Greggs says sorry for replacing baby Jesus with a sausage roll in nativity scene for Christmas ad campaign
Scene depicted three wise men gathered round manger in the traditional fashion but, rather than gazing at the son of God, their eyes fall upon a pork-filled Greggs pastry
‘He’s not the messiah, he’s a very sausage roll’: the image that offended some Twitter users
Greggs has apologised after publicity shots for its new ad campaign included a nativity scene in which baby Jesus is replaced by a sausage roll.
Photos promoting the baker’s new Advent calendar showed three wise men gathered round a manger in the traditional fashion but, rather than gazing in wonder at the son of God, their eyes fall upon a Greggs pastry.
The stunt was apparently meant to be taken in a light-hearted way but numerous people pointed out that the fresh take on the 2,000-year old scene could cause offence because Jesus was Jewish and eating pork is forbidden in the Jewish faith.
After the image appeared online, Beth Rosenberg tweeted: “Out of interest do you think the people at Greggs understand that Jesus was Jewish and serving up a pork sausage roll in the manger is unbelievably inappropriate?”
While James Mather said: “I’m no prude, but equating Jesus, a Jew, to a sausage roll really is deeply offensive on all sorts of levels.”
Some people saw the funny side however:
Come on KFC..show Greggs the way... put a miniature Jesus in all your Christmas buckets
https://t.co/z6lerV0AM2
— bob mortimer (@RealBobMortimer) November 14, 2017
The offending photograph was one of a number of publicity photos for the calendar, including a Santa with flakes of pastry in his beard, a Greggs shop in a snow globe and a woman puckering up to kiss what appears to be a chicken slice under the mistletoe.
Greggs said in a statement: “We’re really sorry to have caused any offence, this was never our intention.”
The advent calendar goes on sale in selected Greggs outlets on Monday costing £24 and includes a £5 Greggs gift card on Christmas Eve.