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The Nativity: From the Gospels of Matthew and Luke

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A miniature gift edition of the Nativity story follows the appearance of the angel Gabriel to Mary, the birth of Jesus, and the family's eventual return to Nazareth, and is complemented by lavish oil paintings and medieval-style gold accents.

Hardcover

First published September 1, 1993

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Ruth Sanderson

114 books91 followers

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5 stars
26 (48%)
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21 (38%)
3 stars
5 (9%)
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Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews
Profile Image for Melody Schwarting.
2,138 reviews82 followers
October 14, 2023
Sanderson dedicated this book "To the Masterjohn family and for the members of my parish, the Saint Nicholas Orthodox Church in Worcester, Massachusetts." Her reverence and love of community shine through this telling of the birth of Christ. Her illustrations are both iconographic and inspired by medieval illuminations. The text is simple and straightforward, coming straight from the biblical text without elaboration. Not to be missed.
Profile Image for Beverly.
5,999 reviews4 followers
September 6, 2017
Beautifully illustrated in the style of Old Masters of the Renaissance. The text is set in decorated boxes, and each illustration is surrounded by a decorated border. This version depicts the wise men visiting the Holy family in a house, rather than stable, and Jesus is a toddler rather than newborn. Sanderson also includes the flight to Egypt, and ends with Jesus growing, becoming strong and filled with wisdom, with God's favor upon him. Throughout the book, Mary, joseph and Jesus all have halos behind their heads.
Profile Image for Jessie.
2,536 reviews33 followers
January 2, 2019
Parts of scripture (in KJV) included:
*The Annunciation
*Birth from Luke 2 and shepherds
*Wise men, flight to Egypt, return to Galilee from Matthew (and the massacre of the innocents is mentioned)

The illuminated manuscript-like illustrations here are really beautiful, and I especially appreciated that Jesus grows in what we think are accurate ways. And the wise men visit a house! The angels and host are portrayed as pretty feminine, though.

The borders repeat, and there might be themes (angels, travel, etc.) to when they repeat, but it's not entirely clear.
Profile Image for Jo Oehrlein.
6,361 reviews9 followers
January 3, 2019
The annunciation, trip to Bethlehem, birth, shepherds, wise men, flight to Egypt, slaughter of the innocents, and return to Nazareth.

Uses traditional wording for the stories, but blends from Luke to Matthew and back again.

There's no illustration for the slaughter, which should reduce its impact on children.

The illustrations are in the style of illuminations, with gold halos for our main characters.
Profile Image for Sophie Crane.
5,233 reviews179 followers
January 23, 2025
Beautiful illustrations. Stays true to the bible story. As far as the murder of all the children age 2 and under by kind Herod, the book says, "And being warned of God in a dream that they (the three kings) should not return to Herod, they departed into their own country another way." So this book is suitable for young children. Mary, Joseph, and baby Jesus all have halos on their heads in all of the illustrations (as seen on the cover).
Profile Image for Taryn.
455 reviews4 followers
January 22, 2018
Ruth Sanderson makes beautifully detailed illustrations to accompany the Biblical text. I especially love that Baby Jesus is a toddler when the wise men visit. Accuracy!
Profile Image for Laura Carr.
10 reviews
December 29, 2025
Rich, wonderful illustrations applied to the traditional Advent/Christmas scripture.
Profile Image for Timothy Darling.
331 reviews50 followers
December 12, 2013
Every year, I reread this delightful book. This year, I noted the flowers in the paintings and the echoing of the themes, like the women with children in the background of Joseph's and Mary's arrival in Bethlehem, and the star out the window in the arrival of the Magi. Sanderson's subject matter is more often fantasy, so her pictures lean in that direction, but they are still tastefully in keeping with the artistic traditions of the middle ages. I could wish for an artistic rendition that is more grounded in realism, but the traditions surrounding Sanderson's renditions save them from subjectivity.

Once again, this book is inspiring. Sanderson's illustrations, stylized as they are, remain reminiscent of medieval manuscript illumination. Her detail draws in the reader and creates a perfect setting for the gospel story. Books like this are rare, that is, books that give the Christmas Scriptures to tell the authentic story in its authentic form. The pictures are a wonderful interpretation of the RSV text. I am amazed that every Bible publisher does not do a book similar to this with their own translation. It would be over-kill, but it would make so much sense.
Profile Image for Juliana Lee.
2,272 reviews41 followers
December 22, 2014
Originally published in 1993, this book follows holy scripture in word and art beginning with the Angel Gabriel's announcement, Mary acceptance of the Lord's Word, and the journey to Bethlehem. Beautiful art depicts the birth of Christ and the appearance of the angels to the shepherds and the visit from the magi. But the story does not end here, it continues as the holy family is warned of Herod's plan and departs from Bethlehem and their later return to Nazareth where the Christ child spends his youth.
Profile Image for Set.
2,167 reviews
April 6, 2016
What an absolute masterpiece. Only thing is, I don't know if Sanderson realized that Gabriel is a male and that angels are male, not female.
Displaying 1 - 15 of 15 reviews

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