What is wrong with this picture (of the Nativity)?

by John Holbrook Jr.
A Biblical View, Blog #072 posted December 24, 2018, edited March 10, 2021.

This blog began with an attempt to create a Christmas card. I searched for a drawing or painting that depicted the adoration of the newborn Yeshua (or Jesus) by either the shepherds or the Magi with both accuracy and artistic merit. Surprisingly, my search proved fruitless. What I did find, however, was a picture that I could use as a teaching tool.

The picture shows the Magi in the manger with both angels and the Star of Bethlehem in the sky above. It is a nice composition, with the focus on mother and child despite the power of the star’s light. The painter’s warm tones create a pleasant and peaceful atmosphere which draws one into the scene. Unfortunately, the depiction is inaccurate. The Magi never visited the manger, and the star never stood in the sky over the manger.

Here is what really happened in the Middle East in late 2 BC.

1 – Events Surrounding the Birth of the Christ Child

1A – The Orchestration of the Planets

On August 27th, Jupiter (the Father) and Mars (the Warrior) conjoined, with Mercury (the Messenger) and Venus (the Mother) nearby. Together the four planets constituted what in astrological circles is known as a “massing of the planets” in the constellation Leo (the Lion). At the same time, the Sun was entering the constellation Virgo (the Virgin).

1B – The Annunciation to the Shepherds

On August 28th, which was Tishri 1, the start of the seventh month in the Jewish calendar, and which is called Rosh-Hashanah or the Day of Trumpets, a group of shepherds were tending their flocks by night in the fields outside Bethlehem. Suddenly, the Angel of the Lord appeared over their heads and announced, “Fear not, for, behold, I bring you tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people. For unto you is born this day in the City of David a Savior which is Christ the Lord. And this shall be a sign unto you. Ye shall find the babe wrapped in swaddling clothes, lying in a manger.” Then around him appeared “a multitude of the heavenly host, praising God….”[1]

1C – The Adoration of the Shepherds

Later on August 28th, the shepherds abandoned their flocks and went into Bethlehem to visit the newborn child, whom they found in the stable that was adjacent to an inn. On bended knee, they adored “the babe lying in a manger.” [2]

1D – The Home of the Holy Family in Bethlehem

Soon after the Christ Child’s birth, the Holy Family moved from the inn’s stable to a house elsewhere in the city.

1E – The Star of Bethlehem

During the next four months, Jupiter moved westward from the company of Mercury, Mars, and Venus to a position over Bethlehem, where it stopped for six days (roughly December 22nd to 28th) – having reached a stationary point between its progression and regression with respect to Earth. From the perspective of Jerusalem at dawn, the normal time for astronomical observations, Jupiter (then a morning star) would have occupied the meridian position at an elevation of 68 degrees above the southern horizon, which would have put it in the abdomen of Virgo (the Virgin) and directly over Bethlehem. In addition, the Sun reached the Winter Solstice on December 21/22 and therefore was also standing still in the sky.[3]

1F – The Adoration of the Magi

In the lands to the east of Israel, the Magi (or wisemen) traveled from their homelands in the east to Israel in the West. Armenian tradition indicates that there were three of them – possibly because they were bearing three gifts (gold, frankincense, and myrrh[4]) – and identifies them as Balthasar of Arabia, Melchior of Persia, and Gaspar of India

Initially the Magi traveled to Jerusalem, where they met with Herod.[5]

The Magi then traveled to Bethlehem, where they probably arrived on December 25, 2 BC. There they visited the home of the Holy Family, where they adored the Christ Child and laid their gifts at His feet.

