Light Has Come Wk2

Dec 14, 2025    Seth Barber

This message takes us deep into the heart of Christmas by exploring John 3:16-20, revealing that the greatest miracle isn't just that Jesus came, but why He came. We're reminded that God's motivation wasn't judgment but love—an overwhelming, rescuing love that compelled Him to step into our darkness. The sermon challenges a common misconception: that we fear God's light because it exposes our failures. But here's the beautiful truth—Jesus' light doesn't expose us to shame us, but to heal us. Many of us have spent years hiding in darkness, afraid of what others might think, convinced that our struggles are too shameful to bring into the open. Yet Scripture tells us that confessing our sins to one another brings healing. The light of Christ doesn't come to condemn but to redeem what's broken inside us. When we finally stop hiding and bring our baggage into His light, we discover something extraordinary: freedom. This Christmas season offers us an invitation to step out of whatever darkness we've been carrying—addiction, guilt, secret sins, brokenness—and experience the liberating power of walking in the light. The message is clear: Jesus was fully God and fully man from birth, carrying all authority to judge, yet He chose to save instead. That's the gospel.


Chapter 1: The True Spirit of Christmas

We explore how Christmas is truly about celebrating Christ stepping into our world, not just the decorations and festivities.


Chapter 2: The Motivation Behind the Manger

We discover that God's love, not judgment, motivated Jesus to come as our Savior through the lens of John 3:16-17.


Chapter 3: Why We Hide in Darkness

We confront the uncomfortable truth that humanity naturally loves darkness more than light because we fear exposure of our sins.


Chapter 4: The Freedom of Walking in the Light

We learn that Jesus' light reveals what is hidden not to shame us, but to redeem and heal what is broken inside us.


Chapter 5: An Invitation to Step Into the Light

We are invited to respond by stepping out of darkness and into the light, whether for salvation or freedom from hidden struggles.