The Incarnation—God becoming flesh in Jesus Christ—solves the profound tension between God's transcendent otherness and His intimate nearness, revealing that salvation is not humanity's work but God's divine act, uniquely accomplished through the virgin-born, fully divine and fully human Son. This union of natures enables Christ to be both the ultimate revelation of the invisible Father and the only Savior who, by sharing in human suffering and temptation, can compassionately redeem sinners. The sermon emphasizes that no other religion or philosophy reconciles divine transcendence with personal intimacy as Christianity does through the incarnate Word, who makes fellowship with God possible and restores humanity to the divine presence once lost in Eden. The Incarnation is not a compromise but a divine solution to the impossibility of human beings seeing God and living, and it invites all to experience eternal life through personal encounter with the historical, tangible Christ.