The Birth of
Christ
Text: Romans 14:5–6;
Luke 2:1–20
Introduction
Each year, conversations about the season return. Some esteem a day
to remember Jesus’ birth; others treat every day alike. Scripture
calls me to be fully convinced in my own mind and to give thanks in
either case (Romans 14:5–6). My aim in this lesson is to honor the
Lord’s authority, walk in love toward consciences that differ, and
use the moment to point hearts to the Savior.
Christian
Liberty and Consideration
Paul teaches that disciples may reach different conclusions about
days while both seek to please God with gratitude (Romans 14:5–6).
Liberty thrives where love governs speech, influence, and example.
What
Scripture Reveals—and Leaves Unrevealed
The Spirit did not reveal the date of Jesus’ birth, and many
historical details remain unstated: the number of magi, the length
of stays in Bethlehem and Egypt, the timing of the family’s return
to Nazareth, and other biographical facts. What we do have is the
inspired record that anchors the birth in God’s purpose and promises
(Luke 2:1–20; Matthew 1–2).
Ten Truths
About the Birth of Jesus
-
Long
promised, long awaited: the woman’s seed, the virgin birth,
Immanuel, the name foretold, the birthplace in Bethlehem
(Genesis 3:15; Isaiah 7:14; 9:6; 49:1; Micah 5:2; Luke 1:30–35;
Matthew 1:21–23; 2:1–6).
-
God gathered
witnesses from many stations—angels, shepherds, magi,
prophets—so the good news would be heard and spread (Luke
2:8–20; Matthew 2:1–12; Luke 2:25–38).
-
The
conception was miraculous and holy; Mary knew her purity, and
others received it by faith on God’s testimony (Matthew 1:18–25;
Luke 1:34–35).
-
The birth is
unique: conceived by the Holy Spirit; the preexistent Son
entered time; the event was heralded in advance and accompanied
by signs (Matthew 1:20; Philippians 2:5–8; 1 Timothy 3:16).
-
God’s
message in the manger is relationship—Immanuel, God with us; the
Father and the Son; the Savior made like His brethren (Matthew
1:23; John 1:12; Hebrews 2:17).
-
The birth is
precious, and the cross and empty tomb bring its purpose to
completion (Luke 24:25–27; 1 Corinthians 15:1–4).
-
The new
birth of believers echoes the theme: born of God, raised to walk
in newness of life (John 1:12–13; Romans 6:3–4).
-
The birth
clarifies core convictions: hope rests in the risen Lord;
disciples remember His death in the Supper each Lord’s Day (Acts
20:7; 1 Corinthians 11:23–26).
-
History’s
rhythms acknowledge His impact—timekeeping and worldwide
remembrance point to His unmatched significance.
-
The season
can become a doorway for proclamation, mercy, and hospitality as
we speak truth in love and keep Christ’s authority in view
(Colossians 3:17).
What the
Season Can Be About (Rightly Used)
-
Proclamation and Joy: A star
guided seekers; angels praised; shepherds reported; prophets
rejoiced (Matthew 2:9–11; Luke 2:8–20; 2:25–38).
-
Family
and Fellowship: Joseph and Mary
obeyed; Elizabeth and Zechariah rejoiced; households today can
practice gratitude and kindness.
-
Traditions with Teaching: Lights
recall the Light of the world; evergreens suggest life; gifts
remind us of God’s gift in His Son (John 8:12; 3:16).
-
Friends, Reflection, Giving, Receiving, Love:
A season to visit, to consider eternal things, to share, to
receive with thanksgiving, and to practice the two great
commandments (Acts 20:35; Matthew 22:37–39).
A Brief
Chronology from Scripture
-
Angelic
announcement to Joseph (Matthew 1:18–25; Isaiah 7:14 fulfilled).
-
Census and
birth at Bethlehem (Luke 2:1–7).
-
Angelic
proclamation and shepherds’ visit (Luke 2:8–20).
-
Circumcision
and naming on the eighth day (Luke 2:21).
-
Presentation
at the temple; witness of Simeon and Anna (Luke 2:22–38).
-
Magi guided
and gifts presented (Matthew 2:1–12).
-
Flight to
Egypt; Herod’s atrocity; return to Nazareth by God’s direction
(Matthew 2:13–23; Luke 2:39–40).
Why Many
Decline a Religious “Holy Day” for the Birth
The New Testament gives no command, example, or necessary inference
establishing an annual religious festival for the birth of Christ.
Disciples act in the name of the Lord—that is, by His authority
(Colossians 3:17). Human commandments presented as divine doctrine
lead to vain worship (Matthew 15:8–9). The apostles warned against
becoming bound to special days as spiritual requirements (Galatians
4:8–11; Colossians 2:20–23). The pattern we find is the Lord’s Day
each week for the church’s memorial and worship (Acts 20:7; 1
Corinthians 11:23–26; 16:1–2).
Historical notes
explain how later traditions grew in the Roman world, yet the
church’s standard remains the apostolic word. Where Scripture is
silent, faith refrains from binding.
An
Evangelistic Opportunity
Paul removed needless barriers for the sake of the gospel. He
circumcised Timothy to open doors among Jews (Acts 16:1–3), and he
refused to require Titus so the truth of the gospel would remain
clear (Galatians 2:3–5). Wisdom still seeks open doors. Many
neighbors are unusually receptive in this season; gracious
conversations about the Lord can flourish when disciples keep both
truth and love.
