Saturday, December 8, 2018

Joseph / Based on Matthew 1:18-25 / Delivered December 9, 2018 to UMC-Hudson

Joseph / Based on Matthew 1:18-25 / Delivered December 9, 2018 to UMC-Hudson
Based on a CCH message I created from 20161218 and added poetry from a 1998 service on Joseph.
Hymns: Come Thou Long Expected Jesus, Joseph Dearest, Love Divine All Loves Excelling.


Matthew 1:18-25 (CEB)
18 This is how the birth of Jesus Christ took place. When Mary his mother was engaged to Joseph, before they were married, she became pregnant by the Holy Spirit. 19 Joseph her husband was a righteous man. Because he didn’t want to humiliate her, he decided to call off their engagement quietly. 20 As he was thinking about this, an angel from the Lord appeared to him in a dream and said, “Joseph son of David, don’t be afraid to take Mary as your wife, because the child she carries was conceived by the Holy Spirit. 21 She will give birth to a son, and you will call him Jesus, because he will save his people from their sins.” 22 Now all of this took place so that what the Lord had spoken through the prophet would be fulfilled:
23 Look! A virgin will become pregnant and give birth to a son,
        And they will call him, Emmanuel.
(Emmanuel means “God with us.”)
24 When Joseph woke up, he did just as an angel from God commanded and took Mary as his wife. 25 But he didn’t have sexual relations with her until she gave birth to a son. Joseph called him Jesus.


Our scripture today gives us a view of the birth of Jesus from Joseph’s side.  We often think of Mary and how this event would have been experienced through her eyes, but Matthew gives us a chance to pause and examine the man who would adopt the Son of God and raise him as his own son.


The three ideas I am pulling from this scripture passage are:
Trust during the unexpected
Choose love over law
Claim Jesus as your own


Trust during the unexpected
18 This is how the birth of Jesus Christ took place. When Mary his mother was engaged to Joseph, before they were married, she became pregnant by the Holy Spirit.

I think we can agree that this was quite unexpected.  Joseph was set to marry this nice, righteous, young woman and then she turns up pregnant.  The human response could of easily been “why me?” which is more of a statement of “poor me” than it is a real question.  The verses do not show Joseph thinking in that way.  Instead it shows him taking steps to do the next best thing he can.

Joseph’s response to this unexpected event is to decide to do the most loving thing he can think of, but then God gives him another option.  His dream told him to risk trusting God was in this situation.  He had to trust Mary had not been unfaithful and risk his own reputation in the community.

By taking a pregnant Mary as his wife he would appear to be admitting he had sex before completing the wedding vows.  The words, “do not be afraid to take Mary as your wife” were appropriate given what he was facing.  It would have been scary.  He was a carpenter and relied on people’s business.  If his reputation was tarnished it could affect his livelihood and his ability to provide for his family.

Then there was the faith needed to believe Mary had not been untrue to her commitment to him.  In the case of all other pregnant young ladies around, there had been a man involved.  Being pregnant as a virgin was quite uncommon to say the least.  Joseph had to have faith in the angel’s words and faith in the fidelity of his betrothed.

Joseph’s final response was total trust.  1:24 “When Joseph woke up, he did just as an angel from God commanded and took Mary as his wife.”  He didn’t need a day to think about it.

Choose love over law
19 Joseph her husband was a righteous man. Because he didn’t want to humiliate her, he decided to call off their engagement quietly.

Joseph was called “a righteous man” which means he knew the scripture.  To be engaged was equal to marriage except you didn’t live together yet.  That meant if Mary was pregnant by someone else she had committed adultery.

Here’s the law per Deuteronomy 22:  If a man is found sleeping with another man’s wife, both the man who slept with her and the woman must die. You must purge the evil from Israel.  If a man happens to meet in a town a virgin pledged to be married and he sleeps with her, you shall take both of them to the gate of that town and stone them to death—the young woman because she was in a town and did not scream for help, and the man because he violated another man’s wife. You must purge the evil from among you. But if out in the country a man happens to meet a young woman pledged to be married and rapes her, only the man who has done this shall die. Do nothing to the woman; she has committed no sin deserving death. This case is like that of someone who attacks and murders a neighbor, for the man found the young woman out in the country, and though the betrothed woman screamed, there was no one to rescue her.

Joseph was planning to claim that final scenario happened to Mary.  That was choosing love over law.  He took what little wiggle room he had to spared her life as well as her reputation.

Claiming Jesus as your own
24 When Joseph woke up, he did just as an angel from God commanded and took Mary as his wife. 25 But he didn’t have sexual relations with her until she gave birth to a son. Joseph called him Jesus.

Matthew doesn’t give the birth of Jesus a lot of explanation.  The key words out of this verse is that Joseph named him.  That indicated Joseph claimed him as his own.  The beginning verses of Matthew contain the genealogy of Jesus.  It traces back from Abraham to Joseph.   Joseph accepted the role of Father.

The name Jesus is the Latin version of the Hebrew name Joshua which translates as “Jehovah saves”.  It was Joshua that led the Israelites into the promised land.  Jesus would carry on that responsibility as savior and lead us into the promise of life with God.

I sometimes wonder about Joseph’s Fatherly influence over Jesus as he was growing up.  Jesus was in trouble often for choosing to love over obeying the law.  Healing on the Sabbath comes to mind, as well as his disciples harvesting grain to eat on the Sabbath.  It may have been first taught by seeing Joseph’s example.

Pulling a little farther back in my archives I came upon this two-character play between Joseph and the Angel I wrote when Pastor T. Thom wanted to do a service about Joseph.  It touches on the similarities of Jesus teaching with Joseph’s profession as a carpenter.  It is more from my imagination than scripture, but it speaks to our human sense of unworthiness when we think of inviting Jesus to enter our lives.  Here it is again for those that may have been around in 1998.