2 – The Most Appropriate Scenes for Christmas Cards

Thus, in my view, the three scenes that are most appropriate for use at Christmas time are the following:

The Annunciation to the Shepherds on the evening of August 28, 2 BC, in which the Angel of the Lord appears to the shepherds who are tending their flocks in the fields outside Bethlehem. The angel is hovering just over their heads and proclaiming the good tidings of the birth of Jesus.[6]

The Adoration of the Shepherds later on the night of August 28, 2 BC, in which the shepherds on bended knees adore “the babe lying in a manger.” [7]

The Adoration of the Magi on December 25, 2 BC, in which the three Magi present their gifts to the Christ child in a domestic setting, with the Star of Bethlehem in the sky above the house and the wisemen bowing before Him.

Here are three portrayals of those scenes.

2A – Annunciation to the Shepherds

by Anonymous

2B – Adoration of the Shepherds

by Rembrandt van Rijn

Unfortunately, the shepherds are clothed in Dutch dress.

2C – Adoration of the Magi

I have not yet found a portrayal of the Magi in a domestic setting, but here are two illustrations that I find particularly pleasing. They show the Magi en route to Bethlehem. The first shows them accompanied by a retinue that would have been appropriate to important men bearing valuable gifts.


by Anonymous


by Anonymous

If you find a portrayal of the Adoration of the Magi in a domestic setting, please let me know.

3- What is Christmas all about?

Since tomorrow will be Christmas, the day on which Christians celebrate the Birth of the Christ Child, I would be remiss if I did not pose and then answer the above question for the benefit of non-Christians who read this blog.

The Bible indicates that God created our first parents, Adam and Eve, and then placed them in an idyllic setting, the Garden of Eden, which met all their needs and allowed them to fellowship with God and one another in peace and comfort.

Soon thereafter, Adam and Eve disobeyed God, which had severe consequences. They became sinners, alienated them from God, and thereby ensured that all their descendants would be born sinners, also alienated from God – excepting one, whom God would someday send to Earth to repair the breach between God and Mankind.  Then they were ejected from the Garden into a hostile world where the man would have difficulty providing protection and provision for his family, and the woman would suffer pain in giving birth to their children. In addition, henceforth they and all their descendents would experience physical aging, sickness, and death.

The above might be characterized as the Bible’s bad news and good news for all Mankind.

The Bad News: At birth,[8] everyone excepting the Christ Child is born with a live mind and a live body, but a dead spirit, of which he or she is unaware. Thus, everyone enters this world with a predilection to sin – i.e. to dishonor God and to disobey God’s commandments.[9] Moreover,  a person cannot stop sinning or even recognize his or her own sinfulness – let alone provide atonement for his or her sins, which requires the sacrifice of an innocent, unblemished life. Because God is holy[10] and hates sin,[11] a person’s sinfulness and sinning separates him or her from God.[12]

The Good News: “…God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life” (KJ21 John 3:16). God sent his Son to Earth the first time[13] in the form of a tiny baby, who was named Yeshua (Jesus in English).[14] He was born in a manger in Bethlehem, lived a sinless life, died on a cross at Golgotha [15] to atone for the sins of His followers,[16] rose from the grave,[17] and ascended into Heaven,[18] where He sits on the Throne of God. God will send his Son to Earth a second time[19] in the form of a mighty warrior, the King of kings and Lord of lords, at the head of the Hosts of Heaven. He will remove His faithful followers[20] from Earth, wreak vengeance on an unbelieving and sinful world, and establish new heavens and a new Earth for His people, over whom He will reign forever.

When a person believes the Goods News, repents, and accepts Yeshua as his or her Savior and Lord, he or she experiences a second birth. His or her spirit awakens. As John Newton wrote in 1779, “I once was lost, but now am found; Was blind, but now I see” (Amazing Grace).

Dear reader, if you have not already done so, accept the free gift that God offers to every person, regardless of his or her age, appearance, behavior, education, ethnicity, intelligence, occupation, race, religion, reputation, sex, station, talents, or wealth. Your spiritual eyes and ears will be opened, and your heart will be filled with indescribable joy.

© 2018 John Holbrook Jr.
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[1] Luke 2:8-13.

[2] Luke 2:16.

