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afriad, baptism, Christ Child, faith, God, Joseph, journey, love, Mary, messy, righteous, Sermon
I have always loved stories and images of Mary and the Christ Child. Mary is revered around the world, a patron saint to many, an intercessor for others (just think of all the “Hail Mary”s said globally), and a spiritual companion to some. I remember in the Holy Land visiting a chapel honoring Mary, the mother of Jesus. The chapel commissioned artists from around the world to depict their unique cultural version of Mary and Child. The walls are lined with these floor-to-ceiling renderings of the sacred pair. I was so taken with the images that I now have my own collection of Mary and Child paintings in my office.
I also remember that same day in the Holy Land, after spending what felt like hours meditating with these stunning paintings, then going down the road to a chapel dedicated to Joseph. The chapel was much smaller, rather nondescript, and quite frankly, easily forgettable. The only real memorable thing about the chapel is how distinctly different the Joseph chapel is from the Mary chapel.
I am struck this year, particularly as we baptize little Melody, how glad I am that we get Joseph’s story this Advent as opposed to Mary’s. On baptism Sundays with children, we have two realities. The first reality is the adorable, belovedness of the child, the glossy photos with family and fonts, the perfect hopefulness of initiating a child of God into the family of faith. We often skim over the second reality. We will hear right at the beginning of the baptism some questions for the family about renouncing Satan, evil powers of the world, and sinful desires. I often joke with the family how inappropriate talking about evil seems at a child’s baptism until you remember those painful sleepless nights of new parenting. But the reason we talk about that second reality is because we are initiating someone into the life of faith, and for those of us who have been at the life of faith for a while, we know the life of faith is not all roses, glossy photos, and cake. There will be real struggles.
And that is why I love that we start off Melody’s journey with a story about Joseph. We are told Joseph is a righteous man. He is devoted to God and lives an ethical life. He represents reality number one of baptism. But then, Joseph is presented with reality number two. When he learns Mary is pregnant before their marriage is consummated, he has three options: the harsh one would be to have her publicly held responsible, most likely by stoning; the generous one he plans to choose of quietly divorcing her, which saves her life, but will leave her in poverty with child in tow; or the unheard of third one, especially for a righteous man, of marrying her anyway and living forever in scandal. As one scholar explains, “In choosing Joseph to be Jesus’s earthly father, God leads a righteous man with an impeccable reputation straight into doubt, shame, scandal, and controversy…[God] requires Joseph to embrace a mess he has not created, to love a woman whose story he doesn’t understand, to protect a baby he didn’t father, to accept an heir who is not his son. In other words, God’s messy plan of salvation requires Joseph – a quiet, cautious, status quo kind of guy – to choose precisely what he fears and dreads the most. The fraught, the complicated, the suspicious, and the inexplicable.”[i]
I would much rather Melody start her faith journey off with a story that lets her know, honestly and unequivocally, how messy this journey will be. We have a hint of that messiness in Matthew’s gospel from the beginning. In the verses before what we heard today, is a long list of Joseph’s forefathers: from Abraham, who almost kills his son Ishmael and twice risks the life and safety of his wife Sarah, to Jacob, the trickster who steals his inheritance and livelihood twice, to David, who steals another man’s wife and has her husband murdered, to Tamar, who pretends to be a sex worker, and Rahab who is one. The genealogy of Christ is a “long line of broken, imperfect, dishonorable, and scandalous people.” As Debie Thomas explains, “The perfect backdrop, I suppose, for God’s relentless work of restoration, healing, and hope.”[ii]
That’s what telling Joseph’s story does for Melody and all of us today. Joseph reminds us that our faith journey will be messy. Our faith journey will not take us where we think our journey will. Our faith journey will invite us to love people we never thought we could. Our faith journey will sometimes seem meaningless or small, like that Joseph’s chapel in the Holy Land. But as the angel tells Joseph, so the angel of the Lord tells us today, “Do not be afraid.” Do not be afraid of the messiness of this journey. Do not be afraid of going where society may deem too messy. Do not be afraid to love with abandon, even if your loving is not seen by the crowds, or recognized all over the world. When we come out of the waters of baptism, we walk right into the mess – because the mess of the world is where God is. And we want to be there too. Amen.
[i] Debie Thomas, Into the Mess & Other Jesus Stories: Reflections on the Life of Christ (Eugene, OR: Cascade Books, 2022), 12.
[ii] Thomas, 13.