Love

Dec 21, 2025    Kevin Stamper

This sermon weaves love, Advent, and Micah 5 into a single invitation: to move from merely knowing we are loved to actually living as if it’s true. In the tension of Advent—between present pain and promised perfection—God enters the story not with power but humility, not meeting expectations but transforming them. From Bethlehem comes a shepherd-king whose love is self-giving, patient, and peace-making: love as willing the good of the other, love that gives all, love that restores shalom. As participants rather than bystanders, we are fueled by a love we don’t earn, freed to see ourselves as God sees us, and formed to love others the same way. Yet this love is costly—it requires humility, surrender, vulnerability, and trust. Advent reminds us that if we truly allowed ourselves to be loved, it would change how we see ourselves, others, and the world—and how we live in it.