[3] Martin, Ernest, The Birth of Christ Recalculated, Foundation for Biblical Research, Pasadena, CA, 1980M, pp. 21-23.

[4] Matthew 2:11. These three gifts are highly symbolic. Gold is an appropriate gift for a king – in this case, the eternal King of Israel. Frankincense is an appropriate gift for a priest – in this case, the eternal High Priest of Israel. Myrrh is a substance used in burials – in this case, the burial of the incarnate God-the-Son in the tomb of Joseph of Arimathea after His perfect, one-time for all time sacrifice on the cross at Golgotha to atone for the sins of Mankind.

[5] I do not accept the normal date for Herod’s death. I argue as follows: (a) In 40 BC, which was 4 Augustus, Herod was appointed King of Judea by Augustus. Hence, 40 BC = 4 Augustus = 0 Herod. (Finnegan, Jack, Handbook of Biblical Chronology, Hendrickson Publishers, Peabody MA, orig. 1964, rev.1998, p. 230). (b) In 37 BC, which was 7 Augustus, Herod took Jerusalem. Hence, 37 BC = 7 Augustus = 3/0 Herod. (c) In either 5 BC or 3 BC, Herod appointed his son Antipater as co-regent (I prefer the former because there are indications that Antipater reigned for a total of 10 years, 5 as co-regent and 5 as king). Josephus appears to have erred in subtracting three years of this co-regency from Herod’s full reign, thereby arriving at a 37 year reign for Herod.  He may have been influenced by the fact that, after the death of Antipater and Herod, Archelaus and Philip later claimed that their reigns had commenced at the same time as their brother Antipater’s co-regency. (d) After the Magi’s visited him, Herod issued his command that Jewish boys under the age of two be killed – the Slaughter of the Innocents (Matthew 2:16). (e) An eclipse of the moon occurred on the day on which Herod had a man named Matthias executed and another man named Matthias deprived of the position of High Priest. (f) Five days after the eclipse, Herod died (40 years from his appointment as king and 37 years from his investment of Jerusalem).

[6] Luke 2:8-14.

[7] Luke 2:16.

[8] Called the first birth.

[9] See Genesis 6:5, I Kings 8:46, Psalm 53:3, Proverbs 20:9, Isaiah 53:6 & 64:6, Romans 3:10-12 & 3:23, I John 1:8.

[10] Exodus 15:11, I Samuel 6:20, Psalm 99:9, Isaiah 6:3, Revelation 15:4.

[11] Deuteronomy 25:16, Psalm 11:5, Proverbs 6:16, Zechariah 8:17, Luke 16:15.

[12] Isaiah 59:2 & 64:7, Hosea 5:6.

[13] Called the First Advent.

[14] Yeshua of Nazareth is the Promised Messiah of Israel. The Hebrew prophets predicted His first coming, His rejection by the majority of His people to allow time for a number of Gentiles to enter His Kingdom, and then His second coming to make all things new.

[15] Golgotha is just outside Jerusalem, near the Damascus Gate.

[16] His Jewish followers make up the Faithful Remnant of Israel

[17] Called the Resurrection.

[18] Called the Ascension.

[19] Called the Second Advent or Parousia.

[20] God imputes his Son’s righteousness to his Son’s faithful followers. In Romans 11, His faithful followers are represented by the Cultivated Olive Tree. His Jewish followers are represented by the fruitful branches which remain in the tree after the fruitless branches have been pruned out and burned. His Gentile followers are represented by the branches that have been removed from the Wild Olive Tree and grafted into the Cultivated Olive Tree.

 

 

 

 

The Gospel – The Hope of the First Christmas

by John Holbrook Jr.
A Biblical View, Blog #064 posted December 18, 2017, edited March 10, 2021.

Although we have entered the season when our cities, towns, buildings, and homes are decorated inside and out with pine boughs, colored lights, and red ribbons and most people shop for presents, revel, and sing songs, not many people actually know what Christmas is really about. What started all this hoopla?

