Some call it a 'hipster nativity,' others call it a 'millennial nativity.' Whatever you call it, it's catching people's attention. 

The scene is in Canada's largest church, Montreal’s Saint Joseph’s Oratory. It depicts what the scene of Jesus' birth might look like if it took place in 2018.

Mary grasps a cup of Starbucks, while Joseph (complete with man bun) positions his phone for a family selfie.

Wise men flank the scene on Segue scooters, holding gifts from Amazon.

Chantal Turbide is the curator of the museum inside the church. Turbide tells the Canadian Press that “feelings are mixed.”

The museum has 1,000 nativity scenes on display from 100 countries.

This one, however, now has a disclaimer next to it:

The museum is aware that the appearance of this creche has raised some concerns. Far from being irreverent, this creche is intended to make us smile.

Turbide said that it is customary for Nativity scenes to be interpreted around the world according to local customs and cultures.

She pointed to a scene from Africa, where the usual cow and donkey are replaced by a giraffe and zebra next to the baby Jesus.

Francois Trudel, 74, who was visiting the oratory Monday, told the Canadian Press that he very much liked the scene.

“Jesus didn’t live just for the first century in which he was born,” he said. “He lived for eternity. The creche shows to what extent man is intelligent. It shows what God put inside him and how those tools progressed to make life better.”

However, others did not think the interpretation was appropriate.

Dinara Salaeva, 27, was one of those people.

“I’m agnostic, but I still respect everything related to the Bible and the images,” she said. “So when I see that, I feel like it’s not necessarily mocking, but maybe it’s a little disrespectful of other people’s beliefs.”