Brentview Church
Brentview’s core values aren’t about meeting a standard—they describe the kind of life that grows when Jesus is at the centre. In this series, we’re exploring these values as markers—shared signs of life that take shape as we press into the way of Jesus. Each week, we’ll reflect on how one value shapes our life together and who we are becoming as a community.
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Brentview’s core values aren’t about meeting a standard—they describe the kind of life that grows when Jesus is at the centre. In this series, we’re exploring these values as markers—shared signs of life that take shape as we press into the way of Jesus. Each week, we’ll reflect on how one value shapes our life together and who we are becoming as a community.
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On Christmas Eve, we reflect on one of the greatest mysteries of all: God becomes human. In Jesus, God chooses closeness over distance and steps into the ordinary, often messy realities of our world so we discover what it truly means to be human in a new way. The Christmas story shows that God does not remain distant or detached, but lives with us—right where life happens. And in that nearness, God changes us. God with us, in our mess, forms us to become more like Jesus.
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Before angels sang or shepherds knelt, Matthew began the Christmas story with a list of names — a family tree tangled with failure and grace. The faithful and the faithless, the shamed and the forgotten. Their stories are raw and imperfect—yet God includes every one of them on purpose. That’s The Scandal of Christmas: Jesus didn’t come to avoid our brokenness; he entered it to heal us. Christmas isn’t a story of perfection—it’s the story of a God who stepped straight into the mess to redeem it. That same grace that ran through Jesus’s family tree is still at work today, as God...
info_outlineBrentview Church
Before angels sang or shepherds knelt, Matthew began the Christmas story with a list of names — a family tree tangled with failure and grace. The faithful and the faithless, the shamed and the forgotten. Their stories are raw and imperfect—yet God includes every one of them on purpose. That’s The Scandal of Christmas: Jesus didn’t come to avoid our brokenness; he entered it to heal us. Christmas isn’t a story of perfection—it’s the story of a God who stepped straight into the mess to redeem it. That same grace that ran through Jesus’s family tree is still at work today, as God...
info_outlineBrentview Church
Before angels sang or shepherds knelt, Matthew began the Christmas story with a list of names — a family tree tangled with failure and grace. The faithful and the faithless, the shamed and the forgotten. Their stories are raw and imperfect—yet God includes every one of them on purpose. That’s The Scandal of Christmas: Jesus didn’t come to avoid our brokenness; he entered it to heal us. Christmas isn’t a story of perfection—it’s the story of a God who stepped straight into the mess to redeem it. That same grace that ran through Jesus’s family tree is still at work today, as God...
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