Christmas: A Historical Testament of Hope and Love

Devotional

Sermon Summary

Bible Study Guide

Sermon Clips

"He came with no home to bring us home, and there's the mystery. This Christmas, it offers a mystery wrapped in history for you too. This wasn't just 2,000 years ago, it's for right now." [52:01 ] (Download)

"Christmas is this regular reminder that you can still change your mind and that God has not changed his mind about you; he still loves you unconditionally." [53:05 ] (Download)

"These aren't just random ideas from a fairy tale; they are reminders for the first century church and for us today, of the profound truths of Jesus' life, death, and resurrection on our behalf." [54:07 ] (Download)

"God can sit in that tension with you. God has so much more for you and me than just the routine. Christmas can still be a time of rich and meaningful celebration for the work that has been done on your and my behalf before we were ever even born." [58:19 ] (Download)

"Luke's approach was different too; for Luke, he was a physician by trade, he was not an eyewitness but he had been impacted by Jesus' teaching and Ministry and so he went and began interviewing scores of eyewitnesses to create the account that we have under his name." [48:21 ] (Download)

"Can you imagine Mary holding Jesus as a baby, looking into his eyes and knowing that she was holding God In Her Arms, that he had come to a cradle but would end up on a cross on his way to an eternal crown for you and me? That's what Christmas reminds us of." [55:20 ] (Download)

"Why does God love us? ...I know the theologically correct answer... but like look around... does it feel like we deserve that love? ...we know at our heart that if this is up to us to deserve it, we don't get it. And that's why it took God." [55:55 ] (Download)

"God offers us Christmas, a reminder of his forever love for us, a reminder that God so loved the world that he gave his only son so that whoever believes would not perish but have everlasting life." [56:36 ] (Download)
Ask a question about this sermon