"Christmas" Tagged Sermons

Hark the Herald Angels Sing | Luke 2:8-20

As we sing old familiar Christmas hymns, we’re often distracted or disengaged. This is especially true if the songs are difficult to understand. When we take time to learn their biblical and historical roots, we see the messages they depict more clearly. We see the Gospel; the good news that God came to be with us so we can be with him!

O Come, O Come, Emmanuel

As we begin our advent journey this year, we encounter Hope.  Jesus came as a baby, but not just any baby. He was Emmanuel – God with us! And the great Hope we have is that we serve a God that is with us! Through everything and anything we experience we can long for and hope that Christ will come into our situation and lives because He has done it before, He is doing it now and He will do it again!

Advent 4: Desperate for a Savior | Luke 2:1-7

We know the nativity story. But the iconic scene we imagine is incomplete by itself. It’s a picture framed by the hardship and pain of Mary and Joseph and of the people of Israel for the centuries that came prior. By observing the sorrow, we see the joy all the more clearly. The tyranny of empires and the death of our Savior make His birth, His resurrection and His return all the more powerful.

Christmas Eve: We Have Seen His Glory | John 1:14-18

What is God like? His glorious universe above gives us a glimpse. His imaging bearing people around the world reveal more. The Bible pull back the curtain even more about God. Yet, when Christ was born those who saw Him made declarations like, “we have seen His glory, glory as of the only Son from the Father” and “No one has ever seen God; the only God, who is at the Father’s side, He has made him known” and “He is the image of the invisible God.” Christ has come to show us what God is like. Tonight we celebrate Christmas, the birth of Jesus to whom we can look to see most clearly what God is like.