The First Christmas: Myths and Reality

I. A Reality Check
Here’s a true-false quiz:
1. Mary and Joseph had to travel as quickly as possible to Bethlehem because Mary could have given birth at any moment.
2. The Bethlehem innkeeper was fully booked, and so Mary had to give birth to Jesus in the barn/stall nearby/behind the inn.
3. Initially, this experience must have been frightening and lonely for Mary and Joseph.
4. “The little Lord Jesus no crying he makes.”
5. The angels who appeared to the shepherds had wings.
How’d you do on the quiz? Check your answers below. (Some of these thoughts are taken from a talk I gave on what really happened that first Christmas.)
Marcus Borg, a member of the liberal Jesus Seminar, claims that the Gospels are in serious conflict: Jesus was born “in a stable” in Luke but in a home in Matthew (Marcus Borg [and N.T. Wright], The Meaning of Jesus: Two Visions [San Francisco: HarperSF, 1999], 180). As it turns out, this isn’t really a conflict at all. Contrary to the traditional Christmas story, Jesus was indeed born in a home! Borg’s claim is based on the notable King James Version’s mistranslation of Luke 2:7: “there was no room for them in the inn.” But the KJV rendering goes against Luke’s in(n)tention.
Over the centuries, the Christmas story has been re-cast and romanticized into a kind of Christian “mythology.” But what do the Scriptures really tell us about Jesus’ birth?
1. There would have been no inns in a backwater town like Bethlehem. They would be found along main roads or in cities.
2. The word for inn (katalyma) is the same one as the “guest room (of a private home)” mentioned in Mk. 14:14 and Lk. 22:11—the room where the last supper was eaten.
Mark 14:13-15: “Go into the city, and a man will meet you carrying a pitcher of water; follow him; and wherever he enters, say to the owner of the house, ‘The Teacher says, “Where is My *guest room* [katalyma] in which I may eat the Passover with My disciples?”’ And he himself will show you a large upper room furnished and ready; prepare for us there.”
Also, this word in Lk. 2:7 (“guest room”) is different from Lk. 10:34 (pandocheion = inn), where the beaten man was taken by the compassionate Samaritan. This inn had an innkeeper (pandocheus), and such inns would unquestionably located on a main thoroughfare between Jerusalem and Jericho. One commentary puts it this way, “The traditional picture of a surly innkeeper refusing admission to the needy couple is somewhat dubious.” (I. Howard Marshall, “Luke,” in *The New Bible Commentary: 21st Century Edition*, eds. R.T. France, D.A. Carson, et al. [Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1994], 984).
3. Joseph, no doubt being a considerate husband (cp. Mt. 1:19), would have taken ample time to find Mary a place to give birth, which is what Luke 2:6 indicates: While they were there [in Bethlehem], the days were completed for her to give birth. Mary gave birth after she had “fulfilled her days”—a duration of time. Although people seem to miss this, the passage clearly indicates ample passage of time in Bethlehem before the birth of Jesus.
4. In a culture that so valued hospitality, Joseph would have insulted his relatives by going to an inn. Rather, he would stay with his relations, who would readily have made room for his expectant wife—even if the guest room was crowded and the birth had to take place in the main living area. It would seem ludicrous, given the importance of hospitality in the Middle East, that Joseph would have no place to stay among his relatives—especially if he was “of the house and line of David” and if his wife was expecting. And if Joseph could not find a place for Mary after a few weeks or so, they could have gone back to Mary’s relative Elizabeth, who lived in the same region.
5. In Jesus’ day, animal sheds were typically attached to houses. In Palestine a manger was not normally found in a separate stable; rather, it was “in the main living room of a peasant house, where animals are brought in at night” (R.T. France, *The Evidence for Jesus* [Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1986], 159). New Testament scholar Kenneth Bailey (from whom I borrow heavily in this blog) notes that the manger Christ was laid in was “built into the floor of the raised terrace of the peasant home” (Kenneth Bailey, “The Manger and the Inn: The Cultural Background of Luke 2:7,” *Evangelical Review of Theology* 4 [1980]: 201-17). This stall-next-to-the-house arrangement is what Luke 13:15 presupposes: “. . . does not each of you on the Sabbath untie his ox or his donkey from the stall and lead him away to water him?”
