Oblate Program at Belmont Abbey, NC

St. Joseph

As Joseph had a mind to put Mary away secretly, the Gospel lifts the veil of the mystery to him: “But hardly had the thought come to his mind, when an angel of the Lord appeared to him in a dream, and said, ‘Joseph, son of David, do not be afraid to take thy wife Mary to thyself, for it is by the power of the Holy Ghost that she has conceived this child; and she will bear a son, whom thou shalt call Jesus, for he is to save his people from their sins’ ” (Mt I:20-21).

Joseph’s worries were overcome by a revelation of the dignity of Christ’s Virgin Birth and of the nature of His mission– namely, to save us from our sins. The very words of the angel: “Do not be afraid to take thy wife Mary to thyself” seem to support the view that Joseph already believed that miracle had taken place in Mary and that that was why he “feared” to bring her into his own house. It is unlikely that any man told of a Virgin Birth would ever have credited it if there had not already been in his heart a belief in the Messias, Christ, Who was to come. Joseph knew that the Messias would be born of the family of David, and he himself was of that family. He also knew of the prophecies concerning the Child, even the one of Isaias that He would be born of a Virgin. If Joseph had not already been described as a just man, the message of the angel and the honor that was to come to Mary would have been enough to have inspired great purity in him. For if a modern father were told that one day his son would be President of the United States, it would inspire a changed attitude toward his wife, the mother of the child. In like manner, all anxiety and anguish now leave Joseph, as his soul is filled with reverence and awe for the love of Mary’s secret.

Archbishop Ven. Fulton J. Sheen
World’s First Love, pp. 90-91

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