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Church turns Joseph into a `new man'

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  • Church turns Joseph into a `new man'

    South Manchester Reporter, England
    Nov 18 2004

    Church turns Joseph into a `new man'

    REVEREND Greg Forster: Loves the new carol.

    A TRENDY church has turned the biblical Joseph into a touchy-feely
    `new man'.

    Instead of the age-old image of Joseph as a reluctant father, St
    Wilfrid's Church in Northenden has reincarnated the famous biblical
    figure as a sensitive soul firmly in touch with his feminine side.

    In a Christmas service on December 2, parishioners will get their
    first taste of a new carol by singer/songwriter Ian Vesty, a former
    Buddhist whose jolly ditty Joseph of Nazareth was written as an
    antidote to the rather more austere carols from the Victorian and
    Medieval eras.

    The song - in which Joseph dotes on a pregnant Mary and accepts the
    Virgin Birth despite having doubts - has been endorsed by the Rev
    Greg Forster at the 19th-century church.

    He said: "I'm very happy with the carol; it sticks strictly to the
    scriptures and the gospel according to Matthew, Luke and John.

    "It is saying that Joseph went along with what Mary was telling him
    even if he didn't know what it was about.

    "Ian's lyrics are teasing words. The song is all about making people
    think of Joseph in a new, much better light rather than the darker
    versions we've had before."

    The new image of Jospeh is very close to the one I read in the bible,
    and is far more sympathetic with him than the one depicted in the old
    Victorian and Medieval songs."

    Unlike in more traditional carols, in which Joseph was mainly
    depicted as an old man courting a very young Virgin Mary, Ian's
    lyrics depict the carpenter as a bit of a soft touch.

    Lines such as "Since you're with child and we know it's not me but a
    gift from on high, And I know in your heart and that's all that
    matters to me," turn Joseph into a retrospective new man of his day.

    In the second verse, Joseph spares a heavily-pregnant Mary the
    ignominoy of being presented to his relatives.

    Instead, she is taken straight to the inn where, in the gospel
    according to Ian Vesty, she gives birth prematurely after the rigours
    of her long journey on the back of a donkey.

    Rev Forster goes along with this too. He said: "The bible doesn't say
    that Mary gave birth prematurely, but it's something I suspect as
    well after all that travelling."

    In comparsion to the famous 12th-century song the Cherry Tree Carol,
    in which Joseph casts doubt on the Virgin Birth, Joseph of Nazareth
    depicts its eponymous character almost as a slave to Mary's wishes
    rather than a hard-headed sceptic.

    Ian, who has tried several faiths but no longer goes to church, said:
    "It occurred to me that here is this man who is engaged to be married
    to a young girl and she tells him, `Okay, I'm now pregnant'.

    "I think he was in love with this woman because obviously he went
    along with the Virgin Birth without really understanding it.

    "The difference between my lyrics and the old carols is that mine
    suggests Joseph was a changed man after he was visited in his dream
    by the angel who told him of the Virgin Birth, whereas in the old
    ones he was seen as a unbeliever until the miracle actually
    happened."

    Ian's song lyrics are not the first time St Wilfrid's has strayed
    from strict religious traditions. Three months ago, the South
    Manchester Reporter told how Rev Forster had changed the words to the
    famous hymn I Vow to Thee My Country to make it, as he put it, `less
    nationalistic and more Christian'.

    Ian will be selling copies of Jospeh of Nazareth on CD format at the
    Christmas carol service on Thursday, December 2. All proceeds from
    the CDs, which also feature The Cherry Tree and his own song Armenian
    Mass, will go to the Booth Centre, a drop-in for the destitute at
    Manchester Cathedral.
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