No Crib For His Bed


And she brought forth her firstborn son, and wrapped him in swaddling clothes, and laid him in a manger; because there was no room for them in the inn. Luke 2:7 KJV

For those whose farming experience comes only from watching “Little House on the Prairie,” the manger scene may sound idyllic. But for those of us who have milked cows, picked up bales of hay and fed the chickens, the words, “The little Lord Jesus asleep on the hay” have a completely different meaning. You might not know this, but in a barn when “The cattle are lowing,” they are often doing other unpleasant things not appealing to a mother who has just given birth! But for all these oversights in this children’s carol, the central truth still rings loud and clear: Jesus was a real baby! He was not just an infant with a halo around His head, posing for a portrait, smiling for the wise men and lifting His tiny hands to bless shepherds. God’s Son was born in a barn, His first bed was a feeding trough and the sights and smells around Him were not Frankincense and myrrh. God’s chosen place for the birth of Jesus was so that both children and wise men, shepherds and small town folks, could draw near. It doesn’t make sense. It isn’t dignified. It looked like it would never work. And yet it did. Jesus heard the sounds of chickens, He touched the rough hay, and smelled the barn animals just as we do. Then one day, He was given a crown to wear covered with thorns. Then He was beaten, given vinegar to drink, nailed to a cross and left to die on a cold dark hilltop. He did it all so that anyone who would believe in Him could be forgiven. Today He invites you to come, whether your home is in a barn or a mansion because He loves you and wants to make you His own!

Away in a Manger 1895 Author unknown music by Willaim Kirkpatrick

Caligiuri, Peter. A Christmas Treasury: Large Print Edition (pp. 5-6). Kindle Edition.

5 thoughts on “No Crib For His Bed

  1. Being more of a “city girl” I never really thought about the smells and noises in a barn. It’s funny how hard it was for people to realize he didn’t come as the future political leader, but as a suffering servant. This is just one more proof of that, among many. Blessings, Pastor Pete!

  2. The portal of the Son of Man to this world of sin was through the poor, and His exit was fashioned by the evil plottings of the rich, leading Him to rest in a rich man’s tomb.

    The humble entrance of Jesus into a world that recognized Him not was a spectacle felt even by the animals in the barn, reminding me of the prophecy in Psalms 8:6-7 and finding one of its fulfillments in Matthew 17:27.

    What a beautiful story about the entrance of Jesus into a world that deserved Him not!

    Thanks Pastor Pete! You reminded me we’ve hit December already! Time is moving fast!

  3. Pingback: No Crib For His Bed – QuietMomentsWithGod

Leave a reply to Eric Kamau Cancel reply