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THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO LUKE - Chapter 2 - Verse 7
Verse 7. Her first-born son. Whether Mary had any other children or not has been a matter of controversy. The obvious meaning of the Bible is that she had; and if this be the case, the word first-born is here to be taken in its common signification.
Swaddling clothes. When a child among the Hebrews was born, it was washed in water, rubbed in salt, and then wrapped in swaddling clothes; that is, not garments regularly made, as with us, but bands or blankets that confined the limbs closely, Eze 16:4. There was nothing peculiar in the manner in which the infant Jesus was treated.
Laid him in a manger. The word rendered "inn" in this verse means simply a place of halting, a lodging-place; in modern terms, a khan or caravanserai (Robinson's Bib. Res. in Palest., iii. 431). The word rendered "manger" means simply a crib or place where cattle were fed. "Inns," in our sense of the term, were anciently unknown in the East, and now they are not common. Hospitality was generally practised, so that a traveller had little difficulty in obtaining shelter and food when necessary. As travelling became more frequent, however, khans or caravanserais were erected for public use—large structures where the traveller might freely repair and find lodging for himself and his beast, he himself providing food and forage. Many such khans were placed at regular intervals in Persia. To such a place it was, though already crowded, that Joseph and Mary resorted at Bethlehem. Instead of finding a place in the "inn," or the part of the caravanserai where the travellers themselves found a place of repose, they were obliged to be contented in one of the stalls or recesses appropriated to the beasts on which they rode.
The following description of an Eastern inn or caravanserai, by Dr. Kitto, will well illustrate this passage:
"It presents an external appearance which suggests to
a European traveller the idea of a fortress, being
an extensive square pile of strong and lofty walls,
mostly of brick upon a basement of stone, with a
grand archway entrance. This leads . . . to a large
open area, with a well in the middle, and surrounded
on three or four sides with a kind of piazza
raised upon a platform 3 or 4 feet high, in the wall
behind which are small doors leading to the cells or
oblong chambers which form the lodgings. The cell, with
the space on the platform in front of it, forms the
domain of each individual traveller, where he is
completely secluded, as the apparent piazza is not
open, but is composed of the front arches of each
compartment. There is, however, in the centre of
one or more of the sides a large arched hall quite
open in front. . . The cells are completely unfurnished,
and have generally no light but from the door, and the
traveller is generally seen in the recess in front of
his apartment except during the heat of the day ....
Many of these caravanserais have no stables, the
cattle of the travellers being accommodated in the
open area; but in the more complete establishments . . .
there are . . . spacious stables, formed of
covered avenues extending between the back wall of
the lodging apartments and the outer wall of the whole
building, the entrance being at one or more of the
corners of the inner quadrangle. The stable is on
the same level with the court, and thus below the
level of the tenements which stand on the raised
platform. Nevertheless, this platform is allowed to
project behind into the stable, so as to form a bench
.... It also often happens that not only this bench
exists in the stable, forming a more or less narrow
platform along its extent, but also recesses
corresponding to these in front of the cells
toward the open area, and formed, in fact, by the
side-walls of these cells being allowed to project
behind to the boundary of the platform. These,
though small and shallow, form convenient retreats
for servants and muleteers in bad weather.
. . . Such a recess we conceive that Joseph and Mary
occupied, with their ass or mule—if they had one, as
they perhaps had—tethered in front .... it might be
rendered quite private by a cloth being stretched
across the lower part."
It may be remarked that the fact that Joseph and Mary were in that place, and under a necessity of taking up their lodgings there, was in itself no proof of poverty; it was a simple matter of necessity-there was no room at the inn. Yet it is worthy of our consideration that Jesus was born poor. He did not inherit a princely estate. He was not cradled, as many are, in a palace. He had no rich friends. He had virtuous, pious parents, of more value to a child than many riches. And in this we are shown that it is no dishonour to be poor. Happy is that child who, whether his parents be rich or poor, has a pious father and mother. It is no matter if he has not as much wealth, as fine clothes, or as splendid a house as another. It is enough for him to be as Jesus was, and God will bless him.
No room at the inn. Many people assembled to be enrolled, and the tavern was filled before Joseph and Mary arrived.
{a} "brought forth" Mt 1:25
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