A Child Is Born

Sermon Series Graphics

What’s included in our Sermon Series Graphics?

(File Types: Photoshop & PNG)

  • Main Screen Graphic (3840×2160)
  • Social Media Post (1080×1350)
  • Social Media Story (1080×1920)
  • 2 Background Templates
  • 2 Lower Thirds Template
  • Bumper Video ( 3840×2160.mp4 + After Effects File)
  • New – Canva Templates (All Dimensions)

A Child Is Born

A Child Is Born is not just a seasonal sentiment—it’s the headline of heaven’s greatest announcement. It’s the fulfillment of ages, the embodiment of prophecy, the miracle that altered the course of history. In those four simple words, we find the collision of divinity and humanity, eternity and time, heaven and earth. It is a declaration that God came close, wrapped in the most vulnerable form—an infant.

This theme invites your church into the sacred mystery of the Incarnation. Before there were Christmas trees and lights, before choirs and carols, there was a manger. And in that manger lay the hope of the world. The birth of Jesus wasn’t just a beautiful story—it was a rescue mission. A divine descent. A holy arrival that brought peace to chaos, light to darkness, and life to the lifeless.

A Child Is Born reminds us that God didn’t come with spectacle or military might. He came through humility, swaddled in simplicity, born into poverty, and announced first to shepherds. The humility of the moment was matched only by the weight of its meaning. This wasn’t just any child—this was the Son of God. The long-awaited Messiah. The One whose very presence fulfilled the cries of generations who had waited in longing.

In a world increasingly noisy and distracted, this theme offers your church a chance to pause. To breathe. To reflect. And to remember. Christmas is not about bigger and better—it’s about something eternal made personal. It’s about a holy interruption that continues to change lives. This is the moment that split time in two. The arrival of Jesus, not as a doctrine or idea, but as a Person—Immanuel, God with us.

Visually, this collection echoes that truth with warmth and reverence. The design is not loud or trendy—it’s timeless. Each piece is created to support your worship experience, to invite your congregation into the deeper meaning of the season, and to draw their eyes and hearts toward Jesus.

What’s Included

  • Main Screen Graphic (3840×2160)
  • Social Post Graphic (1080×1350)
  • Social Story Graphic (1080×1920)
  • Two Background Templates (perfect for Scripture slides, lyrics, or message points)
  • Two Lower Third Templates (for video overlays or livestream use)
  • Photoshop (.PSD) Files
  • High-Resolution PNGs

Who Is This For

  • Pastors preparing Advent or Christmas sermon series
  • Creative directors designing Christ-centered visuals
  • Media teams needing easy-to-edit, meaningful graphics
  • Volunteers looking for plug-and-play assets that carry theological weight
  • Churches creating a worshipful, story-rich Christmas atmosphere

These church graphics and church media graphics are built not just for visual appeal, but for theological depth. Each template and design serves a single aim—to glorify Christ and support your church’s message. Whether you’re a seasoned creative director or a solo pastor doing it all, these tools are easy to use, fully editable, and ready for Sunday.

The high-resolution PNGs are plug-and-play, ideal for screens, presentations, and social posts. The Photoshop files give you full control to customize as needed, ensuring your visuals match your church’s unique voice. From large sanctuaries to living rooms, these elements scale to your space and support your service without distraction.

But the heart of this theme isn’t found in the pixels. It’s found in the message. That in the quiet hills of Judea, heaven chose vulnerability. God took on flesh—not as a distant deity, but as a child who would one day carry the cross. That’s what we remember when we say, “A Child Is Born.” We remember that hope has a name. That peace is a Person. That love came near.

Isaiah 9:6 says it plainly and powerfully: “For to us a child is born, to us a son is given…” This is not poetic language for its own sake—it’s a prophetic declaration of divine intent. And that intent has not changed. God still draws near. Jesus still enters the humble places. And His presence still brings peace where there once was fear.

This theme isn’t about sentimentality. It’s about sacred truth. In a season often marked by performance and production, these visuals help re-center your church on the reality that Jesus came to rescue, redeem, and restore. They’re not meant to impress, but to invite. Not to distract, but to declare.

A Child Is Born helps your community reconnect with the deeper rhythms of the season. The longing of Advent. The quiet of the manger. The joy of good news proclaimed to all people. And the personal transformation that comes when Christ is born not just in a story, but in a soul.

So whether you’re leading a candlelight service, launching a sermon series, or simply trying to tell the Christmas story in a way that feels fresh and faithful, this visual collection can serve you. It’s not flashy or overdone—it’s thoughtful, reverent, and rooted in Scripture. Just like the moment it celebrates.

This Christmas, let your visuals tell the truth with grace and beauty. Let them echo what the angels announced: “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace among those with whom He is pleased.” Let them remind your church that this isn’t just a holiday—it’s holy ground.

Because the child born in Bethlehem is still changing lives today. He still brings joy to the weary, comfort to the brokenhearted, and purpose to the lost. He is still the Prince of Peace, the Wonderful Counselor, the Mighty God.

And He is still worth celebrating—with every sermon, every song, every screen.

Let your church experience that wonder again. Let them encounter not just a beautiful message, but the beautiful Messiah Himself.

A Child Is Born—and everything has changed.