6. When the wise men show up in Bethlehem, they come to a house. Matthew 2:11 states: “After coming into the house they saw the Child with Mary His mother; and they fell to the ground and worshiped Him. Then, opening their treasures, they presented to Him gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh.”
These gifts are highlighted as indicating the fulfillment of what the Old Testament scriptures anticipated. A new covenant was in the making—one involving Gentiles (cp. Zech. 14:16: “all those who survive of the nations . . . shall go up year after year to worship the King, the LORD of hosts”). So when the Gentile wise men/magi come from afar to visit the newly born king Jesus, they bring gifts of gold, frankincense, and myrrh. Of course, there were probably other gifts, but these are highlighted because of certain Old Testament references anticipating the coming in of the Gentiles to worship the true God and to honor his Messiah/King. Isaiah 60:6 speaks of the dawning of the restoration (when the “glory of the Lord has risen upon you” [60:1]). It mentions exiled “sons” coming “from afar” (4) and “the wealth of the nations will come to you” (5). Camels from Midian, Ephah, and Sheba (the south) will come: “They will bring gold and frankincense” (6). In the kingship/messianic Psalm 45 (cited in Hebrews 1), the king’s garments are fragrant with “myrrh” (45:8). This psalm speaks of Israel’s king as being over the “princes in all the earth” and “all peoples [Gentiles] will give you thanks forever and ever” (15-16). The magi’s coming signals the coming in of the Gentiles because the day of the Messiah has dawned. The end times have arrived.
Furthermore, the magi saw Jesus’ star rising in the east (Mat. 2:2). We anticipate this from Balaam’s prophecy of “the days to come” (Num. 22:14)—that “a star shall come forth from Jacob, and a scepter shall rise from Israel” (Num. 24:17).
The Gospels portray a Jesus who is reaching out to the Gentiles. He is telling the Jewish people to give up their nationalistic and social agenda and follow His agenda (N.T. Wright, The Challenge of Jesus [Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press,1999], 27). Jewish leaders were preoccupied with traditional symbols: land, temple, law (especially Sabbath and food laws), kinship (ethnic heritage) and blessing (material possessions). Jesus criticizes the entire temple system and pronounces judgment on it (symbolized by the temple-cleansing). It was necessarily tied to the old covenant with national Israel; Jesus complained about the failure of the ruling priests in when He cleansed the temple. Instead of being a place of prayer for Gentiles and for regathering Israel’s exiles, it fostered oppression and neglected the needy (Marvin Pate, et al., The Story of Israel: A Biblical Theology [Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2004], 167-8).
II. What of the Angels?
In a verse of the Christmas carol “It Came Upon a Midnight Clear,” we come upon these words about angels:
Still through the cloven skies they come
With peaceful wings unfurled,
And still their heavenly music floats
O’er all the weary world.
In the carol “Angels from the Realms of Glory,” they are called to “Wing your flight o’er all the earth.”
The Bible speaks of angelic beings such as cherubim and seraphim, which have wings (e.g., Isaiah 6). However, what most people don’t know is that the specific usage of the word “angels” in Scripture indicates that they do not have wings. They always appear in the form of men.
- Gen. 18-19: Three representatives of Yahweh come to check out the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah. The three appear to Abraham and then Lot (two come to him while the third goes to Gomorrah). Although they appear as “three men” (Gen. 18:2). Abraham immediately recognizes them as manifestations of the Lord. When they appear to Lot, (they are called “two angels” (Gen. 19:1), and Lot takes longer to recognize them. In Heb. 13:2, which refers to these passages, the author writes that some have “entertained angels without knowing it.” This suggests that these angels appear as men—without wings. If they had wings, they would surely be recognized!
- Judges 13:3-6: First, we read that “the angel of the LORD” (v. 3) appeared to Manoah’s wife (Samson’s mother). Then she reports to her husband: “A man of God came to me and his appearance was like the appearance of the angel of God, very awesome.”
