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  1. Her husband Joseph, being a righteous man and unwilling to disgrace her, decided to divorce her secretly. Literal Standard Version and her husband Joseph being righteous, and not willing to make her an example, resolved to send her away privately. Majority Standard Bible

  2. Joseph was an upright man according to the law, and could not therefore make up his mind to retain Mary, as she was pregnant without him; at the same time he could not bring himself to abandon her publicly; he therefore resolved to adopt the middle way, and dismiss her secretly.

  3. Espousal/Betrothal is a binding covenant prior to the marriage feast and consummation - which is why separate rules are given for it in Deuteronomy 22. Joseph is legally herhusband” and she is is “wife” though they are not yet “married”.

  4. While Luke's version of the story of Jesus' birth focuses more closely on Mary's experience, Matthew is describing it from Joseph's perspective. Mary and Joseph were betrothed to be married, something far more formal than a modern engagement.

  5. Her husband Joseph, being a righteous man and unwilling to disgrace her, decided to divorce her secretly. PHILLIPS. The birth of Jesus Christ happened like this. When Mary was engaged to Joseph, just before their marriage, she was discovered to be pregnant—by the Holy Spirit.

  6. Dec 6, 2021 · While Mary was promised in marriage to Joseph, but before they were united, she was found to be pregnant by holy spirit, and the account states: “However, Joseph her husband, because he was righteous and did not want to make her a public spectacle, intended to divorce her secretly.”

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  8. Mar 24, 2021 · Why did Mary kill her husband in “Lamb to the Slaughter”? In the story “Lamb to the Slaughter,” Mary takes a drastic and unexpected action by killing her husband, Patrick. The decision emerges from a complex combination of circumstances and emotions that ultimately drive her to commit such a desperate act of violence.