An audio version of today's gospel and reflection can be accessed here.
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Today’s gospel (Luke 2: 41-51) recounts the episode of the
finding in the Temple. After the Passover visit to Jerusalem, the twelve year-old
Jesus stays in Jerusalem while his parents travel back to Nazareth. Realising He
is not with either of them, Mary and Joseph rush back to the city to search for
Him, a task that covers three days of utter anguish for them. They finally find
Him asking questions in the Temple and amazing those who heard His questions
and His own answers. Rebuked by Joseph and Mary, Jesus returns with them to a
life of submission and obedience in His own hometown.
This gospel marks the feast of St Joseph, and we will come
to him shortly. Yet in passing, let us wonder who could have heard Jesus speak
during this episode twenty years before His public ministry. Was Nicodemus there?
Does the gospel record without our knowing it the first stirrings of Nicodemus’s
vocation when he perhaps shared the amazement of Jesus’ listeners? Did a
different, ambitious man, a Sadducee named Caiaphas, look on and long to be the
centre of attention like this young Nazarene upstart? Who knows whose paths
intersect with this scene that is pregnant with meaning for the Old Testament
and the New?
Yet amid the tumult of these three days, we find the
fleeting figure of a father fraught with anxiety, accompanied by his even more
distressed wife, both looking desperately for signs that their child was still
alive and still here somehow in a capital city from where strangers from all
around the Mediterranean World were departing again for their distant homelands.
Apart from the usual fleshpots and dens of sin where Jesus might have been
detained, who know what ghastly fears crossed the minds of Mary and Joseph as
they watched the foreigners leaving, accompanied perhaps by retinues of young slaves?
How could their lovely boy have disappeared? Surely, He was taken against His
will? And how the three days, one by one, must have ground that niggling
anxiety to a sharpened, gleaming sword of sorrow!
Yet, we may wonder if Joseph’s anxiety was different from Mary’s,
and not only because he was a man, and men worry differently. Mary’s soul was
full of grace at all times. Yet because of this, we see in this moment that the
fullness of the gifts of the Holy Spirit cannot signify that God moves them
constantly into action. In these three days, Mary lives by the theological
virtue of faith, a faith unsupported by human emotion or the connatural
stirrings of affection that the Paraclete’s gifts share with us, a faith that
knows the greatness and goodness of God, but also that He can sometimes permit
the most terrible things to happen. Perhaps for Mary, the anxiety lay in not
knowing which explanation applied to Jesus’ absence. There was no human
accounting for it; only a gulf, an absence, a vacuum, where normally there was
union, presence, and a silent fullness in her soul.
Joseph’s experience was likely very different. By tradition
a man without personal sin, he was not preserved from the wounds of original
sin, and how these wounds must have bitten deeply in the three days of
searching. What thoughts of self-doubt that tortured his mind with the help of
demonic profiteers: Joseph the prudent become Joseph the fool who lost the Son
of God; Joseph the strong rendered Joseph the weak by failing to do his duty
towards his Son; Joseph the obedient rendered a rebel by his lack of attention.
Did Joseph go to bed fitful each night, hoping against hope that another dream
would visit him? Was the third morning worse than the others, precisely because
no dream had come now for two nights? Did he fear punishment because, like Eli
who failed to restrain his sons, he, Joseph, had failed to care for His?
All we know in the end is that St Joseph survived these
three days, and that Jesus was submissive to His authority from that moment
forward. Yet surely, in this moment, Joseph proved himself attentive to the
Father’s forming action. What was the Father teaching St Joseph in these days
of chaos and crisis if not that his own role was only for a time? Joseph had a
job to do, but it did not exhaust who he was. Joseph had responsibilities but
these did not define his life entirely. At all times, Joseph’s experience was
one of the need for utter dependence on the provision of God, communicated to
him often through angelic messengers. This experience must then have driven him
forward in that calling that lay within his exterior calling as the foster
father of Jesus. In the end, God gave Joseph a job only because He wanted
Joseph for His own, granting him a role in that work of salvation.
What are any of us called to when the circumstances escape
our capacities, other than to offer ourselves again to the loving kindness of
the heart of our God who has all things in His care? How deep the space that these
days of apparent separation must have carved in the heart of this just man! Yet
in this, he is our model and example, like his spouse Mary whose own experience
of these days we may reflect on another time. Mary, our mother and our model,
is yet different from us in a way that we cannot comprehend, due to her
unwounded human nature. Yet Joseph is like us, a man born in sin, a hero of
silent fidelity, of union with God’s purposes, of obedience despite the
cravings of his lower nature.
Next in the gospel come the middle, hidden years when Jesus becomes an adult man, and who does He choose to learn under but this humble carpenter from a despised Galilean town? God achieved many purposes in these events; the refining of Joseph’s soul for the road ahead was not the least of them. For in teaching him that he was not the master of his destiny, that nothing but the deepest reliance on God would do, the Heavenly Father taught Jesus’ earthly father to be a follower of Jesus before there was even such a thing.