I played a cow in my first-grade Christmas pageant, and I had more
lines than the kid who played
Joseph. He was a prop, or so it seemed,
for Mary, the plastic doll in the manger, and the rest of us. We were
just following the script. There’s rarely much room in the inn of the
contemporary Christian imagination for Joseph, especially among
conservative Protestants like me. His only role, it seems, is an
usher—to get Mary to the stable in Bethlehem in the first place and then
to get her back to the Temple in Jerusalem in order to find the
wandering 12-year-old Jesus.
But there’s much more to the Joseph figure.
Real Father
When we talk about Joseph at all, we spend most of our time talking
about what he was not. We believe (rightly) with the apostles that Jesus
was conceived in a virgin’s womb. Joseph was not Jesus’ biological
father; not a trace of Joseph’s sperm was involved in the formation of
the embryo Christ. No amount of Joseph’s DNA could be found in the dried
blood of Jesus peeled from the wood of Golgotha’s cross. Jesus was
conceived by the Holy Spirit completely apart from the will or exertion
of any man.
That noted, though, we need to be careful that we don’t reduce Joseph
simply to a truthful first-century Bill Clinton: “He did not have
sexual relations with that woman.” There’s much more to be said. Joseph
is not Jesus’ biological father, but he is his real father. In his
adoption of Jesus, Joseph is rightly identified by the Spirit speaking
through the Scriptures as Jesus’ father (Luke 2:41, 48).
Jesus would have said “Abba” first to Joseph. Jesus’ obedience to his
father and mother, obedience essential to his law-keeping on our
behalf, is directed toward Joseph (Luke 2:51).
Jesus does not share Joseph’s bloodline, but he claims him as his
father, obeying Joseph perfectly and even following in his vocation.
When Jesus is tempted in the wilderness, he cites the words of
Deuteronomy to counter “the flaming darts of the evil one” (Eph. 6:16).
Think about it for a moment—Jesus almost certainly learned those Hebrew
Scriptures from Joseph as he listened to him at the woodworking table
or stood beside him in the synagogue.
Difficult Deed
Our contemporary cartoonish, two-dimensional picture of Joseph too
easily ignores how difficult it was for him to do what he did. Imagine
for a minute that one of the teenagers in your church were to stand up
behind the pulpit to give her testimony. She’s eight months pregnant and
unmarried. After a few minutes of talking about God’s working in her
life and about how excited she is to be a mother, she starts talking
about how thankful she is that she’s remained sexually pure, kept all
the “True Love Waits” commitments she made in her youth group Bible
study. You’d immediately conclude that the girl’s either delusional or
lying.
When contemporary biblical revisionists scoff at the virgin birth of
Jesus and other miracles, they often tell us we’re now beyond such
“myths” since we live in a post-Enlightenment, scientifically
progressive information age. What such critics miss is the fact that
virgin conceptions have always seemed ridiculous. People in
first-century Palestine knew how babies were conceived. The
implausibility of the whole thing is evident in the biblical text
itself. When Mary tells Joseph she is pregnant, his first reaction isn’t
a cheery “It’s beginning to look a lot like Christmas.” No, he assumes
what any of us would conclude was going on, and he sets out to end their
betrothal.
But then God enters the scene.
When God speaks in a dream to Joseph about the identity of Jesus,
Joseph, like everyone else who follows Christ, recognizes the voice and
goes forward (Matt. 1:21-24). Joseph’s adoption and protection of Jesus is simply the outworking of that belief.
Same Faith
In believing God, Joseph probably walked away from his reputation.
The wags in his hometown would probably always whisper about how “poor
Joseph was hoodwinked by that girl” or how “old Joseph got himself in
trouble with that girl.” As the stakes grew higher, Joseph certainly
sacrificed his economic security. In first-century Galilee, after all,
one doesn’t simply move to Egypt, the way one might today decide to move
to New York or London. Joseph surrendered a household economy, a
vocation probably built up over generations, handed down to him, one
would suppose, by his father.
Again, Joseph was unique in one sense. None of us will ever be called
to be father to God. But in another very real sense, Joseph’s faith was
exactly the same as ours. The letter of James, for instance, speaks of
the definition of faith in this way: “Religion that is pure and
undefiled before God, the Father, is this: to visit orphans and widows
in their affliction, and to keep oneself unstained from the world”
(1:27). James is the one who tells us further that faith is not mere
intellectual belief, the faith of demons (2:19), but is instead a faith
that works.
James shows us that Abraham’s belief is seen in his offering up
Isaac, knowing God would keep his promise and raise him from the dead
(2:21-23). We know Rahab has faith not simply because she raises her
hand in agreement with the Hebrew spies but because in hiding them from
the enemy she is showing she trusts God to save her (2:25). James tells
us that genuine faith shelters the orphan.
What gives even more weight to these words is the identity of the
human author. This letter is written by James of the Jerusalem church,
the brother of our Lord Jesus. How much of this “pure and undefiled
religion” did James see first in the life of his own earthly father? Did
the image of Joseph linger in James’s mind as he inscribed the words of
an orphan-protecting, living faith?
It’s a shame that Joseph is so neglected in our thoughts and
affections, even at Christmastime. If we pay attention to him, though,
we just might see a model for a new generation of Christians. We might
see how to live as the presence of Christ in a culture of death. We
might see how to image a protective Father, how to preach a
life-affirming gospel, even in a culture captivated by the spirit of
Herod.
by Russell D. Moore, President of the Southern Baptist Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission, the Southern Baptist Convention’s official entity assigned to address social, moral, and ethical concerns.
Dr. Moore earned a B.S. in history and political science from the
University of Southern Mississippi. He also received the M.Div. in
biblical studies from New Orleans Baptist Theological Seminary, and the
Ph.D. in systematic theology from The Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary. This post originally appeared at The Gospel Coalition Blog on December 15, 2011, under the title, “Father to God, Model for Us.”