But are you allowed to represent the baby Jesus with marshmallows like this? I’m pretty sure those ain’t kosher. How many cans of soda did someone dig through to make this serendipitous scene possible? I just wish they’d gone the extra mile and used an empty Coca-Cola case as the stable and a can koozie as the creche. This minimalist nativity set should go perfectly on your Ikea end table. Money exchanged hands for the ownership of this. Several of these cats are either prayerfully looking skyward, or rolling their eyes at the existence of this set just as hard as I am. Mary (who is wearing a suspiciously pirate-y shirt here) must be much better at swaddling than I am, because she turned her baby into a perfect tube shape. I thought Joseph worked with wood, not bricks With the amount of time travel the X-Men have survived, the plausibility of Wolverine becoming both of his own parents doesn’t seem that far-fetched.Ģ. If you look closer, it appears that both Mary and Joseph are portrayed by different versions of Wolverine, as is the Christ child himself. Okay, this nativity scene is technically all X-Men, but I don’t think they have a catchy slogan like Superman’s. It’s a bird! It’s a plane! It’s the baby Jesus! We’ve already covered the Catalan tradition of including a miniature pooping figurine in among the wise men and shepherds, but the next piece in our coverage of the war on Christmas (not to mention the war on good taste) shows that there’s plenty of nativity-scene weirdness to be found on our side of the planet, too.ġ. Nativity scenes are a sacred part of the holiday tradition … or, possibly, an opportunity to showcase your very strange taste in Christmas decorations. We’re celebrating War on Christmas Week at Mommyish! See our previous posts here.
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