It was started by the birth of a baby in a manger in Bethlehem, Israel’s City of David.[1] Hebrew prophets had been predicting the event for millennia and when it happened, it was surrounded by miracles. God himself entered his creation in the form of a baby, the most helpless of creatures, in order to die on a cross 33.5 years later to atone for the sins of mankind and reestablish the peace between himself and mankind which had been lost when the first man, Adam, disobeyed God’s first – and, at the time, only – proscription: “…of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. Thou shalt not eat….” [2] Since then, men and women have been deciding for themselves what is good and what is evil, the result of which has been almost 6,000 years of worshipping false gods, crafting idols, blaspheming the name of the true God, ignoring the Sabbath, dishonoring parents, and murdering, lusting after, stealing from, bearing false witness against, and coveting the spouses and possessions of others (all of which are forbidden by God in the Ten Commandments [3] which he delivered to Moses).

The baby’s name is Jesus, and His birth almost 2,000 years ago embodied the hope of a restoration of peace between God and mankind. That hope is embodied in the Gospel.

The Gospel

Every person – regardless of gender, race, nation, or other circumstance – finds himself in the same situation with respect to God – a situation which is captured in the Bad News and the Good News of the Bible:

The Bad News – Every person is a sinner,[4] and, because God is holy[5] and hates sin,[6] every person begins his life alienated from God.[7] Sin is embedded in him, in his very nature, and thus he is a sinner from the moment of his conception[8] and born separated from God. Sin is systemic – that is, it affects everything that he thinks, says, or does. Moreover, sin blinds him to his own sinfulness and deceives him into believing that he can be good – or at least good enough[9] – and therefore deserving of God’s favor. Finally, the sinner is helpless. Sin holds him in bondage. He cannot stop sinning on his own.[10]

The Good News – Every person whom God-the-Father calls[11] can avail himself of the solutions to these problems which God himself has provided:

Salvation – The death of Jesus, God-the-Son, on the cross at Golgotha[12] atones for the past, present, and future sins of everyone who repents of his sins and accepts Jesus as his Savior and Lord. Once a person so repents and professes Jesus as his Savior and Lord, Jesus’ righteousness is imputed to him, and he becomes a child of God and an heir to God’s promises to those who love God. His separation from God has ended, and he can be assured that he has become a member of the company of the redeemed,[13] which is called the Body of Christ.

Sanctification – The infilling of God-the-Holy Spirit increasingly enables the believer to resist the temptations of the Devil and equips the believer for ministry in the Body of Christ.

Both salvation and sanctification are free gifts from God, but they must be sought and accepted by the recipient with the clear understanding that he does not merit them, he cannot earn them or buy them, and his acceptance of them constitutes an admission that he is utterly dependent upon his Savior and Lord for his every need.

The above explains the difference between false religion and true religion.

False religion – All false religion is focused on man and what man can do to render himself acceptable to its god or gods. At its core are man-initiated requirements that man must meet and rites that man must perform. All false religions say: Do this and don’t do that, and you will be acceptable to our god(s).

True religion – True religion is focused on God and what God has done to render his creatures acceptable to himself. At its core is a God-initiated relationship between God and some men. The one and only Creator God says essentially: “Neither you nor any other man[14] can make you acceptable to me. Only I can make you acceptable to me.[15] But rejoice! I have done all that is necessary to render you spotless in my sight. I entered my creation once in the person of Jesus of Nazareth and died on the cross to atone for your sinfulness. If you accept[16] Him – and Him alone – as your Savior and Lord, I will accept you.”[17]

The sole criterion by which God will determine a person’s fate – either an eternity in God’s company (Heaven) or an eternity separated from God (Hell) – is whether or not during this life he opened his heart to and accepted Jesus as his Savior and Lord.

