My Advent 4 sermon, which I had previously sent, still needed revising.  Here's 
the product of those revisions. 


Intro
Today, especially within the media and intelligentsia, many mock the Christian 
Faith.  Sometimes, it’s subtle; sometimes, it’s not.  You may find that they 
treat a Christian the way someone might treat a mentally challenged person who 
does something awkward.  They smile, nod politely, and then quickly shuffle him 
off.  At best, they tolerate us; even worse, we get pushed out from much of the 
conversation in the public square. 

That seems especially true whenever we talk about the birth of Jesus.  Almost 
no one denies that a man named “Jesus” was born when our calendar switched from 
BC to AD.  But far fewer people are willing to believe, teach, and confess that 
Jesus was conceived in a miraculous, extraordinary way.  Even within the walls 
of the Church you sometimes hear how Jesus was the illegitimate son of a Roman 
soldier. 

Main Body
But St. Matthew tells us the truth: “The birth of Jesus Christ took place in 
this way.  After His mother Mary had been engaged to Joseph, but before they 
came together, she was found to be pregnant through the Holy Spirit” (Matthew 
1:18). 

Why was our Lord born of a virgin who was engaged, or betrothed, to be married? 
 If it was all-important for our Lord to have a human mother, without a human 
father, then why did God choose a betrothed woman, instead of one fully 
married?  

Well, besides fulfilling Old-Testament prophecy, a virgin birth would show that 
the Messiah came from God’s doing, not man’s doing.  And because of that, a 
virgin birth testified to a Messiah who could do what only God could do: Save 
us from sin, death, and eternal damnation. 

Yet, God was also making another theological point.  For the Law would consider 
a woman in Mary’s position--being pregnant and unmarried--as an adulterer.  
According to Old-Covenant Law, adultery carried the sentence of death 
(Deuteronomy 22:22, Leviticus 20:10).  So, based on how it looked, Mary had 
earned herself the death sentence.  

Joseph’s role then becomes one of becoming Christ to Mary: He takes the death 
penalty away from Mary by taking her as his wife.  Isn’t that how the New 
Testament describes us, we in the Church, as the Bride of Christ?  It’s as if 
Joseph was going to present Mary to himself “in splendor, without spot or 
wrinkle or any other blemish--holy and blameless” (Ephesians 5:27).  And that 
is how Joseph will come to see Mary.  But, right now, he’s not there yet. 

In the Lord’s mercy and wisdom, He chose a young, betrothed, virgin girl to be 
the mother of Jesus.  Of course, then, it was much misery and hardship because 
it meant that both Mary and Joseph would lose their good reputations.  But they 
accepted their roles willingly, for they looked in faith to the One who would 
take all our guilt away and give us righteousness and life eternal in its 
place. 

That encourages us when hardship or difficulties come our way.  Instead of 
thinking that God has abandoned us, we can remember that God is working through 
the events of our lives, just like He did with Mary and Joseph.  “We know that 
all things work together for the good of those who love God” (Romans 8:28), for 
we know that God the Father has “appointed [Jesus] as head over everything for 
the benefit of the Church” (Ephesians 1:22). 

Yet, as important as Joseph’s role was in the birth of our salvation, He did 
not have sex with Mary or cause her to become pregnant.  That means Joseph was 
not the real father of Jesus.  He was only His guardian-father.  

Jesus’ real father is God our heavenly Father, through the Holy Spirit working 
through the Word that Gabriel, the angel, spoke.  And so, Mary became pregnant 
through her ears as the Holy Spirit entered her through the spoken Word of the 
angel.  Jesus’ conception didn’t happen in a normal, earthly way, but in a 
heavenly and divine way.  As St. Matthew tells us, Jesus’ conception was 
through or from “the Holy Spirit.”

That’s how God sent His Son to become our salvation.  That’s how God sent His 
Son to create a new and different beginning for us.  At the dawn time, God 
formed Adam, our first parent, from the new, virgin earth and gave him life by 
breathing into him His breath, His Spirit.  But Adam became disobedient and 
fell into sin.  That drove the gift of God’s life far away, which is why every 
one of us returns to the dust of the earth in death.  

And so for our salvation, Jesus becomes the second Adam.  God the Father forms 
His humanity from the virgin soil of Mary’s womb and His very breath, His Holy 
Spirit.  God didn’t form Jesus from the soil of a new earth, but from the dust 
that is our flesh in the womb of the Virgin Mary.  

That was how Jesus came to be the beginning of a new humanity, a second Adam, 
who could save us while our old humanity still entrapped us.  Jesus’ 
Holy-Spirited conception is something on which our Faith stands or falls.  For 
if the Holy Spirit didn’t bring about Mary’s pregnancy, then Jesus was just a 
man, not the God in human flesh who saves us for eternity. 

