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Says Lee Strobel, the author of The Case for Christmas:
Who was in the manger?
Even after two millennia, controversy continues to swirl around the
Christmas child. “Scholarly debate is intensifying over who Jesus
actually was: divine, human, or both?” said a recent article in The
Chicago Tribune. “Jesus has been portrayed in a burst of books as, among
other things, a Cynic philosopher, an apocalyptic prophet, a zealot, a
rabbi, a Pharisee, a feminist, a radical egalitarian, and a postmodern
social critic.”
Like countless other children, I listened with rapt fascination each
year to the traditional Bible story about Christmas. But as I matured,
skepticism set in. I concluded that not only is Santa Claus merely a
feel-good fable, but that the entire Christmas tale was itself built on a
flimsy foundation of wishful thinking.
All of that changed, however, after I took a cue from one of the most
famous Bible passages about Christmas. The story, recorded in Luke 2:8-18,
describes how an angel announced to a ragtag group of sheepherders that
“a Savior who is Messiah and Master” had been born in David’s town.
Was this a hoax? A hallucination? Or was it the pivotal event of human
history – the incarnation of the Living God?
The sheepherders were determined to get to the bottom of the matter.
“Let’s get over to Bethlehem as fast as we can,” they said, “and
see for ourselves what God has revealed to us.” They left, running, to
personally investigate the evidence for themselves.
Two thousand years later, challenged by my agnostic wife’s conversion
to Christianity, I also undertook an urgent mission to determine the true
identity of the child in the manger. Through interviews with scholars and
other experts, I sought to resolve the question best posed by Jesus
himself: “Who do you say that I am?”
The Case for Christmas retraces and expands upon my journey by delving
into the roots of this most cherished holiday. Can we believe in our
scientific age that Jesus was really born of a virgin? Is there
astronomical support for the mysterious star that led three individuals to
the newly born “king”? Does history support the Bible’s claim that a
Roman census sent Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem or that Herod the Great
ruthlessly slaughtered the children of that rural village, seeking to
destroy his supposed rival? Did Jesus match the prophetic
“fingerprint” of the Messiah? And did he manage to fulfill the
attributes of God?
By focusing on the “hows” and whys” of Christmas, this warm yet
journalistic book will help believers reaffirm their faith while guiding
seekers as they pursue solid answers about this miraculous occurrence.
The evidence is in. The verdict is up to you.
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