APOSTOLIC LETTER
PATRIS CORDE
OF THE HOLY FATHER
FRANCIS
ON THE 150th ANNIVERSARY
OF THE PROCLAMATION OF SAINT JOSEPH
AS PATRON OF THE UNIVERSAL CHURCH
WITH A FATHER’S HEART: that is how Joseph loved Jesus, whom all four
Gospels refer to as “the son of Joseph”.[1]
Matthew and Luke, the two Evangelists who speak most of Joseph, tell us
very little, yet enough for us to appreciate what sort of father he was, and
the mission entrusted to him by God’s providence.
We know that Joseph was a lowly carpenter (cf. Mt 13:55),
betrothed to Mary (cf. Mt 1:18; Lk 1:27). He
was a “just man” (Mt 1:19), ever ready to carry out God’s will as
revealed to him in the Law (cf. Lk 2:22.27.39) and through
four dreams (cf. Mt 1:20; 2:13.19.22). After a long and tiring
journey from Nazareth to Bethlehem, he beheld the birth of the Messiah in a
stable, since “there was no place for them” elsewhere (cf. Lk 2:7).
He witnessed the adoration of the shepherds (cf. Lk 2:8-20)
and the Magi (cf. Mt 2:1-12), who represented respectively the
people of Israel and the pagan peoples.
Joseph had the courage to become the legal father of Jesus, to whom he gave
the name revealed by the angel: “You shall call his name Jesus, for he will
save his people from their sins” (Mt 1:21). As we know, for ancient
peoples, to give a name to a person or to a thing, as Adam did in the account
in the Book of Genesis (cf. 2:19-20), was to establish a relationship.
In the Temple, forty days after Jesus’ birth, Joseph and Mary offered their
child to the Lord and listened with amazement to Simeon’s prophecy concerning
Jesus and his Mother (cf. Lk 2:22-35). To protect Jesus from
Herod, Joseph dwelt as a foreigner in Egypt (cf. Mt 2:13-18).
After returning to his own country, he led a hidden life in the tiny and
obscure village of Nazareth in Galilee, far from Bethlehem, his ancestral town,
and from Jerusalem and the Temple. Of Nazareth it was said, “No prophet is to
rise” (cf. Jn 7:52) and indeed, “Can anything good come out of
Nazareth?” (cf. Jn 1:46). When, during a pilgrimage to
Jerusalem, Joseph and Mary lost track of the twelve-year-old Jesus, they
anxiously sought him out and they found him in the Temple, in discussion with
the doctors of the Law (cf. Lk 2:41-50).
After Mary, the Mother of God, no saint is mentioned more frequently in the
papal magisterium than Joseph, her spouse. My Predecessors reflected on the
message contained in the limited information handed down by the Gospels in
order to appreciate more fully his central role in the history of salvation.
Blessed Pius IX declared him “Patron of the
Catholic Church”,[2] Venerable Pius
XII proposed him as “Patron of Workers”[3] and Saint John Paul II as “Guardian of the
Redeemer”.[4] Saint
Joseph is universally invoked as the “patron of a happy death”.[5]
Now, one hundred and fifty years after his proclamation as Patron
of the Catholic Church by Blessed Pius
IX (8 December 1870), I would like to share some personal
reflections on this extraordinary figure, so close to our own human experience.
For, as Jesus says, “out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks” (Mt 12:34).
My desire to do so increased during these months of pandemic, when we
experienced, amid the crisis, how “our lives are woven together and sustained
by ordinary people, people often overlooked. People who do not appear in
newspaper and magazine headlines, or on the latest television show, yet in
these very days are surely shaping the decisive events of our history. Doctors,
nurses, storekeepers and supermarket workers, cleaning personnel, caregivers,
transport workers, men and women working to provide essential services and
public safety, volunteers, priests, men and women religious, and so very many
others. They understood that no one is saved alone… How many people daily exercise
patience and offer hope, taking care to spread not panic, but shared
responsibility. How many fathers, mothers, grandparents and teachers are
showing our children, in small everyday ways, how to accept and deal with a
crisis by adjusting their routines, looking ahead and encouraging the practice
of prayer. How many are praying, making sacrifices and interceding for the good
of all”.[6] Each
of us can discover in Joseph – the man who goes unnoticed, a daily, discreet
and hidden presence – an intercessor, a support and a guide in times of
trouble. Saint Joseph reminds us that those who appear hidden or in the shadows
can play an incomparable role in the history of salvation. A word of
recognition and of gratitude is due to them all.
1. A beloved father
The greatness of Saint Joseph is that he was the spouse of Mary and the
father of Jesus. In this way, he placed himself, in the words of Saint John
Chrysostom, “at the service of the entire plan of salvation”.[7]
Saint Paul VI pointed out that Joseph
concretely expressed his fatherhood “by making his life a sacrificial service
to the mystery of the incarnation and its redemptive purpose. He employed his
legal authority over the Holy Family to devote himself completely to them in
his life and work. He turned his human vocation to domestic love into a
superhuman oblation of himself, his heart and all his abilities, a love placed
at the service of the Messiah who was growing to maturity in his home”.[8]
Thanks to his role in salvation history, Saint Joseph has always been
venerated as a father by the Christian people. This is shown by the countless
churches dedicated to him worldwide, the numerous religious Institutes,
Confraternities and ecclesial groups inspired by his spirituality and bearing
his name, and the many traditional expressions of piety in his honour.