What guidance can I give the Son of God?
I am a simple man with a simple trade
There is little I can do to prepare him for his life
Joseph, why do you doubt the Master’s choice?
You were chosen you know

I’m tired – it’s time for a break
A man can’t put in quality work if he doesn’t take time to rejuvenate
Mistakes can be made if you don’t step back from your work now and then
The importance of rest
A good lesson to pass on to your son

You’ve separated some wood pieces apart from the others
This pile is wood I can’t use – it’s too weak
It looks fine on the top but see how the inside has been rotting away
Could have fooled some, but you can’t judge wood by its outsides only
The importance of examining what’s inside
A good lesson to pass on to your son

And these planks here – why are they set apart?
They may not look like much because they appear a little rough and dark
Their beauty will be brought out after some sanding and a little stain
Yes, the grain is beautiful on those pieces if you take the time to look and work with them
The importance of recognizing potential
A good lesson to pass on to your son

Are these little pieces ones you’re discarding?
Goodness no – those will be used for backing and shims
It takes a lot of little pieces to create a large project
A house can’t be built with just a brass knocker you know
The importance of respecting the part each one contributes
A good lesson to pass on to your son

I think I understand what you’re getting at
I can share with him the simple things of my trade
Like how important it is to have a solid foundation before building higher
Yes Joseph
Sometimes the simplest lessons are the best



What can we learn from the example of Joseph?

We can work toward trust in the face of unexpected circumstances.   This isn’t easy.  When I first started studying scripture my pastor taught that “why” wasn’t a meaningful question to ask.  “Why” was most often associated with whining.  Why did this happen to me?  Or questioning the authority of the person causing the situation.  “Why did you do this?  A better question is “What do I do now?”

There are times when it is good to determine the cause of a problem and attempt to modify things, so the problem doesn’t reoccur.  However, there are many times we are given a path where trust in an unknown master plan is our better option.  Moving forward in the face of an unexpected reality is a better choice than dwelling in “why me?”.

I have a motto for my tougher days that is “do the next right thing.”  We don’t know where our path will lead far into the future, so taking the next right step is sometimes as far as we can go.  We can trust the wisdom of Psalm 119:105, “Your word is a lamp for my feet, a light on my path” and work toward discerning that next right thing.

We can follow Joseph’s lead, as well as the teachings of Jesus, and choose Love over Law.  You may say, “We don’t have religious laws like that in our post-resurrection time.”  Let me use another quote to give you a little different perspective.  Anne Lamott said, “It's better to be kind than to be right.”  I knew a person that held up a line in a fast food restaurant and made an employee feel like a failure because she shorted him 25 cents when she gave him his change.  He was a person that was on the upper end of the income bracket, but he was “right” about the amount of change he deserved even though the emotional cost to the cashier was far more negative than him missing a quarter.  William James put it this way, “the art of being wise is the art of knowing what to overlook.”

There are times when a situation needs to be set right.  There are other times when the emotional cost to the people involved is more important than correcting a misstep.  In that case it is far wiser and kinder to lead with love and forgiveness and let the misstep be overlooked.  Your life and the lives of those around you can experience more peace if you don’t feel the need to correct every wrong.  To be righteous and know right from wrong is a good thing, but if that slides into being self-righteous, which is believing you are morally superior, it is a negative one.

We daily can choose how we accept Jesus into our lives.  I am asking you to claim that baby in the manager as your own just as Joseph did.  We are to name him Jesus / “Jehovah saves” and Emmanuel / “God with us” and know that we are the “us”.   We say in the Apostle’s Creed that we believe in Jesus “who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the Virgin Mary; suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried.”  To believe means we accept it is true.  Joseph believed that what the dream explained was true.  He took it one step past belief and acted in faith by claiming Jesus as his own.  Faith can be defined as “complete trust or confidence.”  It is the difference between calling Jesus a savior and claiming him as my savior. 

My little play brought out a risk we have as humans.  We may not invite Jesus into our lives because we feel unworthy of welcoming him in.  Jesus words, “your sins are forgiven”, was given to many coming to him for healing. 


Psalm 103:8-12 tell us;
The LORD is compassionate and gracious, slow to anger, abounding in love.  He will not always accuse, nor will he harbor his anger forever; he does not treat us as our sins deserve or repay us according to our iniquities.  For as high as the heavens are above the earth, so great is his love for those who fear him; as far as the east is from the west, so far has he removed our transgressions from us.


Jesus said he’s standing at the door knocking.  He has chosen to make his dwelling within us.  He believes we are enough.  We have free will.  He’s not going to knock the door down and come into our hearts without being invited in. 

Our world needs God’s love today.  Our world needs God’s peace.  His love came down two thousand years ago as a child and Joseph took Him into his heart and into his home.  Today his love comes down when we say “welcome” and open our hearts to receive him.  This must be an active choice.  It must come from your heart. 

For those of you hesitating because you don’t know what you could contribute toward this relationship, my advice to you is to be yourself and give yourself to Him.  You have been chosen.  You are God’s child.  You are enough.  Accept yourself as worthy of acting as His dwelling place, and then accept Jesus, who is waiting to enter, into your heart.

In our first hymn we sang Jesus was “born to reign in us”.  In our final hymn of the day we will sing “fix in us thy humble dwelling” and “enter every trembling heart”.  Own those words.  God will work with you on the rest.  Trust Him in faith.  Live in love.  Claim Him as your own.

One more little piece I wrote in 1998 on the influence of Joseph.


Jesus
was indeed
influenced by a carpenter

For at the close of his life
with wood and with nails
and his own two hands

he formed a gift
no other craftsman
could equal


Amen

No comments:

Post a Comment