Note two important things. First, God is not interested in your – or any other – religion; he wants a relationship with you. Second, God’s invitation to you to have a relationship with him is both inclusive and exclusive. It is inclusive because it is addressed to all persons – all men, women, and children on earth, regardless of their age, race, ethnicity, religion, etc. It is exclusive because it is issued by one person – the Lord Jesus Christ, who said, “I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life; no man cometh unto the Father but by Me.” [18]

If you have not already opened your heart to and accepted Jesus as your Savior and Lord, do it now – for Jesus said, “Behold, I stand at the door, and knock. If any man hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and he with Me.”[19] What a promise from the Lord of Creation!

© 2017 John Holbrook Jr.
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[1] Although we currently celebrate this event on December 25th every year, I believe that it actually occurred on August 28, 2 BC (Gregorian calendar), which was Tishri 1, the Day of Trumpets (Rosh Hashanah) and the first day of the 7th month in the Hebrew calendar.

[2] Genesis 2:17.

[3] Exodus 20:1-17.

[4] Genesis 6:5, I Kings 8:46, Psalm 53:3, Proverbs 20:9, Isaiah 53:6 & 64:6, Romans 3:10-12 & 3:23, I John 1:8.

[5] Exodus 15:11, I Samuel 6:20, Psalm 99:9, Isaiah 6:3, Revelation 15:4.

[6] Deuteronomy 25:16, Psalm 11:5, Proverbs 6:16, Zechariah 8:17, Luke 16:15.

[7] Isaiah 59:2 & 64:7, Hosea 5:6.

[8] A condition customarily referred to as “original sin” or “the inescapable depravity of man.”

[9] People downplay their own sinfulness by comparing themselves to others whom they believe to be worse than themselves – for example, Hitler. Some people cite Hitler as the epitome of evil. From God’s perspective, however, there is not much difference between Hitler and the rest of us. We are all sinners. If, in the final seconds of his life, Hitler repented of his sinfulness and accepted Jesus as his Savior and Lord, he will be among the redeemed in heaven. There is no sin that God’s grace cannot cover.

[10] This helplessness is seldom acknowledged, but it is nonetheless an essential characteristic of the depravity of man.

[11] God-the-Father predestined his children before the foundation of the world, and God initiates the saving of a sinner. Unless God calls a person to repentance and faith, that person will remain in his sin and unbelief. There is no aspect of salvation for which the beneficiary can claim credit.

[12] I believe that Golgotha – the Place of a Skull (Matthew 27:33, Mark 15:22, John 19:17) – was the 1st century AD name for the stone escarpment which is located just over 200 yards north-by-northeast of the Damascus Gate on the north side  of Jerusalem’s Old City. It resembles the face of a human skull. In the 1s century AD, it would have been easily visible from the road running north from the Old City to Nablus and Damascus. It is currently called Jeremiah’s Grotto. Moreover  it is adjacent to the Garden Tomb, where I and many others believe Jesus was buried and which is now maintained by the non-profit Garden Tomb (Jerusalem) Association in the United Kingdom.

[13] Romans 10:9-10, 1 John 1:9, 1 John 5:13.

[14] Such as a priest; excepting the man Christ Jesus, who is the believer’s High Priest.

[15] John 14:6, Acts 4:12, 1 Timothy 2:5.

[16] Trust in.

[17] Ephesians 2:8-9.

[18] KJ21 John 14:6.

[19] KJ21 Revelation 3:20.

The S’s of Sin, Salvation, & Sanctificiation

by John Holbrook Jr.
A Biblical View, Blog #025 posted January 2, 2017, edited March 9, 2021.

I have always enjoyed using alliteration in my writing. In June of 2002, I decided to put man’s predicament and God’s solution to it in alliterative form.

Sovereignty is the issue. Who is in charge? Who makes the rules?

