For the Strength of Youth
The Christmas Truce
For the Strength of Youth December 2025


The Christmas Truce

battlefield

It was Christmas Eve 1914.

The Great War—later called World War I—had been raging for five months.

no man’s land on a battlefield

In Belgium, soldiers on opposite sides fought the war from long, narrow trenches dug in the ground.

The area between them was called “No Man’s Land.”

soldiers in a trench

Thousands of soldiers on both sides were killed in these trenches or in No Man’s Land.

soldiers in a trench hearing music

But on Christmas Eve, the British troops heard the Germans singing Christmas carols.

Stille Nacht, heilige Nacht, alles schläft, einsam wacht …

soldiers singing

The British started to sing, too.

Silent night! Holy night! All is calm, all is bright …

different soldiers singing

They were singing in different languages, but songs about the birth of our Savior are universal.

soldiers

The spirit of the season—Jesus Christ’s message of peace, love, and forgiveness—began to overtake the soldiers on both sides.

Most of them were young Christian men spending their first Christmas away from home.

soldiers climbing out of trench

The soldiers put down their weapons and cautiously crawled out of their trenches into No Man’s Land.

No one fired a shot.

opposing soldiers talking

These young men—“enemies” only because of which country they were from—began to talk.

“Merry Christmas!”

“Frohe Weihnachten!”

opposing soldiers exchanging gifts

They exchanged small gifts such as candy and souvenirs.

soldiers playing soccer

They kicked a football around.

soldiers among graves of fallen soldiers

They took time to bury their dead.

tank firing

Inevitably, the war had to resume.

battlefield with a single poppy growing in it

But the world would always remember the Christmas truce.

poppies

It showed that faith in the Savior, Jesus Christ, can bring the one thing that everyone wants:

Peace.