- Daniel 3:24-28: Nebuchadnezzar sees “four men” in the fiery furnace (v. 25). He then says, “Blessed be the God of Shadrach, Meshach and Abed-nego, who has sent His angel and delivered His servants who put their trust in Him” (v. 28).
- Resurrection narratives: Although we read in the two of the Gospel resurrection narratives that angels are at the tomb (Matthew 28:1-5; “an angel of the Lord”; John 20:12: “[Mary Magdalene] saw two angels in white”). The other two Gospels speak of them as men (Mark 16:5: “they saw a young man sitting at the right, wearing a white robe”; Luke 24:4 “two men . . . in dazzling clothing”).
- Acts 10: An angel of God (10:3) appears to Cornelius in Acts 10, the angel is later on referred to as a man in shining clothes (10:30).
III. Docetism in Our Hymnody and Theology
This line from “Away in a Manger” is quite familiar to us: “The little Lord Jesus no crying he makes. . . .” This picture presents a Jesus who apparently never cried as an infant—and perhaps that he never soiled his diapers and never made a mess eating as baby. However, we must be careful about overemphasizing Jesus’ deity and underemphasizing his humanity. This is the heresy of “docetism.” (The word docetism is a derived from the Greek dokeō, meaning “(I) appear, seem.” The Christ seemed human but really wasn’t.
This is a version of Gnosticism, which came to full bloom in the second century AD. It emphasized the following ideas: (a) a secret, saving knowledge (gnōsis) or illumination is available only to a select “enlightened” few; ignorance, not sin, is the ultimate human problem; (b) the body/matter is evil, and the spirit/soul is good—a belief that tended to produce extreme self-denial (asceticism); (c) an eternal dualism exists between a good Being/God and an inferior evil being/god (who created matter); so the creator in Genesis is an inferior intermediary between the ultimate/true God (the Pleroma—“Fullness”) and this world; (d) history is unimportant and insignificant; if Jesus (the Christ) played any part in Gnostic belief systems, he only appeared to be human but was really divine; God couldn’t take on an evil human body or suffer on a cross.
We can commit the same Gnostic error by focusing on Jesus’ divinity and downplaying his humanity. The same applies to Jesus’ temptation. We may say, “Of course Jesus didn’t sin. He was God.” The Scriptures portray Jesus as someone who struggled; it was not a breeze for him to do the will of his Father. He was not play-acting:
- Hebrews 4:15: For we do not have a high priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but One who has been tempted in all things as we are, yet without sin.
- Hebrews 5:8: Although He was a Son, He learned obedience from the things which He suffered.
So, when you sing “Away in a Manger” this Christmas season, you may want to do what our family does—adjust the words a bit: “The little Lord Jesus *some* crying he makes”!
IV. Lessons from the Christmas Story
Let me summarize some lessons from this retelling of the Christmas story.
- Keep on reading and examining the Scriptures (cp. the Bereans in Acts 17). Let us make sure that we don’t let tradition prevent us from gaining fresh insights from Scripture or from adjusting our theology when this is called for.
- We must be careful not to Gnosticize/Docetize Jesus—as though he didn’t or can’t really identify with us.
- On the other hand, we should make not Jesus’ birth more pitiful or lowly than it actually was.
- We can still celebrate the condescension of Immanuel—God with us—even with these adjustments in our understanding of the first Christmas story.
- Biblical Contradiction? How Would You Respond?
- The Offense of Christmas
- On What Date Was Christ Born?
- Should Christian’s Play Santa?
- Should Christians Play Santa?
Print This Post

bethyada on 03 Dec 2008 at 1:36 am #
My answers before reading the rest of the post.
1. False
2. False (“inn” may be guest room)
3. Don’t know, but probably not.
4. Unlikely. How else does he ask for a feed?
5. Who knows. Some did, some didn’t.
bethyada on 03 Dec 2008 at 1:48 am #
Well, not bad. Interesting about the angels, though the appearance of the angelic host may no be totally analogous to, say, Abraham’s visitors.
