"incarnation" Tagged Sermons

Christmas Day | Born Like Us For All of Us | Luke 2:1-20

When we recognize how extraordinary God is and how ordinary we are by comparison, we may feel that God is too different from us to understand us or too distant from us to be close to us. But when read the Christmas story with a fresh interpretation, we discover that God came to us in many ordinary ways, easing our fears that he is too different or too distant. Instead, he became like us and came close to us.

Children’s Christmas Program | Luke 2:1-14

The 4th Sunday of Advent represents the message of the angels and symbolizes peace. Keeping in mind the Children’s play, I’ll be continuing on a similar theme to Rob and Dean, speaking of the miracle of Jesus incarnate, specifically as a baby. The message will address peace in the midst of a giving up of control – that peace comes from radical trust of the Father.

Hail the Incarnate Deity | Mathew 1:18-25

This Sunday is the 1st Sunday of Advent, the church’s four-week journey toward the celebration of Jesus’ birth. Throughout Advent 2022, we will learn the essential reality of Jesus’ incarnation. Join us at 9 a.m. as we worship the Incarnate Deity in song, prayer and a message for all ages lifting up Jesus as “God with us” who has come to save His people from our sins!

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.

The Story #22: Your King Has Come (Matt. 1 & 2, Luke 1 & 2, John 1)

When heaven is silent we often wonder, “Where is God?” and “Does He care?” Beginning in the mid 400’s BC God’s voice was suspended from Israel and many gave up hope. Yet everything changed in 5 or 6 BC when God announced and then sent His promised Anointed One through a virgin in David’s town. Some received Him, others did not. This message travels from the days of Caesar Augustus to our own because He came not only to be with 1st century Jews but He came to be with you as well.