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The angels didn’t announce a feeling — they announced a Person.
In Week 4 of Advent, we light the Angel’s Candle and lean into a truth that reshapes how we understand love: God doesn’t send love… He becomes it. Drawing from Luke 2:8–14 and Jesus’ words in John 15:13, this message reveals that biblical love isn’t sentimental or shallow — it’s incarnational, self-giving, and costly.
From the manger to the cross, Scripture shows us that love is proven not by words, but by wounds. This is agape love — love that bleeds, love that lays itself down, love that moves toward people instead of away from pain. Written to a church under pressure, John’s reminder still speaks powerfully to our moment today: the answer to fear, false gods, and fading loyalty has always been love shaped like a cross.
Christmas isn’t soft — it’s strategic. The wood of the manger points forward to the wood of the cross. And the God who put on flesh and laid Himself in a feeding trough is still stepping into ordinary, messy places today.
Is there a “manger” in your life where you need God to dwell? This message invites you to see love clearly, receive it deeply, and live it boldly.
By True North ChurchThe angels didn’t announce a feeling — they announced a Person.
In Week 4 of Advent, we light the Angel’s Candle and lean into a truth that reshapes how we understand love: God doesn’t send love… He becomes it. Drawing from Luke 2:8–14 and Jesus’ words in John 15:13, this message reveals that biblical love isn’t sentimental or shallow — it’s incarnational, self-giving, and costly.
From the manger to the cross, Scripture shows us that love is proven not by words, but by wounds. This is agape love — love that bleeds, love that lays itself down, love that moves toward people instead of away from pain. Written to a church under pressure, John’s reminder still speaks powerfully to our moment today: the answer to fear, false gods, and fading loyalty has always been love shaped like a cross.
Christmas isn’t soft — it’s strategic. The wood of the manger points forward to the wood of the cross. And the God who put on flesh and laid Himself in a feeding trough is still stepping into ordinary, messy places today.
Is there a “manger” in your life where you need God to dwell? This message invites you to see love clearly, receive it deeply, and live it boldly.