I have read this account recently: The Manger and the Inn. Others may find it interesting, it was written in 1979.
I am not certain that the Magi visiting the house excludes an inn though. There is reason to think the Magi arrived at a different time to the shepherds, and not at the birth.
Some more questions about the Christmas story.
1. How many Magi?
2. How old was Jesus when he left Bethlehem?
3. Jesus was born during a Roman tax census. T/F
4. Jesus was born on December 25 (Julian). T/F
5. Jesus was born year 0 AD. T/F
Aaron on 03 Dec 2008 at 8:25 am #
Thanks Paul. It was illuminating for me. A question on the angels though. I agree that all the specific references of the word “angel” refer to beings that appear in the form of men. However, even though they are not cited as angels what are we to make of the “women” with stork “wings” in Zechariah 5:9:
“5Then the angel who talked with me came forward and said to me, “Lift your eyes and see what this is that is going out.” 6And I said, “What is it?” He said, “This is the basket that is going out.” And he said, “This is their iniquity in all the land.” 7And behold, the leaden cover was lifted, and there was a woman sitting in the basket! 8And he said, “This is Wickedness.” And he thrust her back into the basket, and thrust down the leaden weight on its opening.
9Then I lifted my eyes and saw, and behold, two women coming forward! The wind was in their wings. They had wings like the wings of a stork, and they lifted up the basket between earth and heaven.”
It has seemed to me that this was the one place where Scripture testified to angels also coming in the form of women and wings. But, I have not read up on this reference. What do you think?
JohnT3 on 03 Dec 2008 at 9:52 am #
This was good thanks for posting it. One of the things I teach people about regarding the “Christmas Manger Scenes” is that the Wise men were not there on the night that Christ was born and that there were more than three of them and scripture doesn’t name them.
I do admit that I do have a little fun with this one and call them Myshack, Yourshack and a Bungalow.
The Gospel accounts list that the Magi frightened the Jews and Herod when they appeared. Are three guys on camels going to frighten anyone? They were the size of a small army possibly and that would scare everyone. Three comes from the gifts that were offered – Gold, Frankincense and Myrrh.
Then when all is said and done Herod after learning he was duped orders all children from 3 and younger killed. Why? Because when the scribes tell him about the Messiah’s birth he realizes that his birth had happened about three years prior. And being the paranoid animal that he was decides to kill the entire group to cover his bases.
The Patriot » Blog Archive » Misconceptions of the first Christmas on 03 Dec 2008 at 10:02 am #
[...] Parchment and Pen has an article this morning about misconceptions of the first Christmas. I started not to read it because so often the same things are brought out every year: the Bible mentions three gifts from the wise men but it doesn’t say there were three wise men, etc. But the Parchment and Pen brings up some things I’ve never heard. [...]
Paul Copan on 03 Dec 2008 at 10:38 am #
Thanks to you all for the interesting and humorous comments!
To be sure, there are lots more questions we can raise, Beth. Due to the monk Dionysius Exiguus’ faulty calculations, Jesus wasn’t born in “0,” but in 4/5 BC. The census itself is tricky. known censuses under Augustus were carried out in Gaul, Egypt, and Cyrene.
Interesting point about Zechariah 5, even though these surreal creatures aren’t identified as angels, as is the angel conversing with the prophet.
Thanks for your comments as well, John, and elaborating further on the magi.
Morning Links : Minor Thoughts on 03 Dec 2008 at 11:27 am #
[...] Copan busts some “First Christmas” myths over at Reclaiming the [...]
Susan on 03 Dec 2008 at 3:28 pm #
I like this Paul! Sometimes the Christmas story can become so rote that it doesn’t penetrate our heart any longer. As I read this, I was thinking that I might print this, and highlight it, so that I can read the parts to my children which would be of interest to them….. to get their thinkers working (!). There are several great topics here which I’m sure could be translated into junior-sized terms….even the concept of Christ’s humanity. Gosh Paul, ever think of writing a children’s book? You could bounce it off your own brood!……something for the little ones, yet stimulating for the older ones as well.
