Homily for December 18th, 2013: Matthew 1:18-25.
Luke’s gospel tells us that when the
angel Gabriel appeared to Mary to tell her that God wanted her to be the mother
of God’s son, Gabriel also told her that Mary’s cousin Elizabeth, though far beyond
child-bearing age, was also, as they say in England, “in a family way” – six
months pregnant, in fact. With typical generosity, Mary decided to go and visit
Elizabeth. She
couldn’t start right away. As I’ve told you so often, it was a man’s world. A
woman, especially a young teenager like Mary, could not travel alone. She must
have at least one chaperone.
Organizing that took time. Since the
whole purpose of the visit was to help with the birth of Elizabeth’s son, Mary was away from home for
some months. By the time she got back to Nazareth,
she was visibly pregnant. A film I saw a few years ago – I think it was called The Birth of the Messiah – shows Mary’s
encounter with Joseph after her months’ long absence. The look on his face is
unforgettable.
According to
the law of that day, an unmarried woman who got pregnant could be stoned for
bringing shame on her family. Though Mary had been unfaithful to him, Joseph still
loved her and did not want to be responsible for her death. Rather than
bringing public charges, Joseph decided simply to break off the engagement
quietly.
Then something unexpected happens. An
angel visits Joseph and tells him: the baby growing in Mary’s womb has no human
father. He is God’s Son, the anointed Servant of the Lord, the Messiah, whose
coming Israel’s
prophets have predicted for centuries. Then Joseph wakes up and realizes it was
only a dream.
Or was it really a dream, Joseph wonders? Suppose it’s true? With
great courage, and almost super-human faith, Joseph decides to go ahead with his
longed planned marriage. For the rest of his life, whenever Joseph had
doubts or second thouhts about the life he had chosen, all he had to go on was the
memory of a dream when he was only a teenager.
Friends, we too have staked our lives on a dream: that God
exists; that he is a God of love and of justice; that he has called us, as he
called Joseph, to be special servants for Mary and her Son Jesus.
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