Monday, 19 December 2022

Joseph: a man for us all

Isaiah 7.10-16 The young woman is with child

Romans 1.1-7 Our apostolic mission is to preach the obedience of faith to all nations

Matthew 1.18-25 How Jesus Christ came to be born

 

[NB text in square brackets was not used in the delivery of the sermon]


'And Joseph did as the angel commanded him'

 

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Perhaps it is because Joseph is a man of few words, in fact no recorded words at all in the Bible, that he gets rather overlooked in the noisy chatter of the world

 

[At the reforming of the Church of England in the sixteenth century, the Book of Common Prayer, whilst it kept the feasts of saints, including a number in honour of Mary, dropped the feast of St Joseph altogether.

 

Mercifully he has since been restored to his proper place: Joseph of Nazareth, husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary, and he is honoured on 19th March each year.]

 

What do we know of Joseph?

 

[He shares the name of one of the great patriarchs of the biblical tradition, Joseph - of coat fame - the one to whom God revealed his purpose in dreams and who had a deeply practical side: think of the provision he made in times of want and in times of plenty.]

 

We know Joseph’s family had ended up in Nazareth but his heritage, as we might say today, was Judean, from Bethlehem, the City of David. And aren’t we going to hear about that city a lot in the coming days.

 

What we all know about Joseph is that he was a carpenter.

 

Perhaps there’s more to it.

 

In Mark’s gospel there is a reference to Jesus as ‘the carpenter, the son of Mary…’ The Greek word used is τέκτων (tekton) which means a bit more.

 

A tekton could be a woodworker, carpenter or builder. And the word tekton comes from the root meaning ‘to carve, to chisel, to mould’. Joseph was highly skilled craftsman, almost certainly Jesus was trained in his craft.

 

[John Everett Millais’ painting ‘Christ in the House of His Parents’ (1849–50) captures this and some of the associated symbolism this brings.]

 

I wonder how much Joseph carved, chiselled and moulded Jesus’ human character as a boy and young man back in Nazareth. (cf Luke 2.39-40)

 

So, this skilled, quiet and strong man was entrusted with the task of protection, care and provision for his wife, Mary, and her son, Jesus.

 

[What we do know is that Joseph did the right thing by Mary: first by wanting to break off their betrothal quietly and discreetly (v19); then doing the right thing by her by marrying her (v24) and then by honouring and respecting her body before her child was born (v25)]

 

Together Joseph and Mary presented Jesus in the Temple at 40 days old; offering up the child as the son entrusted to them both, but to whom Joseph was not biologically related: whatever he felt about that, we do not have his words.

 

Twelve years later they took him to the Feast of the Passover in Jerusalem, as they did every year (Luke 2.41-52) and Jesus remained in the Temple unbeknownst to his parents.

 

Joseph and all the family searched frantically for Jesus and on finding him Jesus uttered words that must have been at once painful and deeply fulfilling for Joseph, ’why were you looking for me, did you not know that I must be in my Father’s house?’ (Luke 2.49).

 

This wasn’t an adolescent outburst, but was a statement of what Joseph learnt from the angel in his dream, ‘the child conceived in Mary is from the Holy Spirit. She will bear a son, and you are to name him Jesus, for he will save his people from their sins.’ (v20b,21).

 

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Consideration of Joseph opens up areas that we rarely go to in church – where preachers fear to tread - and that is the role of men and masculinity in society and in our culture today.

 

There is a wide academic field that speaks of the ‘crisis of masculinity’: What are men for? What is the role of men today?

 

On one extreme there are the hyper-masculine men who live in a fantasy world of male dominance and imperviousness; and on the other a rhetoric that is unremittingly anti-men.

 

The behaviour of some men - violence, sexual violence, control, exploitation and domination - is used to declare all men toxic.

 

Feminism has clearly righted many wrongs and injustices, and has helped men and women see the proper valued contribution women make to society.

 

Yet there are real challenges for men in the culture today.

 

It is true: men are significantly more violent than women and towards women; yet men are vastly more likely to be subjects of violence.

 

The highest rate of suicide is amongst men, by some way.

 

The prison population is overwhelmingly male.

 

It is also clear in current culture some young men find it hard to read signals and know boundaries with regard to the opposite sex.

 

In one version of masculinity men should not express feelings, and in another they should be ‘New Men’ pouring out their emotions all the time.

 

No wonder men are in a muddle, or society in a muddle about men.

 

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And there’s a gender gap in church too: in the UK typically congregations are 2/3 female and 1/3 male. [And it’s most prevalent in Western European and North American Christianity.

 

Men are not less spiritual as witnessed in other faiths and religious traditions, but their churchgoing is declining rapidly: what do we do about that.

 

One study found that ‘in the last 20 years 49% of men under 30 left the church! At the current rate of loss it is predicted that by 2028 men will all but have disappeared from the Church in the UK’. (Why so few men in Church? | Why Church)]

 

So how might Joseph help us all, particularly men, in our spiritual lives? And along the way help the women those men seek ‘to love, comfort, honour and protect’ (Marriage Service CW 2000)

 

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Here are some pointers.

 

Joseph is described as ‘a righteous man’.

 

Righteousness is not a sense of patriarchal superiority but about being right with God; about training and honing one’s body, mind and spirit - like an athlete, or musician, or craftsman, or tekton -  such that one is in a right relationship with God.

 

I have mentioned that not a word of Joseph’s is recorded.

 

Does that mean he’s one of those men who bottles things up and doesn’t disclose his inner emotion and life even to his nearest and dearest? I don’t think so.

 

In St Luke’s gospel we hear of Joseph’s ‘great distress’ when he and Mary were searching for Jesus in Jerusalem for hours (Luke 2.48).

 

What the Gospels make clear is that Joseph freely acts; his eloquence is in his actions.

 

Joseph as a righteous man acted with a sense of duty.

 

He didn’t run for the hills when Mary was found to be pregnant and the child not his; he wanted her reputation protected; he was ready to overcome his longing for her by quietly letting her go.

 

All too often we see today men running from responsibilities and duties; the consequences of which harm both women and children.

 

Joseph didn’t ditch Mary and her child at the threat of the murderous Herod; he shielded them from danger until it passed, because most men are physically stronger than most women.

 

Good male role models are good for boys and for girls.

 

We don’t say and hear that enough.

 

Many men crave a clear role in life, and being able to be stable and supportive in their relationships: Joseph is an exemplar of this.

 

Men are not uniquely wicked; and, God knows, men are not perfect; indeed we are all, men and women, sinners of God’s own redeeming.

 

Today, as we approach the birth of Emmanuel, God with us, who was entrusted with his Blessed Mother to the care of Joseph let us ask Joseph’s prayers that we may all, men and women, be capable of receiving Jesus Christ into our lives, where he will shape, mould and chisel us into his image and likeness afresh.

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