The Theology of the Incarnation in the Pulpit

Theological Reflection

The Theology of the Incarnation in the Pulpit

Preaching the glory that God became man.

Christology
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By An Expositor

Few doctrines demand more reverence from the preacher than the incarnation. It is not merely a seasonal theme but the beating heart of the gospel: The eternal Son assuming true humanity without surrendering His deity, all for our salvation. Preaching the incarnation requires clarity, wonder, and a firm grip on the biblical contours of Christ’s person and work.

The Incarnation Is Not Optional

At Christmas it is tempting to treat the incarnation as a comforting backdrop to the festivities. But biblically, it is a doctrinal cornerstone. Without the incarnation:

  • there is no true atonement, for only one who is God and man can reconcile God and man;
  • there is no true righteousness, for Christ obeys where Adam failed;
  • there is no true representation, for we needed a real human mediator;
  • there is no true revelation, for Jesus is the Word made flesh.

The incarnation is not poetic symbolism but God’s decisive act in history. Preaching must resist vague language and present theological reality: the eternal Son became what He had never been, man, while remaining what He had always been,God.

The Biblical Shape of the Incarnation

Key passages give the preacher firm doctrinal footing:

  • John 1:14 = the Word becomes flesh, revealing glory and grace.
  • Philippians 2:5–11 = the Son humbles Himself in obedience unto death.
  • Hebrews 2:14–18 = He becomes like His brothers to destroy death and serve as a merciful high priest.
  • Galatians 4:4–5 = God sends His Son, born of woman, to redeem and adopt.

These texts locate Christmas not in sentimentality but in substitution, revelation, and redemption. The incarnation is a mission, not a moment. Christmas begins what Good Friday and Easter complete.

The crib is already shaped like the cross because the Son took flesh for the sake of His people.

Guarding the Two Natures: A Pastoral Responsibility

Preachers may not think they are flirting with ancient heresies, but careless language can unintentionally obscure the truth. The pulpit must avoid:

  • speaking as if Jesus “stopped being God” (Arian drift),
  • suggesting He “blended” His natures (Eutychian drift),
  • or portraying Him as two persons switching roles (Nestorian drift).

Instead, faithful preaching affirms the Chalcedonian balance Scripture itself presents: one person, two natures, without confusion, change, division, or separation. This is not academic precision; it is pastoral care. A confused Christ cannot save; the biblical Christ does.

The Tone of Incarnational Preaching

If doctrine is the skeleton, tone is the breath. The incarnation should be preached with:

  • Reverence = the mystery is real and humbling.
  • Joy = salvation’s dawn breaks in Bethlehem.
  • Gravity = the Son takes flesh to die.
  • Clarity = God’s people need solid truth, not seasonal fog.

Your tone shapes not only how people feel about Christmas, but how they feel about Christ Himself.

Preaching Christ for the People

The incarnation is profoundly pastoral. It means:

  • Christ knows our frailty.
  • Christ bears our guilt.
  • Christ stands for us in heaven.
  • Christ is near to the brokenhearted.

To preach the incarnation is to preach comfort, courage, and confidence. God has not remained distant; He has come near in the person of His Son. Our people need this truth in December, and in every month.

Conclusion: Glory and Grace

The incarnation is not merely the beginning of the gospel story; it is the heartbeat of God’s redeeming grace. The preacher who handles this doctrine with faithfulness and warmth will lead the congregation into worship, repentance, and renewed trust.

Let the incarnation expand your view of Christ and deepen your proclamation of Him. Preach it with precision. Preach it with wonder. Preach it with a grateful heart.

Birth Narratives Text-Driven

Biblical Interpretation

Birth Narratives: Letting the Text Lead

How to preach Matthew and Luke with clarity, weight, and gospel shape.

Christmas Preaching
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By An Expositor

Preaching the birth narratives is a yearly joy—and a yearly challenge. Matthew and Luke are familiar to our congregations, filled with rich theology, and densely tied to Old Testament promises. The danger is to preach the “Christmas story” we assume rather than the inspired accounts as they stand. Text-driven exposition guards us from that drift and allows Scripture to give Christmas its shape, tone, and weight.

The Distinct Voices of Matthew and Luke

The Spirit inspired two complementary accounts, not a blended nativity script. Each contributes a unique theological angle:

  • Matthew emphasises fulfilment, kingship, conflict, and God’s sovereign hand in history.
  • Luke emphasises humility, joy, Spirit-wrought praise, and God’s mercy toward the lowly.

Good exposition resists merging these perspectives into one “harmonised” sermon. Let Matthew be unmistakably Matthew. Let Luke be unmistakably Luke. The theological richness comes not from folding them together but from hearing each voice distinctly.

The birth narratives are not sentimental vignettes—they are theological announcements shaping the entire storyline of redemption.

Observing Narrative Structure

Before moving to application or seasonal themes, trace how the story actually unfolds. Narrative structure—setting, rising tension, climax, resolution—is not incidental; it is inspired. Consider:

  • Contrasts (Herod’s rage vs. the Magi’s worship; Caesar’s decree vs. God’s sovereignty).
  • Repetition (angelic commands, fulfilment formulas, “Do not be afraid.”).
  • Slow-motion scenes (Magnificat, Benedictus, Nunc Dimittis—Luke lingers!).

When you trace the narrative’s movement carefully, the sermon gains shape organically rather than artificially.

Let the Old Testament Speak

Matthew expects his readers to hear echoes everywhere. His fulfilment quotations anchor the incarnation in covenant history. Luke, too, thickens his narrative with allusions to Samuel, Abraham, and the Psalms.

