2022/04/04
33. The Vocation of Mary and Joseph
Jesus
encouraged mainly his male disciples to become "eunuchs who have made
themselves eunuchs for the sake of the kingdom of heaven."1
It is because men's bodies are designed to be able to control their sexual
impulses. The male body has a function whereby old sperm is absorbed into the
body to replenish it with new sperm. As male external genitalia is also used as
a urethra, some may think that sperm, like urine, must be expelled once it is
filled up, but the idea is an illusion. On the other hand, the number of eggs
is determined when a woman is a foetus in her mother's womb, and no new eggs
are produced after birth. An egg matures in a grown woman's body and comes out
into the fallopian tubes. If the egg does not meet any sperm and does not
become a fertilised egg, it is expelled from her body together with a part of
the uterus which peels off with bleeding. Ovulation, in which a mature egg is
released, happens independently of the woman's will. At this time, she
undergoes a few days of estrus. So, God specially prepared Mary so that she
would carry his only begotten Son. The Holy Spirit came upon her, and the power
of the Most High overshadowed her.2 It meant that her body
became "like an angel." Jesus must have had an image of his mother in
mind when he replied to the Sadducees: "They can no longer die, for
they are like angels; and they are the children of God because they are the
ones who will rise" (Luke 20:36). The Gospel accounts show that Jesus,
who was the first to rise from the dead, was seemingly no different from an
ordinary person. As Mary was likewise, no one, let alone herself, would have
realised what had happened to her. That is why Jesus responded to the woman,
"Rather, blessed are those who hear the word of God and observe it"
(Luke 11:28) when she said aloud, "Blessed is the womb that carried you
and the breasts at which you nursed" (Luke 11:27), and also addressed
his mother as "Woman."3 Considering all these
things, we can imagine that Joseph, who took Mary and her unborn child Jesus
into his home following the angel's instruction and became Jesus' earthly
father, witnessed extremely rare childbirth in Bethlehem. It must have been
like the scene in which Jesus has risen, leaving an empty tomb behind. Joseph
saw it all and realised everything; he feared God and lived his whole life as
"a eunuch who has made himself a eunuch for the sake of the kingdom of
heaven," even though he did not know it. The life choices of Mary and
Joseph opened up to Christians the possibility of receiving the life of a new
man and a new woman.
References: 1.
Matthew 19:12, 2. Luke
1:35, 3. John
2:4, 19:26
Maria
K. M.
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