Christ the Savior is not a sentimental Christmas phrase. It is a divine revelation that reshapes how we worship, pray, and fight. After weeks of seeking direction, the Holy Spirit spoke two words with clarity and authority: Christ the Savior. Those words carry far more meaning than many believers realize.
Jesus did not come merely to secure our eternity. He came to intervene in our present reality. Christ our Savior was born to save, deliver, and preserve us. He came to give us abundant life now, not just heaven later. He forgives our past, secures our future, and sustains us through trials, warfare, and pressure.
Luke 2:11 declares that a Savior was born. Not a life coach. Not a moral teacher. A Savior. When we understand what that word truly means, the Christmas story deepens. In Hebrew, Savior means to rescue, liberate, save in battle, and give victory. In Greek, it means Savior, Deliverer, and Preserver. So when we say “Christ our Savior,” we are declaring that He rescues us, delivers us, keeps us, and gives us victory.
This revelation did not begin in Bethlehem. David knew God as Savior long before Jesus came in the flesh. In 2 Samuel 22, David testifies of a God who rescued him from enemies, violence, and crushing pressure. Bethlehem was not the beginning of salvation. It was the moment salvation arrived in human form.
Christ our Savior saves. Jesus came on a clear mission to seek and save the lost. Salvation is not a religious accessory. It is a rescue operation. Jesus saves us from sin’s penalty, power, and destructive patterns. He translates us out of darkness and into a kingdom of life, freedom, and abundance.
Christ our Savior delivers. Deliverance is not optional or extreme. It is part of the gospel. Jesus came to destroy the works of darkness and break the enemy’s grip on our lives. Scripture declares that we have already been delivered from the power of darkness. The enemy may be loud, but he is not lord.
Christ our Savior preserves. Many believe Jesus can save and deliver, but struggle to trust His keeping power. Yet Scripture promises that no one can snatch us from His hand. Our stability rests not in our strength, but in His faithfulness. He keeps us, guards us, and preserves us now and forever.
At Christmas, we are not celebrating fragile hope. We are celebrating a strong Savior who saves, delivers, and preserves.
Watch the replay now at www.ahop.online. Get into our official webchurch tribe and get access to healing, deliverance, prayer and prophecy rooms, Connect groups and all of Pastor Jennifer’s teaching archives at www.ahop.online/webchurch.
