I Knew Jesus - Before He Was a Star - was created in 1974.
Many, such as the wise men and shepherd's, knew he was special because of the star but thought he was just a prophet of God. No-one but Mary and Joseph, who were spoken to by angels, knew he was really the son of God.
after because they followed the star
The wise men first saw the star in the East when they were in their own country, before they began their journey to visit Jesus.
If you believe that Jesus is God - Jesus must have put the star to show where he was born! If you believe that Jesus is a Prophet - then God must have put the star to show where Jesus was born.
they followed a star that led them to jesus. they followed a star that led them to jesus.
Jesus was believed to have been born under the star known as the Star of Bethlehem.
the North Star led the three wise men to the birth of Jesus
The star that shown the night of Jesus' birth was in the east.
Before Piccolo fused with god.God created the black star Dragonballs!
A star symbolizes the star of Bethlehem. when jesus was born they're was a star
According to the Gospel of Luke, angels came and informed one group of shepherds, so that they could go and worship Jesus in the manger. The author of Matthew's Gospel knew nothing of this particular event.According to the Gospel of Matthew, magi came following a star from the east, so that they could worship Jesus in the house where he was born. The author of Luke's Gospel knew nothing of this particular event, and the star was not recorded by any of the scribes who recorded all other interesting celestial events of the time. Even stranger is the reported ability of a star to move from the east to Jerusalem then back towards the south-east to Bethlehem, where it enabled the magi to identify the exact house in which the baby Jesus was to be found.
A:The usual assumption is that the magi began to follow the star after Jesus was born, some believing that this was up to two years later. However, Ian Wilson (Jesus: The Evidence) says the hard reality is that the Matthew nativity story offers insufficient historicity for anyone to be confident that there was a star at all. In fact, this account has all the hallmarks of myth.