The 'Christmas Story', as we know it, is derived from a mixture of
carols and carol services, nativity plays, children's Bibles and
paintings. The Bible itself offers two stories, each quite different
from the other, not just in detail, but in tone. Neither of them is
reproduced in the familiar Christmas story, and indeed, that story
sometimes runs counter to the biblical text. This book, which
incorporates some of the authors own stories and poems on the Christmas
theme, begins by examining the two biblical accounts in turn: Matthew's,
which is a dark tale, or at least as tale of light shining in darkness,
Luke's, which is full of light and joy. The author explores the concept
of the virgin birth, while acknowledging that the narratives retain a
certain ambiguity, and looks at the strangely neglected question: given
the world and the God that we know, what story must we tell now? His
response is that the church itself desperately needs the vision of the
God in a manger, and must allow this vision (together with that of God
on a cross) to determine its theology and practice. ""Trevor Dennis'
vivid imaginative writing truly lights up the 'Christmas Story' for our
twenty-first century world."" Jane Dowell in Magnet