They first caught my eye this year. I’m not sure why this is
the first year I noticed them. They have been there year after year. Every
Christmas you see them in the most famous family portrait. Mary is kneeling by
the manger and Joseph is standing over her, together they are witnessing a
miracle.
Mary was young. Joseph was older. I imagine neither of them
ever thought they would be chosen to be the parents of Jesus. Their dreams were probably simple dreams.
They wanted a warm house. They wanted a prosperous life. They wanted to live a
comfortable life. They thought they had
everything in place to have that comfortable, normal life. Then the angel came.
The angel just dropped in on Mary one day and told her the
world was about to be changed. Mary must
have been such a faithful woman. She said “ok, let it be as you have said”. She
didn’t put out a fleece. She didn’t argue. She just said ok. Then, she went and
lived out the “ok”.
I can imagine Joseph’s face as Mary tells him what happened.
I don’t know what kind of relationship they had prior to that conversation.
Maybe they knew each other. Maybe they were in love and had those long rambling
conversations of new love. Maybe they just had a passing relationship, the type
where conversations were kept to the point. I don’t know. I can see this conversation
going down though.
Joseph is trying to process what Mary has said. I imagine
sleep came hard for him that night. Then the angel came. The angel came and
explained that Mary wasn’t crazy. So they entered together into a new type of
relationship. A relationship built on faith that what God said would be.
It is easy sometimes to be faithful for a minute. To grab
hold of faith and stand firm knowing that in a day or two the crisis will pass.
This faith journey they were on was a lifetime journey. As Mary’s belly grew, so did the whispers.
Did they run to each other or did they drift apart, Joseph blaming Mary for
this problem and Mary feeling so alone? I like to think that there were days of
each, days of running to each other and days of running away from each other. There were days when the faith jar was empty.
Days when Mary’s body hurt and the girls she had grown up with were rude. There
were days when Joseph’s buddy said one too many “funny” comments.
Then there was the journey to Bethlehem. Mary was ready to
deliver. Joseph was worried about money and the baby and Mary. What kind of father couldn't find a decent
place for this baby to be born? What kind of a husband made his wife walk 70
miles at the end of her term? What kind of a God would send an angel to mess up
a life plan like this?
The night passed and the baby came. Mary, still weak but in awe, looks at the baby
and then at Joseph. Joseph looks down at
Mary. Their faith has been made flesh. It still doesn't make any sense but they
feel something different in the air. God is there. God is with them. Despite
their doubts, even though they had such weak faith, God chose them and God was
there wrapped in swaddling clothes.
After the family picture was made, the one where they are
posed in silhouette-Mary kneeling, Jesus in the manger, Joseph looking down on
them- did Joseph gather the weary Mary in his arms and hold her? Did Mary cry
all the tears she had held back so long? As all the fears of new parents washed
over them, did they become one flesh joined forever in the miracle of this
birth?
The light of the baby Jesus, the light of love wrapped them
in joy. There must have been some special delight in caring for Jesus something
sweeter even than the routine sweetness of a beloved child. One day, maybe I will ask them. I will ask
Mary what her day to day life was like. I will ask Joseph if he ever fully
trusted Mary and the angels.
For now, I will look at the family picture and imagine the
conversations between the virgin and the carpenter as they prepared for our
Emmanuel.
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