He was told in a dream to retreat to a land where his ancestors were once enslaved with fear and degradation; Egypt. But why? That doesn't make any sense.
With no significant accomplishments, wealth, or titles to his name; Joseph was just a common, ordinary, Jewish laborer, a carpenter.
And while engaged to be married he found himself at odds with reason and fate. Mary was pregnant with someone else's child and according to the law he had every right to leave her, expose her, even have her stoned. Surely thoughts of betrayal, unfaithfulness, and selfishness flowed through his mind.
But there's something revealed about Joseph that can easily be missed if not read carefully. The Bible says he was a righteous man. So he decided to put her away secretly; not to expose or extinguish her. His decision was endowed with dignity and respect.
But in a moment of contemplation an angel appeared to him in a dream and declared that he not divorce her but in fact marry her, name the baby Jesus, and step into the role of becoming the step-father of the Savior of the world. And Joseph obeyed. Why? Because he was righteous. Not just a rule follower or a law abider but righteous.
Again an angel appeared to Joseph in a dream to depart from Bethlehem to Egypt to escape the evil intent of King Herod whose kingdom felt threatened by the presence of Jesus.
Twice more an angel appeared to Joseph to part ways with their current home in an effort to fulfill the Scriptures by moving from Egypt to Israel to Nazareth.
According to Matthew's Gospel that's about the extent of Joseph's involvement in the Christmas story; a righteous man being visited by an angel four times and each time, he obeyed. When his actions would have been justified to put Mary away; he chose to trust and obey. When he could have claimed a hardship on traveling to other cities, he chose to trust and obey.
Joseph, the step-father of Jesus, accepted his role in the background so the bright lights could shine all around the lead role of Jesus coming into the world. He simply did what the righteous should do; he did the right thing, at the right time, for the right reason.
How can we be more like Joseph? When life offers us opportunities to live in judgment of others' actions or fear of God's calling we must learn to be wise and choose to do what's right. It's not always easy or attractive but it always puts the focus on the greater story being told; not our story but the story of Jesus.
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