12-24-19 Grace-Tucson Christmas Eve Sermon

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Pastor Tim Patoka

Christmas Eve December 24, 2019 God Loves the World, Including You John 3:16-18

Maybe it’s just me, but it seems that when Christmas comes around every year it is newly familiar. There are things we do every year, but they seem new when we complete them every year. Take giving gifts to loved ones for example. That’s a familiar concept. But it’s new every year as you try to find the perfect gift for your loved one whether they be a growing child, someone who doesn’t need anything, or a person who buys what they want before you can get it for them. Or take decorating your Christmas tree. If you put on your own lights, can you remember how to untie the impossible knot they got themselves into while in storage? Are you going to use tinsel or garland on your tree? Did you hang all the ornaments up on the tree so they can be easily seen yet are evenly spaced around the tree? These or any number of Christmas things can be newly familiar each year. And as we look at our verses tonight from John chapter 3, we see how we get to review God’s Christmas truths in a newly familiar way. The Apostle John writes for us, “For God so loved the world that he gave his only-begotten Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish, but have eternal life. For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him. The one who believes in him is not condemned, but the one who does not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the onlybegotten Son of God” (John 3:16-18). Christian churches typically don’t base their Christmas Eve message on these verses. Instead they usually choose traditional passages like Luke chapter 2. Yet John chapter 3 is a newly familiar way to learn what Christmas Eve is all about – that God loves the world, including you. “For God so loved the world” (John 3:16). When we talk about God’s love, we’re not equating it with the normal way we think of love. For us, love is most often a warm, fuzzy feeling that people have for each other. John describes God’s love as an agape love, an unconditional love that is based on one person and their mindset. It is a part of God’s eternal nature to have an agape love. And this love is directed to the world. When we’re talking about the world, we mean more than simply all people. There’s also the sinful connotation that John attaches to this word. Even though we and all people are born dead in our sins and undeserving of God’s love in any way, shape, or form, God still gives his agape love to us because that is who he is.

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