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No Asses or Oxen: "Nativity a Legend"
by Jordan Yerman | December 20, 2007 at 08:35 am
293 views | 0 Recommendations | 1 comment
The Archbishop of Canterbury, in an interview with BBC Radio 5's Simon Mayo, described the Nativity story as "a legend", and debunking all those little details of Christ's birth that grace Christmas cards and pageant stages around the world.
Dr Rowan Williams has claimed there was little evidence that the Magi even existed and there was certainly nothing to prove there were three of them or that they were kings.He said the only reference to the wise men from the East was in Matthew's gospel and the details were very vague.
Dr Williams said: "Matthew's gospel says they are astrologers, wise men, priests from somewhere outside the Roman Empire, that's all we're really told. It works quite well as legend."
The Archbishop went on to dispel other details of the Christmas story, adding that there were probably no asses or oxen in the stable.
ABC It is… well, what's happening there one of the gospels quotes a prophecy that a virgin will conceive a child. Now the original Hebrew doesn't have the word virgin, it's just a young woman, but that's the prophecy that's quoted from the Old Testament in support of the story which is, in any case, about a birth without a human father, so it's not that it rests on mistranslation; St Matthew's gone to his Greek version of the bible and said "Oh, 'virgin'; sounds like the story I know," and put it in.
SM So you've got the Virgin Mary, Jesus: Joseph?
ABC Joseph, yes, again, the Gospels are pretty consistent that that's his father's name;
SM So we're panning out now'; shepherds? They're with their sheep and the oxes and asses?
ABC Pass on the oxes and asses; they don't figure very strongly in the gospels, so I can live without the ox and asses.







Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (1)
at 08:52 on December 20th, 2007
That second video isn't nearly as blasphemous as the title suggests.