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  1. In Septuagint, the Greek word, representing different Hebrew words, has also the extended meaning of "stall" (2 Chronicles 32:28 Habakkuk 3:17); thus also in Luke 13:15, where the Revised Version margin has "manger." Old tradition says that Jesus was born in a cave in the neighborhood of Bethlehem; even so, a place for food for cattle may have ...

    • Manes

      MANES. ma'-nez (Manes): One of those who put away their...

    • The Manger Was Dirty.Link
    • The Manger Was Planned.Link
    • The Manger Was A Sign.Link
    • The Manger Was Glorious.Link
    • The Manger Is The Way of Discipleship.Link
    • The Manger Was Step One on The Calvary Road.Link

    Yes, we may be sure that Joseph and Mary cleaned it up as best they could. They, no doubt, padded it in some way to make a comfy little bed. But there is no way to romanticize this bed into anything other than a feeding trough for slobbering animals. The first bed for the Son of God was not a royal cradle. It was a common corn crib. It’s meant to h...

    At first, you might think it was a fluke of fate — a random misfortune. Because Luke says Mary “laid him in a manger, because there was no place for them in the inn” (Luke 2:7). But the way Luke tells the story, that won’t work. God had centuries to get ready for this birth. The prophet Micah lived seven hundred years before the birth of Jesus and ...

    The angel of the Lord said something to the shepherds that was almost too good to be true. To believe this and bear witness, they would need a sign. The angel gave it: Swaddling cloths? Every baby in Bethlehem was wearing swaddling cloths. That is not the sign. The sign is the manger. In fact, this must have sounded so wildly scandalous, the shephe...

    No sooner were the words out of the angel’s mouth — “you will find a baby . . . lying in a manger” — than the heavens exploded with praise: Glory to God! The Savior is in a feeding trough! Glory to God! The Messiah is in a feeding trough! Glory to God! The Lord is in a feeding trough! “Glory to God in the highest!” From the highest to the lowest! W...

    The angel of the Lord came to shepherds, not Pharisees. With whom is the Lord pleased? That word “pleased” (Greek eudokia) occurs one other place in Luke: Not the wise. Not the understanding. But the children. The ones who would take no offense at a baby in a feeding trough. The ones that would expect no better bed than their Savior: Except for a m...

    The Calvary road is downhill. Not because it gets easier, but because it gets lower. The Savior’s life starts low and ends lower. This is the point of Philippians 2:6–8: This is how the Savior saves. This is how the Messiah fulfills all the promises. This is how the Lord reigns: from infinite deity, to feeding trough, to final torments on the cross...

  2. Transliteration: urvah Definition: a manger, crib. NAS Exhaustive Concordance. Word Origin from arah, see uryah Definition a manger, crib NASB Translation pens (1), sheepfolds (1), stalls (2). Links. Interlinear Greek • Interlinear Hebrew • Strong's Numbers • Englishman's Greek Concordance • Englishman's Hebrew Concordance • Parallel ...

  3. Dec 25, 2017 · We see the connection between a manger and a sukkah in Genesis 33:17 where Jacob built booths (or tabernacles; Heb. succot or sukkot is the plural form of sukkah) for his livestock showing us that the Hebrew word sukkah (pl. sukkot) can also mean “livestock barn or manger” as well as a temporary habitation where Israelites dwell during the ...

  4. Discover the meaning of Manger in the Bible. Study the definition of Manger with multiple Bible Dictionaries and Encyclopedias and find scripture references in the Old and New Testaments.

  5. Oct 4, 2022 · The word “manger” appears four times in the New Testament. Luke is the only writer who uses the word, which he does three times in the second chapter of his Gospel and another time when he quotes Jesus. The first time he refers to a manger, it describes Jesus’ birth.

  6. Feb 14, 2022 · The noun φατνη (phatne) means manger. It occurs 4 times in the New Testament, see full concordance, thrice in reference to the manger which Mary laid Jesus. Once, in Luke 13:15, our word appears as synonym for the whole stall, and this has helped form the Christian myth that Jesus was born in one.

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