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Sunday Service - 10AM 12/14/2025

Dec 14, 2025    Pastor Jonathan Murray


Key Points

1. Songs are vessels of truth that shape faith across generations.

Certain songs become more than music — they become prayers, promises, companions in suffering, and carriers of theological truth.  Psalm 96, the Magnificat, the angels’ proclamation, and “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing” all serve this role.


2. Mary’s song (the Magnificat) is a revolutionary proclamation of God’s great reversal.

Mary sings not a gentle lullaby but a bold declaration of God lifting the lowly, scattering the proud, and pouring out mercy.  Her song announces a kingdom defined by justice, mercy, and divine reversal.


3. Song gives voice where ordinary speech fails.

Just as Mel Tillis could sing fluently despite his stutter, Mary finds her deepest voice through song when fear and confusion overwhelm her ordinary words.  Song becomes a channel for truth and praise when prose falls short.


4. “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing” proclaims the core of the gospel.

Charles Wesley’s carol expresses the Incarnation with theological richness — God and sinners reconciled, the Word made flesh, new creation, second birth, healing, and hope.  It echoes the Magnificat and joins the long line of songs that proclaim God-with-us.



Reflection Questions

1. What songs of faith have shaped your life, and why do they stay with you?

Consider the melodies or lyrics that have become companions in your journey with God.


2. Where do you see God’s “great reversal” at work in your life or in the world today?

How is God lifting the lowly, filling the hungry, or scattering the proud around you?


3. When have you found your true voice not through explanation, but through worship, prayer, or song?

Reflect on moments when praise expressed what ordinary words could not.


4. As we sing “Hark! The Herald Angels Sing,” what part of the gospel does your heart need to hear most this season?

Is it reconciliation?  New birth?  Light and life?  Emmanuel — God-with-you?