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by Christians around the world
Sunday 23
December 2007
Learning from
Joseph
A
sermon preached by
Katharine Smith, Reader at St. Andrew's Church on 23 December 2007.

Inspired by the
St. Andrew's Advent banner
The baby is only
just beginning to take a recognisable shape.
He’s tiny, curled
up, waiting, growing, unaware of who he is
and what his life will be. His mother, Mary, is
betrothed to a man called Joseph. But he’s not
Joseph’s son, not yet.
Joseph hasn’t yet
decided what he’s going to do about this
situation.
He could force
Mary to undergo a public trial because a
betrothal in this society is a legally binding
contract and Mary, it would seem, has been
unfaithful.
She could be
stoned.
And what then
would happen to our tiny baby who is just
beginning to take shape? Even if she lived could
he survive his mother’s stoning?
But Joseph is a
good man, a righteous man and he decides that,
with regret,
he will quietly
and privately divorce Mary and not complete
their marriage to her.
And what then
would happen to our tiny baby who is just
beginning to take shape?
Perhaps he will
live a life of shame, of poverty and
vulnerability because his mother will be on her
own with no man to protect her with his name, a
home and financial security.
What a risk God
takes when he gives himself over to a human
life.
But Joseph has a
dream. He hears God calling in the night with
the voice of an angel telling him not to be
afraid, to go ahead and marry Mary, to accept
her child as his son and to name him Jesus.
A child who will
save his people from their sin.
A child who will
be Emmanuel: “God is with us”.
And so what
happens to our tiny baby is he grows and is born
to loving parents who both said yes to God when
he took that risk of giving himself over to a
human life.
After his birth
there will be other dangers and it will be
Joseph, once again, who listens to God calling
in the night, in dreams, directing him away from
danger into safety.
On Tuesday at our
community carol service Jim was asking what we
wanted for Christmas. He talked about the word
“want” and how it can mean “lack of”
something. What do we lack this Christmas? What
do we need this Christmas?
God knows our
deepest, perhaps unspoken, needs and dreams. He
knows what it is we lack deep in our hearts; he
knows what we want. And it may be that today,
this Advent, God, in his infinite wisdom and
love, is entrusting to us some new task, a new
idea about how to live our lives, a new vision
for the future, a new sense of God being with us
and how that might shape our lives.
Something new
that will fulfil those deep unspoken needs.
Whatever it is,
perhaps it’s as tiny and vulnerable as our tiny
baby; a fragile new thing that we need to
protect, to treat tenderly, to nurture. Maybe
it’s so small we can’t see what it’s going to be
or where it’s going to take us.
This Advent, this
Christmas, let’s learn from Joseph.
Like Joseph let’s
listen to God’s message sent by an angel,
revealed in a dream or gently planted in our
minds when we’re thinking about turkeys and
Christmas puddings.
Like Joseph let’s
act on that message, trusting in the
truthfulness and the rightness that we sense
under and behind the doubts, questions and
fears.
Like Joseph let’s
protect and guard that tiny gift of God that’s
going to grow and save us from our sins.
Let’s allow the
Holy Spirit, like fire and like a dove, to give
us Holy Energy and Holy Peace so that in our
lives too the word becomes flesh and dwells
among us saving us from our sins.
Thanks be to God.
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