Ever wondered what goes into a message that reaches the largest audience of the year? Adam Hamilton pulls back the curtain on his 36th Christmas Eve at Church of the Resurrection, revealing nine drafts, 30+ hours of research, and a stunning historical discovery at 2:20 in the morning that changed everything.
The beloved Christmas carol "O Holy Night" wasn't just a pretty song. In 1855 Boston, it became an anthem of the abolitionist movement, inspiring Christians to give up everything and travel to Kansas to claim it as a free state. The line "chains shall he break, for the slave is our brother" moved people to action, and Adam discovered these faithful abolitionists passed directly across the land where his church now sits.
In this special behind-the-scenes episode, Adam walks through his creative process: why he rewrote the sermon after preaching it the first time, how he adapted it for 2,000 kids on Christmas morning, and what it takes to keep a 2,000-year-old story compelling after nearly four decades of Christmas Eves. From "Home Alone" clips to trail maps to his own family's Super 8 films from 1967, see how one pastor weaves history, personal story, and a simple call to "love one another" into a message that moved people to give $2.3 million to families in poverty.
Whether you're curious about the craft of communication, fascinated by hidden history, or simply wondering what happens behind the scenes of the biggest night in the church year, this episode offers rare insight into how faith and creativity collide.
In this episode:- Why Christmas Eve is the most challenging message of the year
- The abolitionist history hidden in "O Holy Night"
- How Adam discovered his church sits on an Underground Railroad route
- What it takes to preach the same story fresh for 36 years
- The moment at 2 AM when everything came together
The episode includes the full 7:00 PM Christmas Eve service, featuring Dr. Cameron Smith's stunning performance of "O Holy Night."