The Bible
pays Joseph the highest compliment: he was a “just” man. The quality
meant a lot more than faithfulness in paying debts.
When the Bible speaks of
God “justifying” someone, it means that God, the all-holy or
“righteous” One, so transforms a person that the individual shares
somehow in God’s own holiness, and hence it is really “right”
for God to love him or her. In other words, God is not playing games, acting as if
we were lovable when we are not.
By saying Joseph was “just,”
the Bible means that he was one who was completely open to all that God wanted to
do for him. He became holy by opening himself totally to God.
The rest we
can easily surmise. Think of the kind of love with which he wooed and won Mary,
and the depth of the love they shared during their marriage.
It is no
contradiction of Joseph’s manly holiness that he decided to divorce Mary
when she was found to be with child. The important words of the Bible are that he
planned to do this “quietly” because he was “a righteous man,
yet unwilling to expose her to shame” (Matthew 1:19).
The just man
was simply, joyfully, wholeheartedly obedient to God—in marrying Mary, in
naming Jesus, in shepherding the precious pair to Egypt, in bringing them to
Nazareth, in the undetermined number of years of quiet faith and
courage.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Comments will be posted after they are reviewed by the admin. Thank you