#flight into egypt

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Strange Happenings to the Young Child (As Told by Mary, His Mother)

Joseph came to me trembling today.

“What is it, Joseph?” I said.

“Herod plots to kill the Child,” he said, “and what can humble people like we do to foil the king?”

I thought of the sword that was to pierce my heart.  Was this it?  But God could foil the king.

“It will be all right, Joseph,” I said. “Fear not.”

I knew it would be all right.  God did keep us in mind; he came to us in a dream last night and told us to flee to Egypt; that Herod is bent on destruction.  We had our hearts set on going back to Nazareth, but the joys of home cannot now be ours.  For the Child’s sake we will gladly be exiles.  God leads.

- “His Mother, a Story of Our Lord” by G. M. Anderson

ADVENT CALENDAR DAY 22The Flight into Egypt, from the 12th-century Infancy of Christ window of the A

ADVENT CALENDAR DAY 22

The Flight into Egypt, from the 12th-century Infancy of Christ window of the Abbey Church of Saint-Denis, France. Glencairn Museum, Bryn Athyn, PA, 03.SG.114.

Three consecutive verses in the Gospel of Matthew (2:13–15) are the only biblical source for the story of the Flight into Egypt. According to Matthew, after the visit of the Wise Men, “an angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph in a dream, saying, ‘Arise, take the young Child and His mother, flee to Egypt, and stay there until I bring you word; for Herod will seek the young Child to destroy Him’” (2:13). Although the Bible provides very little information about this episode in the Nativity narrative, it is frequently depicted in art. Usually Mary is shown riding a donkey with Jesus on her lap, accompanied by Joseph and sometimes a servant. 

Glencairn’s medieval stained-glass example of the Flight into Egypt formed part of the Infancy of Christ window at the Abbey Church at Saint-Denis. It illustrates an incident in the story not included in the canonical Christian gospels in the Bible. According to the early Christian apocryphal Infancy Gospel of Pseudo-Matthew, on the third day of the journey Mary became fatigued by the desert heat, and the Holy Family took refuge under the shade of a date palm. When Mary expressed a wish for some of the tree’s fruit, the Christ Child commanded the palm, saying, “O tree, bend your branches, and refresh my mother with your fruit.” Immediately the tree obeyed and they gathered its fruit (chapters 20–21).

Every day, from December 1 through December 25, a new work of Nativity art from the Glencairn Museum collection will appear on the home page of our Advent calendar (Follow the Star: A 2021 Advent Calendar). To receive these in your newsfeed, follow our social media (Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, Tumblr).


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