But poor Joseph doesn’t know about this--at least, not yet.  So, imagine 
Joseph’s predicament.  In his mind, he must have gone back and forth about Mary 
being pregnant.  He could have made her pregnancy public, showing that he had 
no part in an unlawful adultery.  But, according to the Law, that would have 
exposed Mary as an adulteress.  That would have meant the death sentence for 
her.  But if Joseph pretended that Mary’s pregnancy never happened, he then 
would be consenting of her actions.  What was Joseph to do?

St. Matthew explains what Joseph had decided to do: “[Mary’s] husband Joseph 
was an honorable man and did not want to disgrace her publicly.  So he intended 
to divorce her privately” (Matthew 1:19).  That’s what Joseph was going to 
do--divorce her privately. 

Betrothal was serious.  The culture of that time considered those who were 
betrothed as husband and wife, of course without the sexual relations.  That 
would happen after marriage.  Betrothal was so serious that someone could break 
the betrothal, call off the marriage, only by going through a divorce.  It 
wasn’t like today’s marriage engagements.  

And if early-Church tradition is accurate, Joseph had previously married and 
had other children.  Those children became the brothers and sisters of Jesus, 
which the New Testament mentions.  Joseph’s earlier wife had died, and he was a 
man with a long-established and good reputation (Epiphanius of Salamis).  What 
then should he do?  

And when we learn what Joseph finally does, he gives us a good, Christian 
example on how to deal with sin.  Of course, we still call a sin a sin.  But we 
should also seek to deal with sin in compassion and mercy.  We should see 
beyond the weakness that makes a sin so easy to commit and, instead, see the 
Son of God, born of the Virgin Mary, who came to set us free from our 
weaknesses and sins. 

That’s the way God treats you.  He saw, even from conception, how the germ of 
sin has infected each of us.  That’s why we have the sinful cravings and the 
evil thoughts that we do.  We sin because we are conceived in sin.  We don’t 
become sinners because we happen to do something wrong.  Sin is our congenital 
condition, which we’ve inherited from Adam. 

That’s why God sent His Son to be the second Adam, to be born in a new and pure 
way.  That was so we, who are born in sin, could be reborn into holiness 
through the forgiveness of sins.  That’s why Scripture calls baptism a new 
birth (John 3:5-7).  That’s why God uses baptism to bring you into the 
forgiveness of sins (Acts 2:38).  That’s the new birth that God uses to bring 
you into the new life of Christ. 

Well, back to Joseph.  He didn’t divorce Mary.  He, instead, responded to 
Mary’s pregnancy by becoming the face of Jesus to her, to the one who was 
swaddling the Christ-child within her womb.  Joseph sacrificed his reputation 
to save Mary’s life.  That’s also what Jesus did.  He responded to your sin by 
sacrificing His reputation on the cross, giving up His sinless life for your 
sinful one, all so you could live forever in the forgiveness of sins. 

Jesus, the Messiah, shows us what it means to be righteous.  It offends Him 
that your sins enslave you.  So Jesus becomes human in every way, except sin, 
so when He dies His death, He can give you His life.  That’s what the Angel 
Gabriel meant when he said: “Joseph, son of David, don’t be afraid to take Mary 
as your wife, for what is conceived in her is from the Holy Spirit.  She will 
give birth to a son, and you will name him Jesus, for he will save his people 
from their sins” (Matthew 1:20-21). 

That’s the salvation we need.  That’s the salvation for which we long.  That’s 
the salvation that becomes reality on Christmas day, when Jesus becomes the 
infant God in human flesh.  Jesus becomes our God, coming to us in the closest, 
possible way.  He becomes human--sinless and perfect, to save us from our sins 
and defects.  He comes to live within our hearts through His Gospel message, 
the preached Word.  He enters our bodies through His Supper, giving us the 
holiness and life that He brought into the world through His incarnation.  

Conclusion
And now, we look forward to His return on the Last Day, when this wonderful 
salvation will be visible for all to see.  On that Day, the Son, who became 
human by the Holy Spirit and the Virgin Mary, will arrive on the clouds.  It is 
then that we will arrive in eternity wearing the robe of a sinless, perfect 
human flesh, reunited to our souls, into God’s rule and reign of everlasting 
life.  Amen. 


--
Rich Futrell, Pastor
Shepherd of the Hills Lutheran Church, Kimberling City, MO
http://sothl.com 

Where we receive and confess the faith of the Church (in and with the Augsburg 
Confession): The faith once delivered to the saints, the faith of Christ Jesus, 
His Word of the Gospel, His full forgiveness of sins, His flesh and blood given 
and poured out for us, and His gracious gift of life for body, soul, and 
spirit.  

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