Years ago, I was sitting in a larger church—at least by Canadian standards. The kind with high ceilings, a generous sanctuary, and a pipe organ tucked into the balcony where the choir usually sat.
The hymn before the sermon had just ended, and its last chord lingered in the air like incense. The organist stood, picked up his coffee mug, and quietly made his way toward the fellowship hall for his mid-service coffee.
Down below, the preacher—whose name I don’t remember—stepped into the pulpit. No dramatic pause. No preamble. He simply looked out over the congregation and said:
“Jesus loves you.”
That was it. Three words.
No buildup. No backstory. Just truth, spoken plainly.
And somehow, it was enough.
Decades later, I still remember that moment. Not because it was eloquent—but because it was honest. I’ve forgotten a thousand other sermons. I remember very few of my own. But not that one.
The words themselves came from the Christian tradition—but the message isn’t exclusive to it.
So many faiths, philosophies, and cultures carry some version of this same call:
You are seen. You are held. You are loved.
Sometimes the deepest truths don’t need explaining.
They just need saying.
So wherever you are today—on the road, in the air, or somewhere in between—remember this:
You are loved. And you are not alone.
This is Nomad Santa, reminding you:
In this small world, we’re all neighbors.