December
2014
/ January 2015 - Vol. 77
“You
Shall Call His Name Jesus”
A
Scriptural reflection
.
by Jeanne Kun
Reflecting on the Word
The moment long awaited by Israel is now at
hand. Devout Jews had been yearning for
centuries for the fulfillment of the messianic
promises. Their hopes and expectations – and
much more – would
soon be realized: “When the time had fully
come, God sent forth his Son, born of woman,
born under the law, to redeem those who were
under the law, so that we might receive
adoption as sons” (Galatians 4:4-5). Another
English translation, “In the fullness of
time,” evokes the vivid image of year being
added to year, like an empty measure being
filled drop by drop until it brims over.
“Born of woman” – God
chose to send one of human flesh and blood to
overcome the curse of sin that Adam and Eve
had brought upon humankind. And so he asked a
daughter of Israel, Mary of Nazareth, to be
the mother of his Son. Of Mary’s role in God’s
plan, Cardinal John Henry Newman noted,
The Seed of the woman, announced to
guilty Eve, after long delay, was at length
appearing upon earth, and was to be born of
her. In her the destinies of the world were to
be reversed, and the serpent’s head bruised.
On her was bestowed the greatest honor ever
put upon any individual of our fallen race.
God was taking upon Him her flesh, and
humbling Himself to be called her offspring; – such
is the deep mystery! (Sermon 12, “The
Reverence Due to the Virgin”)
Mary gave her consent to God’s request – “Behold,
I am the handmaid of the Lord; let it be to me
according to your word” (Luke 1:38) – and
Jesus was conceived in her womb through the
overshadowing of the Holy Spirit (1:35). Yet
Mary must have been overwhelmed as she heard the
angel Gabriel describe the child she was to
bear: He was to be named Jesus (1:31), meaning
“the Lord saves,” and would be called “Son of
the Most High” (1:32) and “Son of God” (1:35).
He would be the fulfillment of the promise God
made to David so long ago (1:32-33).
Matthew tells us that Joseph took Mary, his
betrothed, to be his wife after God assured
him of the divine purpose at work in her. The
child Mary was carrying had been conceived in
a way that surpassed nature – “of
the Holy Spirit” (Matthew 1:18) – and
would “save his people from their sins”
(1:21). “[Joseph] took Mary as his wife in
humble acceptance of the mystery of her
maternity. He accepted her along with her Son
who would come to the world by the action of
the Holy Spirit. St. Joseph can therefore be
compared to Our Lady in his great docility to
the will of God as revealed to him by an
angel” (Pope John Paul II, Guardian of the
Redeemer).
Matthew’s account of Jesus’ birth begins with
his genealogy (Matthew 1:1-16). Jewish
genealogies followed the male line. Joseph
belonged to the family of David and was, as
the husband of Mary, the legal father of
Jesus. As such, God entrusted Joseph with the
responsibility of naming of the child (1:21,
25). Since this was a parental duty, Joseph’s
action indicates that he adopted this child
into his lineage. Through Joseph’s lineage and
his legal paternity, Jesus is the son of David
– and
thus fulfills God’s promise to David that his
dynasty would last for all generations. Since
it was common for people to marry within their
clans, most likely Mary was also descended
from the house of David.
But it is through the Holy Spirit and the
miraculous virginal maternity of Mary that
Jesus is the Son of God. Concerning the manner
of Jesus’ birth, Matthew refers back to the
prophecy of Isaiah 7 and explains, “All this
took place to fulfil what the Lord had spoken
by the prophet: “Behold, a virgin shall
conceive and bear a son, and his name shall be
called Emmanuel” (which means, God with us)”
(Matthew 1:22-23). Archbishop Oscar Romero
pointed out that as the virgin mother of the
Messiah, “Mary is the human instrument . . .
who by her holiness was able to incarnate in
history God’s divine life.”
In words that have become so familiar to us
that we know them by heart, Luke describes the
journey of Joseph and Mary from Nazareth to
Bethlehem, David’s city, and the unassuming
circumstances of Jesus’ birth there (Luke
2:4-7).
Bethlehem lies in the Judean hills, six miles
south of Jerusalem. Rachel, the wife of the
patriarch Jacob, was buried there, and Ruth,
who became the great-grandmother of David and
ancestress of Jesus, settled in the town.