Sin is the problem. Sin involves a refusal to recognize and acknowledge God’s sovereignty; the sinner believes that the self (or some being other than God) can be sovereign. Sin seduces, beguiling the sinner into sinning, and swindles, blinding the sinner to his own sinfulness and to his subservience to Satan. Indeed, the sinner is a slave and stuck in bondage – that is, the sinner is helpless and cannot escape from this situation through his own efforts. Sin is both systemic – that is, it characterizes everything that a person thinks, says, or does – and sweeping or universal – that is, it is embedded in every man, woman, and child excepting Jesus. Finally, sin separates the sinner from God.

The sentence or penalty for sin is death.

Only the death of a satisfactory substitute can save the sinner from the sentence of death (what cannot save him is the attempt to be good or otherwise earn his way into God’s favor, because he will always fall short; he cannot be good enough).

Only the Sinless Sheep, “the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world,”[1] can provide a satisfactory substitute. He is both divine (the Son-of-God) and human (the Seed-of-the-Woman), and therefore He – and He solely – can bridge the gap between an infinite, omniscient, omnipotent, holy Creator and a finite, ignorant, impotent, and sinful creature. He does this both in His person and in His works.

Only the Spirit-of-God can enable a sinner to see his sinfulness and his need for salvation and then sanctification.

Salvation (deliverance from the consequences of sin) requires sorrow and self-reproach for one’s sins, repentance (a turning away from one’s sins), faith in the finished work of the Sinless Sheep on the cross, and surrender to the Sinless Sheep as one’s Savior and Sovereign. It costs nothing excepting damage to one’s pride; it is a free gift from the hand of a loving and merciful God. It results in safety – that is, the believer enters God’s sanctuary, where he is sheltered and shielded from the depredations of the Devil.

Sanctification (deliverance from the power of sin) requires constant struggle against temptation, constant study of and submission to the Scriptures (the Word of God Written), and frequent suffering (the most overlooked and least understood aspect of a disciple’s walk with the Lord). It therefore costs something – the greater the sanctification, the greater the cost – but also the greater the reward.

A saint is a sinner who has been saved and is undergoing sanctification.

© 2016 John Holbrook Jr.

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[1] John 1:29.

Are Jews going to hell because they don’t believe in Jesus?

by John Holbrook Jr.
A Biblical View, Blog #004 posted August 8, 2016, edited March 9, 2021.

No! Jews are not going to Hell because they don’t believe in Jesus.

Jews are going to Hell because they are sinners. In this, the Jewish people are no different from Gentiles.

All people are sinners. If you don’t believe this, see my essay “Is everyone is a sinner?”

All sinners are going to Hell unless their sins are atoned for by God himself. The Biblical message on this subject is clear and divided into two parts:

The Bad News: Every man, woman, and child (regardless of gender, race, nation, or other circumstance) is born a sinner, and the penalty for sin is death – eternal separation from God who is the fount and giver of life. Everyone starts life condemned.

The Good News: God Himself entered His creation in the person of the Jew Jesus, and Jesus died on the cross to pay the penalty for the sins of any man, woman, or child (Jew or Gentile) who accepts Him as his or her Savior and Lord. This salvation is free.[1] It cannot be earned by good works, because a sinner’s works are always tainted by his sinfulness and therefore can never be good enough. It can only be gratefully accepted from a Holy God by someone who acknowledges his wretchedness and helplessness and trusts in God’s Word – His promise that “…if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved” (KJV Romans 10:9).

Jews must recognize that Jesus is their Savior. He came to save the Jew first and only then the Gentile. During his trip into Phoenicia to escape the crowds in Judea, a Gentile woman approached Him and cried, “Have mercy on me, O Lord, thou Son of David; my daughter is grievously vexed with a devil. But he answered her not a word. And his disciples came and besought him, saying, Send her away; for she crieth after us. But he answered and said, I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel” (KJV Matthew 15:22-24). There is more to the story, but the foregoing is sufficient to make my point. The Jew Jesus came to save the men, women, and children among His people who would acknowledge Him as their Lord and Savior.

© 2016 John Holbrook Jr.

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[1] “For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast” (KJV Eph 2:8-9).