Advent Season - The Significance of the Manger

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Advent Season -2012 The Significance of the Manger Scripture Thought for the Week: “When the angels had left them and gone into heaven, the shepherds said to one another, „Lets go to Bethlehem and see this thing that has happ ened, which the Lord has told us a bout.So they hurrie d off and found Mary and Joseph, and the baby, who was lying in a manger.” Luke 2:15 -16 Believe it or not, the above picture is a photograph of a manger that possibly resembled the one that our Lord Je sus was pla ced in after his birth. Although our nativity scenes have the manger portrayed from different materials, it would be reasonable to assume the manger the Christ Child used was one made from clay and mixed with straw or stones held together with mud. After all, a manger was a feeding trough for animals kept in the stables. After researching the actual meaning of the word, it appears that this photograph was taken in Megiddo where this manger was used in the stables of King Ahab. (The photograph and information was recorded by David Padfield in an article entitled, “Away in a Manger…”.) As I looked at the photograph of this manger, I thought about this newborn infant being wrapped in swaddling clothes and placed in this feeding trough. The manger looks to be cold and ha rd and brought to mind the stark realization that babies enter a world that is cold and hard. And this

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Advent Season -2012

The Significance of the Manger

Scripture Thought for the Week:  “When the angels had left them and gone into 

heaven, the shepherds said to one another, „Let‟s go to Bethlehem and see this thing 

that has happened, which the Lord has told us about.‟ So they hurried off and found 

Mary and Joseph, and the baby, who was lying in a manger.” Luke 2:15 -16 

Believe it or not, the above picture is a photograph of a manger that possibly

resembled the one that our Lord Jesus was placed in after his birth. Although our

nativity scenes have the manger portrayed from different materials, it would be

reasonable to assume the manger the Christ Child used was one made from clay and

mixed with straw or stones held together with mud. After all, a manger was a

feeding trough for animals kept in the stables.

After researching the actual meaning of the word, it appears that this photographwas taken in Megiddo where this manger was used in the stables of King Ahab.

(The photograph and information was recorded by David Padfield in an article 

entitled, “Away in a Manger…”.)  As I looked at the photograph of this manger, I

thought about this newborn infant being wrapped in swaddling clothes and placed in

this feeding trough. The manger looks to be cold and hard and brought to mind the

stark realization that babies enter a world that is cold and hard. And this

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particular baby, the Son of the Most High God, has quite a difficult road to travel

for the next thirty-three years. Research notes that the Greek word for manger

explains it is “the ledge or projection in the end of the room used as a stall on 

which the hay or other food of the animals of travelers was placed.”  

Remember a couple of weeks ago when I wrote about the significance of the bread?The Bread of Heaven, Jesus Christ, is our essential provision. Just as the body

cannot exist without the staple of bread, so the spiritual soul cannot exist without

the Bread of Heaven. There is a great significance in the birth of Jesus in a lowly

stable and His placement in a stone, cold manger. He is the Breath of Heaven, the

Bread of Life which has come into the world to feed our hungry spiritual souls and

breathe new life into our lost world. He has called all persons from various

backgrounds, color, creeds, etc., to surround Him on this momentous occasion to

celebrate His coming as a baby. By a stunning star that lit up the entire sky, the

Light of the World garnered attention and drew men to Himself from shepherds to

wise men and all that would hear the message down through the ages.

Even today, Jesus stands at the door of your heart and knocks for entrance. He

will not force Himself into your life, but choosing Him is life….life everlasting. Dear

friends, please call on the name of the one who can save you from eternal darkness

and revive your soul. For the Bible plainly promises, “If we confess our sins, he is

faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.” 

I John 1:9

As we draw closer to the actual celebration of the birth of Jesus, may attention be

placed on our spiritual gain rather than on our material gathering of goods. May weshow forth our benevolence to those who are hurting, hungry and in need of a

friend during the coming weeks and extended into the New Year. And may we

remember and pray for all the families that lost loved ones this past week in

Newtown, CT. God, grant them peace.

Lord, thank you for the opportunity once again to reflect on Your birth. When 

babies are born today we shower them with the best life has to offer and 

money can buy so that they can be laid in warm, soft, beautiful surroundings 

of comfort. Father, as I view this picture of a possible bed where you spent 

your first hours after entering into this human world, I realize fully You did 

not come to be comforted, but to comfort. Your purpose has always been to 

seek and to save the lost. Being born as a baby was only the beginning of 

that human journey that led to a horrible death on a cross. Lord, as we 

remember your birth in the coming weeks, help us to remember to thank you 

each time we view a nativity scene or hear a Christmas carol sung or see the 

beautiful twinkling lights that bring warm memories and light into our homes.

Father, please be with all those moms, dads, brothers, sisters, grandmas,

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 grandpas, husbands and loved ones that are in the depths of loss this weekend 

and in the days to come. As I can‟t possibly find the words to describe what 

I‟m feeling, I can‟t imagine what is transpiring within their hearts and minds.

Please minister to them through the Holy Spirit of God and anoint them with 

 peace to get through each day and may they find comfort in knowing their 

babies are being rocked by Jesus Christ. In whose name I pray, Amen.