P
patrick457
Guest
The offer of the ‘stable’ (not so much a Western barn or a shack as a part of the house) to the holy couple is actually an act of charity. We’re talking about an honor-shame, group-oriented culture here: the host would obviously not want to ‘lose face’ by failing to provide for his guests. If the “lodging” was full/too cramped for the delivery he/she had to offer a more spacious area. The backdoor/underground (whichever it was) stable isn’t really that too bad of a place as we sometimes think it is: people lived with their animals after all. This was nothing unnatural.I’ve heard of several versions of what the place Jesus was born in was like.
But the one I think fits best is the one that said that the inn had a number of rooms but were taken before Joseph arrived. But the stable, or cave, which housed animals under the house, was offered to them. Like a garage in our day which is below the house.
Yes, the cave where St. Jerome worked is under the Church of the Nativity. I don’t think that it’s the same cave as the Cave of the Nativity however. And yes, caves could be converted into living quarters.St. Jerome, while working on the bible, was housed in a cave as the original place of birth in Bethlehem.
A few pics:
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Manger
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http://www.welcometohosanna.com/LIFE_OF_JESUS/JESUS_LIFE_PIX/NAZARETH_VILLAGE_HOME_INT.jpg