Bethlehem was the birthplace of David as well
as the place where Samuel anointed David king
to succeed Saul. Bethlehem is a small and
seemingly insignificant town, yet the prophet
Micah, a contemporary of Isaiah in the latter
half of the eighth century B.C., said of it,
But you, O Bethlehem Ephrathah, who
are little to be among the clans of Judah,
from you shall come forth for me one who is to
be ruler in Israel, whose origin is from of
old, from ancient days. (Micah 5:2)
Jewish tradition interpreted Micah’s prophecy as
predicting the exact place of birth of the
anticipated Messiah, a king who was to be far
greater than David. Centuries after Micah, the
Roman census decreed by Caesar Augustus brought
Mary and Joseph to Bethlehem, where the birth of
Jesus took place. Learned scribes of Israel who
studied the ancient writings of the prophets
recalled Micah’s prediction of where the Christ
was to born when the wise men came to King
Herod’s palace seeking the newborn king of the
Jews (Matthew 2:1-6). God’s plan to redeem the
human race, begun at the gates of Eden, reached
now to the gates of Bethlehem.
The angel’s message to the shepherds contains
the announcement of the birth in the city of
David of a “Savior, who is Christ the Lord”
(Luke 2:11). This child is a savior, because
he has come to redeem and save us from our
sins. He is Christ (christos means
anointed one), the Messiah now born in
fulfillment of the ancient hopes. Yet the
angel also told the shepherds that they would
find this newborn “wrapped in swaddling cloths
and lying in a manger” (2:12), a humble
setting for one they announced so exaltedly.
Luke’s text echoes the description of Solomon,
King David’s son, found in the Book of Wisdom:
And when I was born, I began
to breathe the common air, and fell upon the
kindred earth, and my first sound was a cry,
like that of all. I was nursed
with care in swaddling cloths. For no king has
had a different beginning of existence; there
is for all mankind one entrance into life, and
a common departure.(Wisdom 7:3-6)
By his human birth Jesus, Son of God and son of
Mary, shared our common humanity, our
vulnerability, our mortality,
The humility of God condescending to being
born as a human child in a stable is almost
unfathomable. Jesus’ birth in the flesh is a
manifestation of the mercy and grace of God.
The shepherds were privileged to be the first
to greet the incarnate God and to testify of
him to others (Luke 2:17-18). Surely what they
saw that wondrous night transformed their
lives and set them aglow with hope, for now a
child was growing up among them to be their
savior!
Mary “kept all these things, pondering them
in her heart” (Luke 2:19) through the years
ahead as her son grew and God’s unlikely plan
of salvation unfolded before her.
Jeanne
Kun is a noted author and a senior womens'
leader in the Word
of
Life Community, Ann Arbor, Michigan,
USA.
Excerpt from God's Promises
Fulfilled, The Word Among Us Press,
Copyright © 2006.
All rights reserved. Used with
permission.
|
Adoration of the Shepherds by El Greco
(1603)
The Scene
Matthew 1:18-25
18Now the
birth of Jesus Christ took place in this
way. When his mother Mary had been
betrothed to Joseph, before they came
together she was found to be with child
of the Holy Spirit; 19and her husband
Joseph, being a just man and unwilling
to put her to shame, resolved to send
her away quietly. 20But as he considered
this, behold, an angel of the Lord
appeared to him in a dream, saying,
“Joseph, son of David, do not fear to
take Mary your wife, for that which is
conceived in her is of the Holy Spirit;
21she will bear a son, and you shall
call his name Jesus, for he will save
his people from their sins.” 22All this
took place to fulfil what the Lord had
spoken by the prophet:
23
“Behold, a virgin shall conceive and
bear a son,
and
his name shall be called Emmanuel”
(which means, God with us). 24When
Joseph woke from sleep, he did as the
angel of the Lord commanded him; he took
his wife, 25but knew her not until she
had borne a son; and he called his name
Jesus.
The
Scene
Luke 2:1-21
1In those
days a decree went out from Caesar
Augustus that all the world should be
enrolled. 2This was the first
enrollment, when Quirinius was governor
of Syria. 3And all went to be enrolled,
each to his own city. 4And Joseph also
went up from Galilee, from the city of
Nazareth, to Judea, to the city of
David, which is called Bethlehem,
because he was of the house and lineage
of David, 5to be enrolled with Mary, his
betrothed, who was with child. 6And
while they were there, the time came for
her to be delivered. 7And she gave birth
to her first-born son and wrapped him in
swaddling cloths, and laid him in a
manger, because there was no place for
them in the inn.