A text-driven Christmas sermon will:

  • Show how the genealogy or song fits Israel’s story.
  • Explain the Isaiah or Micah reference clearly.
  • Let the congregation feel the “longing” of the Old Testament answered in Christ.

This gives Christmas preaching theological depth without making it academic.

Preaching the Emotional Tone of the Text

The birth narratives are emotionally rich—but each passage carries its own tone. Resist importing emotions from other Christmas texts. Instead, preach:

  • Luke 1–2 with gentle wonder, joy, reversal, and humility.
  • Matthew 1–2 with sober conflict, fulfilment, kingship, and divine protection.

When the emotional register of the sermon reflects the inspired tone of the text, the congregation experiences a more authentic encounter with Scripture.

Christ in the Birth Narratives

The key to Christ-centred preaching is not forcing the cross into every verse, but showing how the text itself anticipates His mission. The infancy narratives already lean forward:

  • Jesus comes as Saviour (Luke 2:11), presupposing sin and repentance.
  • He is born to save His people from their sins (Matt. 1:21).
  • He is King, provoking opposition (Matt. 2).
  • He is light in darkness (Luke 2:32).

Let the text itself reveal Christ’s identity and mission. Do not staple the cross onto the crib—but do not let the crib be preached without the mission the crib contains.

For Preachers and Congregations

Text-driven preaching of the birth narratives will help your people:

  • See familiar passages with new clarity.
  • Move beyond seasonal sentiment into theological substance.
  • Understand the unity of the Bible’s story.
  • Love Christ more deeply as the fulfilment of God’s long-promised mercy.

The preacher’s task is not to make Christmas “special,” but to make Christ unmistakably clear.

Preaching Christmas Without Sentimentality

Preaching & Pastoral Ministry

Preaching Christmas Without Sentimentality

Letting the text, not the season, set the tone.

Christmas Preaching
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By An Expositor

Christmas is one of the easiest seasons to preach—and one of the easiest to mishandle. Familiar texts, strong emotions, cultural expectations, and packed diaries all conspire to pull the preacher toward sentimentality. The challenge is not only to say something fresh, but to say what the text actually says, with the tone the text actually carries.

What We Mean by “Sentimentality”

Sentimentality is not simply emotion. Scripture is deeply emotional. Sentimentality is emotion unmoored from reality—warmth without weight, comfort without cost, joy without the jagged edges of truth.

At Christmas, sentimentality often looks like:

  • Reducing the incarnation to vague “peace on earth” slogans.
  • Softening sin into “brokenness” without guilt or repentance.
  • Staying in the manger without ever reaching the cross and empty tomb.
  • Using the season to reinforce nostalgia rather than proclaim news.

The result may be moving services and full buildings—but little lasting change. Our people leave warmed, not won; stirred, not transformed.

Letting the Text Set the Tone

One of the most practical safeguards against sentimentality is ruthlessly simple: let the passage itself set the emotional tone of the sermon.

Consider how different the Christmas texts are:

  • Luke 1–2 carries quiet wonder, humble obedience, and breaking joy.
  • Matthew 1–2 holds together royal fulfilment and real threat—Herod, exile, danger.
  • John 1 is majestic, theological, awe-filled: the Word, light, glory, rejection, grace.

If every Christmas sermon sounds the same, we are likely smoothing over the edges of the text. Observing structure, repeated words, contrasts, and narrative tension will help us feel what the inspired author felt, and then preach with that same contour.

We avoid sentimentality not by suppressing emotion, but by letting Scripture teach us which emotions are fitting.

Holding Together Joy and Gravity

Christmas preaching that is truly evangelical will hold together both deep joy and genuine gravity.

  • Joy, because the promised King has come, grace has appeared, and God has drawn near.
  • Gravity, because this child was born to die, to bear wrath, to save sinners.

The birth narratives are already cross-shaped. Mary’s song rejoices in salvation and reversal. Simeon speaks of a sword that will pierce. Herod rages against the newborn King. The shadow of Good Friday falls across Bethlehem’s light.

Our task is not to drag in the cross from outside, nor to leave it outside the stable, but to show how the text itself leans forward to Calvary and beyond.

Four Practical Helps for Preaching Christmas Texts

1. Start with the Normal Exegetical Process

Resist the urge to “jump to the Christmas bit.” Observe, trace the argument or narrative flow, identify the main point, and let application grow from there. Treat the text as you would in any other month.

2. Use Fewer, Stronger Images

Illustrations at Christmas are easy to find—and easy to overuse. Choose one or two that arise naturally from the text and serve the main point. Avoid sentimental stories whose emotional tone clashes with the passage.

3. Name Sin Clearly, Offer Christ Freely

Do not let seasonal niceness blunt the gospel edge. The Saviour came because we are sinners, not merely because we are lonely or busy. Name the problem honestly; then proclaim Christ gladly.

4. Preach for Outsiders Without Neglecting the Flock

Christmas brings visitors. Speak clearly to those who are unfamiliar with Scripture, but remember that your sheep also need feeding. Let the same text both invite the outsider and strengthen the believer.

Preaching the Child Who Is Lord

Ultimately, avoiding sentimentality is about honouring who this child is. He is not a seasonal symbol of hope but the Lord of glory who humbled Himself to save His people. When we keep His person and work central—His deity, humanity, humility, obedience, death, and resurrection—our preaching gains both warmth and weight.

As you step into this Christmas season, you do not need to be clever. You need to be clear. Let the text lead. Let the gospel define the tone. And trust that the Spirit delights to use simple, honest proclamation of Christ to do what no amount of seasonal atmosphere can achieve.