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  1. Nov 30, 2017 · Manger comes from the Latin word for chew or eat. It refers to a trough where horses and donkeys and cattle ate. For example, Luke uses it in Luke 13:15: The Lord answered him, “You hypocrites! Does not each of you on the Sabbath untie his ox or his donkey from the manger and lead it away to water it?” And in the most famous Christmas ...

  2. 1. Baby Jesus lying in a manger was a sign to the shepherds (Luke 2:12, 16). He was found, not on a throne, but in a manger! 2. “God shook the world with a babe, not a bomb.” WHY A BABY IN A MANGER? A. Jesus entered this world just as each one of us did . . . As a newborn baby, as a newborn infant. 1. “A baby.” That’s all the Greek says.

  3. Manger — (Luke 2:7, 12, 16), the name (Gr. phatne, rendered “stall” in Luke 13:15) given to the place where the infant Redeemer was laid. It seems to have been a stall or crib for feeding cattle. Stables and mangers in our modern sense were in ancient times unknown in the East.

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  4. Why was Jesus born in a manger? Luke 2:7 “and she gave birth to her firstborn, a son. She wrapped him in cloths and placed him in a manger, because there was no room for them in the inn.” Have you ever stopped to consider why God allowed His only son to be born in a lowly manger?

  5. Oct 27, 2022 · When Jesus was born, Luke tells us that Mary laid him in something called a manger . The word used for manger is the Latin word munducare, which means “to eat.” When our Savior left the comfort of Heaven and his earthly mother’s womb, his first resting place on earth doubled as a feeding trough for livestock.

  6. It means a crib or feeding trough; but according to Schleusner its real signification in the New Testament is the open court-yard attached to the inn or khan, in which the cattle would be shut at night, and where the poorer travellers might unpack their animals and take up their lodging, when they mere either by want of means excluded from the h...

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  8. God in the Manger: The Miraculous Birth of Christ. John MacArthur Thomas Nelson, 2001 192 pages. A Brief Book Summary from TGC. By Casey Croy. Overview. God in the Manger contains exegetical studies of the nativity narratives within Matthew and Luke’s Gospels and other passages related to the birth of Jesus.

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