Advent

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)

Advent

Advent is a sacred threshold—the beginning of the Church’s story and the gentle echo of eternity breaking into time. It is a season that does not shout but whispers, inviting us to pause, to breathe, and to wait with holy expectation. While the world rushes into celebration, Advent teaches us to slow down and make room. It reminds us that before joy comes preparation. Before glory, stillness. Before the light, a longing.

This visual theme steps into that sacred space—not to distract, but to direct. To help your church reorient to the deeper rhythm of the Gospel story. These church graphics and church media graphics are designed to hold space for worship, reflection, and anticipation. Their simplicity serves as an intentional invitation—come, prepare Him room.

Advent, meaning “arrival,” is a time of watching and waiting. It’s not just about looking back to Bethlehem—it’s about looking forward to the return of Christ. It holds the tension between the already and the not yet. Jesus has come—and yet we still wait. We celebrate what God has done, even as we long for what He has promised.

Each week of Advent carries its own sacred theme: hope, peace, joy, and love. These aren’t just nice words—they are lifelines in a weary world. They speak to the deepest parts of our humanity and the deepest needs of our hearts. And in Jesus, each one finds its fulfillment. He is the Hope that won’t disappoint. The Peace that calms the storm. The Joy that overflows. The Love that never lets go.

This visual collection reflects that depth. It’s not just a set of church motion graphics—it’s a liturgical companion. A visual liturgy that reinforces the message being preached and the Scriptures being read. Designed with soft tones, contemplative layout, and reverent design, these graphics help set the tone not just for a service, but for a whole season of worship.

What’s Included

  • Main Screen Graphic (3840×2160)
  • Social Post Graphic (1080×1350)
  • Social Story Graphic (1080×1920)
  • Two Background Templates (for liturgy, Scripture, or announcements)
  • Two Lower Third Templates (for video overlays or livestream captions)
  • Photoshop (.PSD) Files
  • High-Resolution PNGs

Who Is This For

  • Pastors walking their congregation through a weekly Advent series
  • Creative directors seeking liturgically-aligned visuals with theological depth
  • Media teams building a cohesive visual experience from screen to stream
  • Volunteers looking for ready-to-use graphics for social or service media
  • Churches wanting to set a sacred, contemplative tone during the Christmas season

These assets are designed for accessibility and excellence. The high-resolution PNGs are plug-and-play, easily dropped into presentation software, online platforms, or service slides. The fully layered Photoshop files allow for complete customization—ideal for teams wanting to add Scripture references, sermon titles, or church-specific branding. Whether you’re serving in a cathedral, a storefront, or your living room, these graphics help transform any space into a sanctuary.

But more than technical ease, these visuals help your community enter into a sacred story. They visually represent what Advent is all about: preparation. Not just logistical preparation—but spiritual. Preparing our hearts for Christ. For His presence in our lives, our churches, our world.

Advent is a countercultural invitation. In a season where the culture screams for more—more speed, more noise, more consumption—Advent calls us to less. Less distraction. Less hurry. Less self. It is the discipline of making space so that we might not miss what matters most.

These church graphics are not meant to dominate attention but to foster reverence. The layouts are clean, the visuals are grounded, the tone is pastoral. They whisper the same invitation Advent does: Come near. Look up. Wait well.

Each graphic can serve multiple purposes—anchor your sermon slides, introduce weekly themes, guide your social media presence, or lead devotionals. Use them for each of the four Sundays of Advent, or as a cohesive visual arc throughout the season. Their consistent style provides clarity and unity, creating a calm visual space that matches the spiritual tone of Advent itself.

Consider using the main screen graphic as a visual centerpiece throughout December. Let it accompany your Scripture readings, Advent candle lightings, and weekly reflections. Use the background templates during prayer, worship, or response times. The lower thirds work beautifully for livestreaming services or enhancing Scripture moments on-screen. The social templates allow your message to reach your people throughout the week—an encouraging reminder that the season isn’t confined to Sunday.

And behind every visual, let the meaning of Advent ring clear.

Let your people be reminded that Jesus came into a world that was waiting—just like ours. A world marked by suffering, silence, and unanswered questions. And it was into that world that the cry of a newborn broke the silence. That same Jesus is still coming near—to weary families, broken systems, lonely hearts, and distracted minds.

In this season, your church has the chance to do something different. To set a different tone. Not perform, but prepare. Not entertain, but equip. These visuals are tools for that mission. They support your message. They clear the noise. They gently refocus eyes and hearts on what—and who—really matters.

Let this Advent be one where your church doesn’t rush to Christmas, but lingers in longing. Where each week builds in meaning, culminating not in hype, but in holy awe.

  • Week 1: Hope—Not based in optimism, but in the character of a faithful God
  • Week 2: Peace—Not the absence of conflict, but the presence of Christ
  • Week 3: Joy—Not temporary delight, but deep-rooted gladness in God
  • Week 4: Love—Not sentiment, but sacrifice; not fleeting, but forever

Use these themes in your teaching, music, and prayer. Let your visuals echo your message and deepen the experience for your congregation. Help them not just hear the story—but feel it. Enter it. Live it.

Because Advent is more than a countdown. It’s a calling. A call to be people of expectation. A people who know how to wait with purpose. A people who light candles not just for tradition’s sake, but to say with our whole being: “The Light has come—and is coming again.”

May these graphics help your church experience that light. May they draw attention not to themselves, but to the One we are waiting for. And may your services this season be marked by a holy sense of preparation, as together you declare:

Come, Lord Jesus. Come quickly.