What could be more familiar than the Christmas story--and yet what could be more extraordinary? The cast of characters is strange and exotic: shepherds and magicians, an emperor and a despot, angels, and a baby who is Almighty God.
Christmas, as it appears in the New Testament.
Yet Christmas is made familiar all over again by showing it to be a family story.
Bestselling author Scott Hahn who has written extensively on Scripture and the early Church, brings evidence to light, dispelling some of the mystery of the story.
The strangeness calls for an explanation, and this book provides it by examining the characters and the story in light of the biblical and historical context.
What could be more familiar than the Christmas story--and yet what could be more extraordinary? The cast of characters is strange and exotic: shepherds and magicians, an emperor and a despot, angels, and a baby who is Almighty God.
To see the life of this earthly trinity is to gaze into heaven.
Christmas, as it appears in the New Testament, is the story of a father, a mother, and a child--their relationships, their interactions, their principles, their individual lives, and their common life.
Yet Christmas is made familiar all over again by showing it to be a family story.
Bestselling author Scott Hahn who has written extensively on Scripture and the early Church, brings evidence to light, dispelling some of the mystery of the story.
The strangeness calls for an explanation, and this book provides it by examining the characters and the story in light of the biblical and historical context.
What could be more familiar than the Christmas story--and yet what could be more extraordinary? The cast of characters is strange and exotic: shepherds and magicians, an emperor and a despot, angels, and a baby who is Almighty God.
To see the life of this earthly trinity is to gaze into heaven.
Christmas, as it appears in the New Testament, is the story of a father, a mother, and a child--their relationships, their interactions, their principles, their individual lives, and their common life.
Yet Christmas is made familiar all over again by showing it to be a family story.
Bestselling author Scott Hahn who has written extensively on Scripture and the early Church, brings evidence to light, dispelling some of the mystery of the story.
The strangeness calls for an explanation, and this book provides it by examining the characters and the story in light of the biblical and historical context.
What could be more familiar than the Christmas story--and yet what could be more extraordinary? The cast of characters is strange and exotic: shepherds and magicians, an emperor and a despot, angels, and a baby who is Almighty God