Sin and Atonement

A cold, damp bethlehem stable at dawn, wooden beams dripping with rain, dirt floor pooled with muddy water. a simple manger holds a single newborn lamb nestled in dry, cracked hay. one shaft of pale golden light pierces the roof gap, illuminating dust motes. no figures. ancient scribbles faintly carved into the stone wall. realistic, high-detail, natural lighting.

When Christmas Becomes More Than a Memory: The Danger of Reducing Christ to a Therapist

While the sermon uses appropriate language and relatable illustrations, it significantly distorts the Gospel by conflating Christ's historical incarnation with a mystical rebirth in believers. Key elements of salvation—such as penal substitutionary atonement and divine wrath—are omitted, leaving congregants without a clear understanding of how Christ's birth connects to their need for redemption.

Biblical Parallel (Archetype): Laodicea — The sermon reduces Christ's work to therapeutic healing without addressing sin, atonement, or divine justice, reflecting a lukewarm spiritual condition described in [Revelation 3:15](https://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Revelation+3%3A15&version=KJV)–16.

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