J
JacktheCatholic
Guest
Your use of ‘normal’ and ‘extraordinary’ apply in todays world but 2,000 years ago these terms would have different meaning than today.
Jack, elderly is one thing - certainly it’s very plausible that Joseph could have been significantly older than Mary. A 60 or 70 year age difference is something quite extraordinary though. And would have been in those days as well. And I believe Joseph and Mary were, and had to be, a relatively normal family as far as outward appearances. That’s why Jesus was born so humbly when he could have been (and would have been more easily believed if he had been) a great Prince or the son of the High Priest or something.
Imagine the attention that would have been drawn to Jesus (and to Joseph, who everyone thought was his father!) if he was 85 at the birth of the child. It is recorded in the Scriptures that Zechariah and Abraham were old men when they had their children - it was further proof that the births of their sons were miraculous. It almost certainly would have been recorded if Joseph was so elderly as well.
Don’t forget the things Joseph did and had to do during his remaining thirty years. Play with the child, teach him the physically very demanding trade of carpentry, journey to Bethlehem, to Egypt and back to Nazareth. A few side trips to the Temple in Jerusalem (imagine him at the age of nearly a hundred running around looking for Jesus when he was lost in the Temple?!?).
Altogether it’s much more plausible that he was closer to Mary’s age. And there’s no more proof of the Divine Inspiration of that particular text than of any of the other account of the lives of Jesus, Mary and the Apostles which haven’t been included in the Bible. We are not obligated to place any credence in a word of them.
As Catholics we read scripture and history within the context of the times and how people lived and thought.
I agree that a couple that had a wife of 12 and a husband of 90 in the USA today would not only be unheard of but illegal.
Back in those times this would have been acceptable and a much better vision than one of Mary being with out a husband and having a child.
As to age there is another Joseph in scripture that lived to be close to 150 years old. We must always remember that all is possible with God. That Joseph being 90 years old would not be so extraordinary or abnormal 2,000 years ago. I think the problem here is that WE have a mindset of those in the 21st century and in cultures that are vastly different than those of Rome 2,000 years ago.
And consider what is readily accepted by many Catholics; Joseph was previously married and with children and that Jesus buried Joseph.
Since Joseph had children from a previous marriage we can assume he was not a young man since it would have taken time to have six children and raise them and that his first wife was deceased before he was asked to marry Mary.
Jesus burrying his foster father also asserts that Joseph was well along in years and he died of old age.