I was also thinking that maybe I don’t need to buy the animals for the manger scene after all….. nor the stable.
I’m not so sure I will clip the angel’s wings just yet though.
“The First Christmas: Myths and Reality” | The Daily Scroll on 03 Dec 2008 at 7:44 pm #
[...] Myths and Reality” December 3, 2008 Paul Copan offers a lengthy but very helpful post at Parchment and Pen: “Over the centuries, the Christmas story has been re-cast and romanticized into a kind of [...]
learning on 03 Dec 2008 at 9:52 pm #
Paul is this from the talk you gave? If not is there anyway you post your notes from the talk you gave? Thanks.
Aaron C. Rathburn on 04 Dec 2008 at 8:38 am #
“On the other hand, we should make Jesus’ birth more pitiful or lowly than it actually was.
That’s probably not what you meant to say. I just wanted to point it out so you could tweak it =). (should = shouldn’t?)
Tom on 04 Dec 2008 at 8:57 am #
Paul,
Good job as a mythbuster. In your conclusion you said
“On the other hand, we should make Jesus’ birth more pitiful or lowly than it actually was.”
I’m guessing that was a typo and you meant “shouldn’t”
Paul Copan on 04 Dec 2008 at 9:11 am #
Thanks to you for your comments (and suggested correction, which is forthcoming).
Susan, thanks for your comments. One of these days I might get around to a children’s book–something my familiy has been urging me to do for years. My wife keeps saying that maybe *this* book will be my best-seller!
We’ll see….
ricky on 04 Dec 2008 at 5:16 pm #
Very interesting. I think we all tend to read alot into the Christmas story instead of taking it like Luke and Matthew meant for us to take it. (the translaters didn’t help in this respect!) Thanks!
Paul Copan on 04 Dec 2008 at 7:34 pm #
Thanks for the further comments!
“Learning,” if you’d like to get an electronic file of my talk, you can just email me through my website (www.paulcopan.com). This was a small study I gave to a group at my church awhile back.
Intersected » Blog Archive » The First Christmas: Myths and Reality on 05 Dec 2008 at 11:08 am #
[...] Great article about some common misconceptions about Christ-mas. Here’s a quiz. Are the following true? [...]
First Christmas « Tough Questions Answered on 09 Dec 2008 at 10:30 pm #
[...] Check out this interesting post on what the first Christmas was probably like, contrary to some of the myths that have grown up [...]
C. Barton on 10 Dec 2008 at 4:13 pm #
A common thread among Biblical researchers has the Migdal Eder as the most likely place of Jesus’ birth; this place near Bethlehem was where the special lambs were born – the lambs destined for sacrifice within Jerusalem.
This strikes a clear note with me, because Jesus was and is our sacrificial lamb, as it says in Revelation, “Behold the Lamb who was slain . . .”!
A Slightly More Fun December Test « Dawg Cogitans on 11 Dec 2008 at 1:32 pm #
[...] December 11, 2008 by ngilmour The First Christmas: Myths and Reality [...]
David McKay on 11 Dec 2008 at 6:44 pm #
Angels wings
I always think about angels at Christmas and ponder why people today think angels and fairies are more or less the same.
In the Bible angels are of masculine appearance [sort of like God's soldiers] and are scary.
Whereas people depict angels like feminine fairies, who wouldn’t hurt a fly.
And I do wonder about angels’ wings.
I have been reading through the Bible for the 7th time and have not encountered stuff about angels wings yet, however Gabriel is said to fly in Daniel.
Daniel 9:21 while I was speaking in prayer, the man Gabriel, whom I had seen in the vision at the first, came to me in swift flight at the time of the evening sacrifice.
C. Barton on 12 Dec 2008 at 2:02 pm #
God’s angels, the “Mighty Ones” can fly and I think do a whole lot of other awesome things that we, bound by the natural laws in our bodies, cannot do. Whether or not they are depicted with wings is up to God, I guess. Some of them carry a sword, too!
As awesome or scary or magnificent as they are, the Psalms tell us that, “The Lord is mightier than these!”
