Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Finding Christ in Christmas: An Advent Devotional from the Writings of A. W. Tozer

Rate this book
This brief daily devotional compiled from the writings of A. W. Tozer will help center and prepare your heart to truly be ready for Christmas and recall what Christmas is about and why the Christ child had to come as he did to live and die to redeem those under the law from sin and death.

34 pages, Kindle Edition

Published November 21, 2018

93 people are currently reading
97 people want to read

About the author

A.W. Tozer

657 books2,128 followers
Aiden Wilson Tozer was an American evangelical pastor, speaker, writer, and editor. After coming to Christ at the age of seventeen, Tozer found his way into the Christian & Missionary Alliance denomination where he served for over forty years. In 1950, he was appointed by the denomination's General Council to be the editor of "The Alliance Witness" (now "Alliance Life").

Born into poverty in western Pennsylvania in 1897, Tozer died in May 1963 a self-educated man who had taught himself what he missed in high school and college due to his home situation. Though he wrote many books, two of them, "The Pursuit of God" and "The Knowledge of the Holy" are widely considered to be classics.

A.W. Tozer and his wife, Ada Cecelia Pfautz, had seven children, six boys and one girl.

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
28 (37%)
4 stars
22 (29%)
3 stars
19 (25%)
2 stars
5 (6%)
1 star
0 (0%)
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Barbara Harper.
867 reviews42 followers
December 27, 2018
Tozer wrote the words contained in Finding Christ in Christmas, but he didn’t actually write the book. Someone pulled together quotes relating to Christmas and the Advent season from Tozer’s other writings. Thus there’s no flow of logical thought from one entry to the next, (at least, I didn’t pick up on it if it was there). Each is taken out of context, and some leave the reader hanging a bit. Whoever compiled these did not note what writings each of the entries comes from, so there is not a way to look up the context of the entry unless you google a phrase and find a reference online.

Despite those failings, the book contains some nuggets worthy of consideration. I’ve never found Tozer to be a warm, cozy devotional speaker. Rather, he makes us think with his incisive rhetoric. And that, to me, is what gives this book value.

Here are just a few samples:

Thousands each year find their desire for salvation and holiness becoming too acute to bear, and turn to the One who was born in a manger to die on a cross. Then the fleeting beauty that is Christmas enters their hearts to dwell there forever. For who is it that imparts such beauty to the Christmas story? It is none other than Jesus, the Altogether Lovely.

He sacrificed many pure enjoyments to give Himself to the holy work of moral rescue…He pleased not Himself but lived for the emergency; and as He was so are we in this world.

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.

[On Isaiah 53:2 portraying the Messiah being “a root out of dry ground] Had Israel been like a young woman at the peak of her reproductive powers, the rising of such a prodigy as Jesus from within her might have had some logic in it; but He was born of Israel when her powers had waned and her strength had withered. By no stretch of fancy could anyone who knew Israel in that day have visioned Jesus as her offspring. Israel was dry ground —politically, morally and spiritually effete.

The theology of Christmas too easily gets lost under the gay wrappings, yet apart from its theological meaning it really has none at all.

Though we are keenly aware of the abuses that have grown up around the holiday season, we are still not willing to surrender this ancient and loved Christmas Day to the enemy.

Man is lost but not abandoned. Had men not been lost, no Savior would have been required. Had they been abandoned no Savior would have come.

In our mad materialism we have turned beauty into ashes, prostituted every normal emotion and made merchandise of the holiest gift the world ever knew. Christ came to bring peace and we celebrate His coming by making peace impossible for six weeks of each year. Not peace but tension, fatigue and irritation rule the Christmas season. He came to free us of debt and many respond by going deep into debt each year to buy enervating luxuries for people who do not appreciate them. He came to help the poor and we heap gifts upon those who do not need them. The simple token given out of love has been displaced by expensive presents given because we have been caught in a squeeze and don’t know how to back out of it. Not the beauty of the Lord our God is found in such a situation, but the ugliness and deformity of human sin.


The editors ended the compilation with the last quote, which, though convicting, ends the book on a note of condemnation. I wish they had ended with a quote of hope.

There are readings for December 1 – 25, and each day’s reading ranges from just a paragraph to little more than a page. So the selections are easily readable.

Despite the frustrations I mentioned, I found the book highly beneficial.
Profile Image for Logan.
247 reviews17 followers
December 12, 2018
DNF at 52%. Puts forth a works-based theology and leans more towards Catholicism, than a sound Biblical theology. Perhaps this is par the course for Tozer and I am just ignorant of his theology. But I won't continue the devotional.
Profile Image for Cathy (Thoughts on Books).
69 reviews
December 22, 2019
I love Tozer but this advent devotional was so badly edited that I was confused most of the time. Every chapter was taken out of context and therefore didn’t make sense. Tozer was one of those authors that took the time (and many paragraphs) to explain what he wanted to get across to his reader and so this book just didn’t sound like him. I don’t recommend this one.
34 reviews
December 26, 2023
Jacci

This book was intriguing in that it prompted thought and inner reflection upon how we prepare and celebrate Christmas. Thought provoking with insight and wisdom. A good read.
Profile Image for Linda S James.
11 reviews1 follower
December 25, 2018
Christmas

Descibes the true meaning of Christmas and how we have taken it and commercialized something beautiful. It is a very good book.
7 reviews3 followers
December 25, 2018
Excellent prep for Christmas

How do we put Christ back in to Christmas? This book does a great job of reframing the holiday to its roots. The reason for the season, lest we forget!
845 reviews2 followers
June 7, 2023
Not edited well. Many of the readings feel like they were just cut off and thoughts aren't completed. A few in the beginning were thought-provoking but that's about it.
Profile Image for Michael.
135 reviews10 followers
December 25, 2023
Tozer Christmas Devotional

I love A W Tozer! His word's are simple and to the point! Reading Tozer is such a pleasure and is easy to read!
45 reviews
May 29, 2025
I greatly appreciate A. W. Tozer's writing. However, I didn't rate this higher because the organization of these excerpts felt a bit disjointed. Some introductory material, daily Scripture verse(s), questions or thoughts for reflection, and even an author bio would be nice additions.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.