glory to God in heaven, and on earth let there be peace to the people who please God.”

Then the angels left the shepherds and went back to heaven. The shepherds said to each other, “Let us go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happened. We will see this thing the Lord told us about.”

So the shepherds went quickly and found Mary and Joseph. And the shepherds saw the baby lying in a feeding box. Then they told what the angels had said about this child. Everyone was amazed when they heard what the shepherds said to them. Mary hid these things in her heart; she continued to think about them. Then the shepherds went back to their sheep, praising God and thanking him for everything that they had seen and heard. It was just as the angel had told them.

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2025 Christmas Christmas Calendar English Jul Julekalender

Christmas Calendar Story – Day 23: Share the Joy Close to Home

December 23rd — Lille julaften — began with the sound of snow shovels and the smell of Christmas baking drifting through every house in town. The schools had closed for the holidays, but The December Project hadn’t ended. On the family fridge, Emma’s note still hung: “Mission #23 – Share the joy close to home.”

While her parents prepared dinner, Emma packed small paper bags filled with gingerbread cookies she and her brother had baked the day before. “We’ll take a few to the neighbors,” her mother said. “The ones who might not have family visiting.” So they bundled up, cheeks red from the cold, and went door to door.

At Mrs. Holte’s house, the elderly woman opened the door with a delighted gasp. “You two again!” she laughed. “You’ve kept me company all month.” Emma handed her a cookie bag and a card that said “God jul – you’re not forgotten.” The old woman’s eyes glistened, and for a moment, the whole house seemed to glow.

Across town, Jonas and his dad delivered a loaf of homemade bread to the couple next door. Ida left a candle and a note in the mailbox of a widower who lived alone. No one made a big deal out of it — they just gave quietly, naturally, the way Christmas giving should be.

That night, as lights twinkled from every window, the warmth of those small visits lingered in every home. Not one family talked about what they’d received — only about how good it had felt to give.

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2025 Christmas Christmas Calendar English Jul Julekalender

Christmas Calendar Story – Day 22: Say Thank You for What You’ve Been Given

Tuesday’s classroom felt calm and reflective after yesterday’s reading. On the board, Ms. Larsen had written in white chalk: “Mission #22 – Say thank you for what you’ve been given.” Underneath, she’d added a small note: Write a card to Jesus, to God, or simply to express gratitude for the year that has passed.

No one rushed to start. This wasn’t an easy assignment — not because it was hard, but because it was personal. Emma began slowly: “Dear God, thank you for my family, for my friends, and for helping me see how much I have.” She smiled to herself, realizing she’d never actually written a letter like that before.

Jonas hesitated, then started: “Hey God — thanks for giving me more patience than I used to have. Still working on it, but progress counts, right?” He chuckled quietly and kept writing. Ida’s note was more solemn. She wrote about her grandmother’s recovery, about peace in her family, and ended with, “Thank you for listening, even when I forget to speak.”

When Ms. Larsen invited volunteers to share, only a few did — but the ones who did spoke softly, sincerely. “This,” Ms. Larsen said, “is what faith looks like in everyday life — gratitude, not grand gestures.”

Before leaving, the students placed their envelopes in a small basket on her desk. “You don’t have to send them anywhere,” she said. “They’ve already been received.”

That night, across the town, many homes felt a little lighter. And while the cards stayed sealed in Ms. Larsen’s classroom, the gratitude inside them had already done its work — turning reflection into quiet peace.

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2025 Christmas Christmas Calendar English Jul Julekalender

Christmas Calendar Story – Day 21: Listen to the Story That Started It All

Monday morning carried a stillness that only the week before Christmas can bring. The lights were dim, and on Ms. Larsen’s desk stood a small nativity scene surrounded by candles. Written on the board in calm, blue letters was “Mission #21 – Listen to the story that started it all.”

When everyone was seated, Ms. Larsen opened a worn Bible and began to read from Luke, chapter 2. Her voice was quiet but steady: “And it came to pass in those days, that there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus…” The classroom, usually restless, was utterly silent. Even Jonas, who always found something to whisper about, sat still, watching the candles flicker.

As she read about Mary and Joseph, the manger, and the shepherds who followed the star, something warm settled in the room. It wasn’t about religion alone — it was the story of hope, humility, and love born in the simplest of places. When Ms. Larsen finished, she closed the book gently and said, “Whether you believe this story literally or as a symbol, its heart is the same — light coming into darkness.”

For a few moments, no one spoke. Then Emma said softly, “It’s kind of beautiful that it all began with so little — just a child, a family, and faith.”
Ms. Larsen smiled. “Exactly. Great things rarely start grand. They start small — like kindness, like this project.”

When the bell rang, the students left quietly, speaking in lower voices than usual. Outside, snow began to fall again — slow, steady, peaceful — as if the story itself had followed them out the door.