I think it is interesting that Herod had not a clue about Jesus’ birth and whereabouts, but the common folk, shepherds and such, had a special message delivered to them by the angels!
Paul Copan on 12 Dec 2008 at 2:21 pm #
Thanks for the further comments. Yes, those (flying, wingless!) angels aren’t to be tinkered with. Their presence tends to create fear and dread.
Stephen on 18 Dec 2008 at 5:17 pm #
I dont know if anyone else has pointed this out as I havent had time to read all of the responses but Matthew and Luke are not in conflict with where the baby was born. If you combine both stories its easy to see. Matthew does NOT say Jesus was born in a house, it says the wise men visited them at a house. If you compare that with Luke, the wise men are not even mentioned in Luke. But Luke does show that they were in Bethlehem long enough to perform everything according to the law which means at least 8 days but could be much longer. It is very feasable that he was not actually born inside the house but then by the time the magi got there he was in a house. Especially since Josephs family was from Bethleham. I’m sure as people started to clear out after the census there was pleanty of room. This is especially true since Herod killed the babies under 2 years old apon realizing that the wise men didnt come back to tell him where they found Jesus.
So basically what you have is Matthew talks about the wise men (magi) and Luke talks about the sheperds. And it never says that the wise men arrived at the initial birth, it could have been any time before they left Bethlehem.
Anyway, not that any of that really matters, but I thought I’d bring more light onto the subject since I’ve never felt there was any conflict at all between the two stories like the author of this writing suggested there is.
Stephen Ley on 24 Dec 2008 at 11:28 am #
I always cringe when we sing “Away in a Manger” at church, and refer to it half-jokingly as the Christmas carol only a Gnostic could love. I’m afraid several other of our well-loved holiday chestnuts flirt with the same errors.
I so appreciate the gospel proclaiming and theologically sound lyrics of Isaac Watts and Charles Wesley at this time of year especially!
oliver marks on 26 Dec 2008 at 12:33 am #
I have heard a few emotional dramas depicting the birth of Christ as horrid and wretched, so the clarification on” inn “and”guest room” ties in a few things for me, which relieves me in that it seems odd that the birth trumpeted by angels would be so bleak,and that the God who remembers the deer in labour deserts Mary and Joseph at that time .my conclusion for the stories is that too often X’ns like to see themselves as wretched, instead of as sons of God
Paul Copan on 06 Jan 2009 at 12:06 pm #
Thanks for the further comments, Stephen and Oliver.
You’re right, Oliver. The story isn’t as pathetic as is typically told. Luke’s text indicates that there wasn’t a rushed labor and delivery or not being welcomed in Bethlehem. As to Christian theology (anthropology, to be more specific), I would add that we shouldn’t let the fact of our adoption as God’s sons and daughters eclipse another fact–that we are deeply flawed and remain in a fallen condition, though God by his grace continues to transform us. In 1 Timothy 1:15, Paul calls himself the “chief” of sinners. Or as Martin Luther said, we’re simultaneously justified and sinners (simul iustus et peccator).
As Stephen points out, the magi likely came later, but the clear implication (knowing what we do about life in first-century Palestine), Joseph would have come to his own family/relatives and thus a home–certainly not an inn in a small town like Bethlehem. Given the importance of hospitality in the Middle East, especially in light of Mary’s being with child, a (relative’s) home setting at the birth and when the magi visit is strongly suggested by various factors: “no room in the *guest room*”; stalls attached to houses; Joseph’s coming to his own family; the importance of hospitality in the Middle East. Luke and Matthew fit together quite nicely–the home of Joseph’s relatives being implied in both accounts.
I would add to Stephen’s comment that “Away in a Manger” is indeed one of the more tepid Christmas songs. And let’s hear it for Isaac Watts and John Wesley!
Well, that’s all folks. On to this month’s posting—on N.T. Wright.
Christmas-ing « ἐν Χριστῷ Ἰησοῦ (in Christ Jesus) on 09 Dec 2009 at 5:22 pm #
[...] Copan: The First Christmas: Myths and Reality By the way, as I find more substantive and meaningful content on the Christmas season I’ll [...]