Conclusion
Give thanks for the birth of Jesus and the grace it announces:
Immanuel has come. Keep the Lord’s pattern in worship and doctrine,
and use every providential moment to point people to the crucified
and risen King.
Invitation
God has given the world His Son. Believe the gospel, turn to God,
confess Jesus as Lord, and be baptized into Christ for the
forgiveness of sins, rising to walk in newness of life (John 3:16;
Acts 2:38; Romans 6:3–5). Come today.
The Birth
of Christ Sermon Outline:
-
Introduction
-
Liberty
and gratitude regarding days (Romans 14:5–6).
-
Aim:
honor Christ’s authority, love consciences, seize gospel
moments.
-
I.
Christian Liberty and Consideration
-
II.
What Scripture Reveals—and Leaves Unrevealed
-
III.
Ten Truths About the Birth
-
Prophecy
fulfilled: virgin, Immanuel, Bethlehem, name foretold (Gen
3:15; Isa 7:14; Mic 5:2; Isa 49:1).
-
Witnesses gathered: angels, shepherds, magi, prophets (Luke
2; Matt 2).
-
Holy
conception; received by faith (Matt 1:18–25; Luke 1:34–35).
-
Uniqueness: conceived by the Spirit; preexistent Son;
foretold and sign-marked (Matt 1:20; Phil 2:5–8; 1 Tim
3:16).
-
Emmanuel
and Sonship; made like us (Matt 1:23; Heb 2:17).
-
The
cross and resurrection fulfill the purpose (1 Cor 15:1–4).
-
New
birth parallels (John 1:12–13; Rom 6:3–4).
-
Weekly
remembrance in the Supper (Acts 20:7; 1 Cor 11:23–26).
-
History’s acknowledgment of His impact.
-
A
doorway for good works and witness (Col 3:17).
-
IV.
Season Focused in Christ
-
Proclamation and joy (Luke 2; Matt 2).
-
Family
and fellowship.
-
Traditions explained with Scripture (lights, life, gifts).
-
Friendship, reflection, generosity, gratitude, love (Acts
20:35; Matt 22:37–39).
-
V.
Chronology for Teaching
-
Joseph
informed—prophecy fulfilled (Matt 1:18–25; Isa 7:14).
-
Birth at
Bethlehem (Luke 2:1–7).
-
Angels
and shepherds (Luke 2:8–20).
-
Naming
and circumcision (Luke 2:21).
-
Presentation; Simeon and Anna (Luke 2:22–38).
-
Magi and
gifts (Matt 2:1–12).
-
Flight,
atrocity, return to Nazareth (Matt 2:13–23; Luke 2:39–40).
-
VI. Why
Many Decline a Religious Holy Day
-
Authority of Christ alone (Col 3:17).
-
Vain
worship warned (Matt 15:8–9).
-
No
apostolic festival for the birth; weekly Lord’s Day given
(Gal 4:8–11; Acts 20:7).
-
VII.
Evangelistic Wisdom
-
Timothy
circumcised to advance the gospel (Acts 16:1–3).
-
Titus
not compelled, preserving the gospel’s truth (Gal 2:3–5).
-
Use
seasonal openness for gracious witness.
-
Conclusion
-
Invitation
Call to
Action
Set Christ apart in your heart this season. Speak clearly about what
Scripture teaches, gather with the saints on the Lord’s Day, and
practice generous hospitality. Begin two intentional gospel
conversations this week with neighbors or family who are already
thinking about Jesus.
Key
Takeaways
-
Liberty
concerning days must be guided by gratitude and love (Romans
14:5–6, 19).
-
Scripture
centers the birth in fulfilled prophecy and God’s saving plan
(Isaiah 7:14; Micah 5:2; Luke 2:11).
-
Worship and
doctrine rest on Christ’s authority alone (Colossians 3:17;
Matthew 15:9).
-
The
apostolic pattern is the weekly Lord’s Day memorial (Acts 20:7;
1 Corinthians 11:23–26).
-
The season
can open doors for witness and mercy (Acts 16:3; Galatians
2:3–5; Colossians 4:5–6).
Scripture
Reference List
-
Romans
14:5–6 — Liberty about days with gratitude to God.
-
Luke 2:1–20
— Historical setting, proclamation, and response at Jesus’
birth.
-
Matthew
1:18–25; 2:1–23 — Conception by the Spirit; magi; flight;
return.
-
Genesis
3:15; Isaiah 7:14; 9:6; 49:1; Micah 5:2 — Messianic promises
fulfilled in the birth.
-
John
1:12–13; Philippians 2:5–8; 1 Timothy 3:16 — Incarnation,
preexistence, new birth.
-
Hebrews 2:17
— The Son made like His brethren.
-
Matthew
15:8–9 — Warning against man-made doctrines in worship.
-
Colossians
2:20–23 — Self-made religion lacks power.
-
Colossians
3:17 — All in the name of the Lord.
-
Galatians
4:8–11 — Enslavement to days and seasons warned.
-
Acts 20:7; 1
Corinthians 11:23–26; 16:1–2 — Lord’s Day assembly, Supper, and
giving.
-
Acts
16:1–3; Galatians 2:3–5 — Evangelistic wisdom with Timothy and
Titus.
-
Acts
20:35; Matthew 22:37–39 — Generosity and the great commands.
Prepared by David Hersey of the church of Christ at
Granby, MO |