8And in
that region there were shepherds out in
the field, keeping watch over their
flock by night. 9And an angel of the
Lord appeared to them, and the glory of
the Lord shone around them, and they
were filled with fear. 10And the angel
said to them, “Be not afraid; for
behold, I bring you good news of a great
joy which will come to all the people;
11for to you is born this day in the
city of David a Savior, who is Christ
the Lord. 12And this will be a sign for
you: you will find a babe wrapped in
swaddling cloths and lying in a manger.”
13And suddenly there was with the angel
a multitude of the heavenly host
praising God and saying,
14 “Glory
to God in the highest, and on earth
peace among men with whom he is
pleased!”
15When the
angels went away from them into heaven,
the shepherds said to one another, “Let
us go over to Bethlehem and see this
thing that has happened, which the Lord
has made known to us.” 16And they went
with haste, and found Mary and Joseph,
and the babe lying in a manger. 17And
when they saw it they made known the
saying which had been told them
concerning this child; 18and all who
heard it wondered at what the shepherds
told them. 19But Mary kept all these
things, pondering them in her heart.
20And the shepherds returned, glorifying
and praising God for all they had heard
and seen, as it had been told them.
21And at
the end of eight days, when he was
circumcised, he was called Jesus, the
name given by the angel before he was
conceived in the womb.
Pondering
the Word
1. Summarize Joseph’s
role in God’s plan of salvation. What does
the narrative in Matthew 1:18-24 indicate to
you about Joseph’s character? What qualities
does he exhibit?
2. List all the titles
attributed to Jesus in Matthew 1:18-24 and
Luke 2:1-20. Why, in your opinion, did
Matthew and Luke begin their gospels with
such attention to Jesus’ identity?
3. Identify the links
between David and Jesus recorded by Matthew
and Luke. Why do you think the Evangelists
pointed so frequently to the Old Testament
prophecies in describing Jesus and his
birth?
4. Luke mentions many
concrete details about the circumstances
surrounding Jesus birth (the Roman census,
the city of David, the lack of space in the
inn). Do you think Mary and Joseph
understood the significance of these
circumstances at the time? What does this
physical setting add to your understanding
of Jesus’ birth and mission?
5. Why, in your
opinion, did God announce the birth of his
Son to shepherds rather than to the leaders
of Israel? Note the verbs that describe the
shepherds’ actions. What do these actions
and their response to God’s message suggest
about them?
6. What is the
significance of Jesus’ incarnation –that
is,
of the fact that he took on human flesh to
redeem us? How is this related to God’s
promise in Genesis 3:15?
Living
the Word
1. How does the fact
that Jesus is both God and man affect you
personally? Have you ever felt reluctant to
bring your troubles to Jesus, thinking that
he wouldn’t understand? If so, how can you
overcome that reluctance?
2. Israel awaited the
coming of the Messiah for long centuries,
until “the time had fully come” (Galatians
4:4) for God to send his Son. Reflect on a
situation in your life in which you were
forced to wait on God and his timing. How
did you deal with it? How can “waiting on
God” be an active rather than a passive
activity?
3. Joseph trusted God
and obeyed him in the face of unexpected
situations such as Mary’s miraculous
pregnancy and the lack of accommodations in
Bethlehem. What current situations in your
life call for trust in God and obedience?
How can Joseph’s example help you?
4. The name “Jesus”
means “Yahweh saves” or “Yahweh is
salvation,” that is, “savior.” In what
concrete ways has Jesus “saved” you?
5. The shepherds shared
the good news of what they been told by the
angel with Mary and Joseph and others (Luke
2:17-18). Have you ever had the opportunity
to share Christ and the gospel message with
others? Can you think of instances when you
missed an opportunity to spread the good
news? What prevented you?
6. At the birth of
Christ, a heavenly host of angels sang,
“Glory to God in the highest” (Luke
2:13-14). Imagine yourself joining in their
song of worship, and write your own prayer
praising God for his Son’s incarnation and
thanking him for his great love for you.
|