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The King of Kings

Nov 30, 2025    Pastor Jon Snape

Sermon Summary: This Advent sermon challenges listeners to move beyond a superficial, comfortable understanding of the Christmas story and instead embrace the full reality of Christ's incarnation into a broken world. Using Luke's account of Caesar Augustus's census and the journey to Bethlehem, the sermon reveals how Jesus entered into the midst of human suffering, oppression, and systemic brokenness. Rather than offering temporary comfort, Christ comes as the true King who brings lasting peace (shalom) that conquers sin and bridges the separation between humanity and God. The message calls believers to bring their complete selves—including grief, struggles, and sin—into the gospel story, recognizing that Christ meets us in our depths and offers genuine transformation. The sermon emphasizes that our hope should rest not in earthly rulers or ourselves, but solely in Jesus as our one true King and Messiah.


Key Points:

- The Advent season invites us to go "beyond the lullaby" and engage with the Christ story at a deeper level than surface comfort

- Luke intentionally contrasts Caesar Augustus (the supposed bringer of peace) with Jesus (the true Prince of Peace)

- Jesus was born into a world of oppression, forced registration, taxation, and systemic brokenness—He enters our complicated reality

- Christ comes to us in the midst of all that is broken: within ourselves, in our relationships, in society, and in the world

- We are invited to bring our full selves to the nativity—our grief, struggles, sin, and all that holds us back from kingdom living

- Jesus conquers sin and rebuilds the bridge between humanity and God, making God's presence real among us again

- Our hope must be placed solely in Christ as our one true King, not in earthly rulers, institutions, or ourselves

- The peace Christ offers is lasting and enduring (shalom), unlike any peace the world can provide


Scripture Reference:

- Luke 2:1-5 (The primary text focusing on Caesar Augustus's decree, the census, and Joseph and Mary's journey to Bethlehem)

- Luke 1 (Referenced as showing Jesus came into the brokenness of our world)


Stories:

- The historical context of Caesar Augustus's census and forced registration, illustrating the oppressive circumstances into which Jesus was born

- The journey of Mary and Joseph from Nazareth to Bethlehem under difficult circumstances

- The poem "The Journey" by Diana Holmes, which poetically retells the nativity story from a first-person perspective of a traveler following the star to Bethlehem, encountering angels, shepherds, and wise men, and ultimately beholding the Christ child in the manger