Incarnation

Find a sermon associated with this topic below.

This sermon illuminates the truth that Jesus is the Creator who became creation, the Light who brought enlightenment to a world shrouded in darkness, and the ultimate fulfillment of all the Old Testament's shadows. It argues that Jesus's radical humility and glorious revelation confront humanity's love of darkness, inviting us to find true and lasting satisfaction in Him alone.

This sermon explains that the doctrine of the Incarnation—God becoming human in Jesus Christ—is the ultimate solution to the church's disunity, which is often rooted in a "glory-starved" pursuit of external validation. By a selfless act of humility, Jesus emptied Himself of His glory so that believers, in a substitutionary act, could be filled with His divine fullness, freeing them from the need for self-exaltation and empowering them to love others.

This sermon explains that the God of the Bible is not only real and self-existent but also desires a personal relationship with humanity, actively seeking us out despite our sin. The message highlights that while God's holiness creates a barrier, Jesus Christ, the pre-incarnate "angel of the Lord," is the ultimate solution who, through His sacrifice on the cross, bridges the gap and makes a personal and transformative relationship with God possible.

This sermon explains that humanity, as image-bearers of God, is meant to reflect His greatness and love, but our inherent self-centeredness prevents us from doing so. The message highlights Jesus as the ultimate model of humility, who, despite being God, willingly emptied himself by becoming a servant and dying on the cross, providing the path to true transformation and the ability to reflect God's image.

This sermon challenges a transactional view of God by proposing that greater need reveals God's greater sufficiency, a truth demonstrated by Moses's encounter with the holy and compassionate God at the burning bush. The message highlights that the ultimate proof of God's grace is found in Jesus's suffering on the cross, where He was abandoned so that believers would never be, making our own suffering a pathway to a deeper experience of Him.