Innumerable holy men and women were passionately devoted to him. Among them was
Teresa of Avila, who chose him as her advocate and intercessor, had frequent
recourse to him and received whatever graces she asked of him. Encouraged by
her own experience, Teresa persuaded others to cultivate devotion to Joseph.[9]
Every prayer book contains prayers to Saint Joseph. Special prayers are
offered to him each Wednesday and especially during the month of March, which
is traditionally dedicated to him.[10]
Popular trust in Saint Joseph is seen in the expression “Go to Joseph”,
which evokes the famine in Egypt, when the Egyptians begged Pharaoh for bread.
He in turn replied: “Go to Joseph; what he says to you, do” (Gen 41:55).
Pharaoh was referring to Joseph the son of Jacob, who was sold into slavery
because of the jealousy of his brothers (cf. Gen 37:11-28) and
who – according to the biblical account – subsequently became viceroy of Egypt
(cf. Gen 41:41-44).
As a descendant of David (cf. Mt 1:16-20), from whose
stock Jesus was to spring according to the promise made to David by the prophet
Nathan (cf. 2 Sam 7), and as the spouse of Mary of Nazareth,
Saint Joseph stands at the crossroads between the Old and New Testaments.
2. A tender and loving father
Joseph saw Jesus grow daily “in wisdom and in years and in divine and human
favour” (Lk 2:52). As the Lord had done with Israel, so Joseph did
with Jesus: “he taught him to walk, taking him by the hand; he was for him like
a father who raises an infant to his cheeks, bending down to him and feeding
him” (cf. Hos 11:3-4).
In Joseph, Jesus saw the tender love of God: “As a father has compassion
for his children, so the Lord has compassion for those who fear him” (Ps 103:13).
In the synagogue, during the praying of the Psalms, Joseph would surely
have heard again and again that the God of Israel is a God of tender love,[11] who
is good to all, whose “compassion is over all that he has made” (Ps 145:9).
The history of salvation is worked out “in hope against hope” (Rom 4:18),
through our weaknesses. All too often, we think that God works only through our
better parts, yet most of his plans are realized in and despite our frailty.
Thus Saint Paul could say: “To keep me from being too elated, a thorn was given
me in the flesh, a messenger of Satan to torment me, to keep me from being too
elated. Three times I appealed to the Lord about this, that it would leave me,
but he said to me: ‘My grace is sufficient for you, for power is made perfect
in weakness’” (2 Cor 12:7-9).
Since this is part of the entire economy of salvation, we must learn to
look upon our weaknesses with tender mercy.[12]
The Evil one makes us see and condemn our frailty, whereas the Spirit
brings it to light with tender love. Tenderness is the best way to touch the
frailty within us. Pointing fingers and judging others are frequently signs of
an inability to accept our own weaknesses, our own frailty. Only tender love
will save us from the snares of the accuser (cf. Rev 12:10).
That is why it is so important to encounter God’s mercy, especially in the
Sacrament of Reconciliation, where we experience his truth and tenderness.
Paradoxically, the Evil one can also speak the truth to us, yet he does so only
to condemn us. We know that God’s truth does not condemn, but instead welcomes,
embraces, sustains and forgives us. That truth always presents itself to us
like the merciful father in Jesus’ parable (cf. Lk 15:11-32).
It comes out to meet us, restores our dignity, sets us back on our feet and
rejoices for us, for, as the father says: “This my son was dead and is alive
again; he was lost and is found” (v. 24).
Even through Joseph’s fears, God’s will, his history and his plan were at
work. Joseph, then, teaches us that faith in God includes believing that he can
work even through our fears, our frailties and our weaknesses. He also teaches
us that amid the tempests of life, we must never be afraid to let the Lord
steer our course. At times, we want to be in complete control, yet God always
sees the bigger picture.
3. An obedient father
As he had done with Mary, God revealed his saving plan to Joseph. He did so
by using dreams, which in the Bible and among all ancient peoples, were
considered a way for him to make his will known.[13]
Joseph was deeply troubled by Mary’s mysterious pregnancy. He did not want
to “expose her to public disgrace”,[14] so
he decided to “dismiss her quietly” (Mt 1:19).
In the first dream, an angel helps him resolve his grave dilemma: “Do not
be afraid to take Mary as your wife, for the child conceived in her is from the
Holy Spirit. She will bear a son, and you are to name him Jesus, for he will
save his people from their sins” (Mt 1:20-21). Joseph’s response
was immediate: “When Joseph awoke from sleep, he did as the angel of the Lord
commanded him” (Mt 1:24). Obedience made it possible for him to
surmount his difficulties and spare Mary.
In the second dream, the angel tells Joseph: “Get up, take the child and
his mother, and flee to Egypt, and remain there until I tell you; for Herod is
about to search for the child, to destroy him” (Mt 2:13). Joseph
did not hesitate to obey, regardless of the hardship involved: “He got up, took
the child and his mother by night, and went to Egypt, and remained there until the
death of Herod” (Mt 2:14-15).
In Egypt, Joseph awaited with patient trust the angel’s notice that he
could safely return home. In a third dream, the angel told him that those who
sought to kill the child were dead and ordered him to rise, take the child and
his mother, and return to the land of Israel (cf. Mt 2:19-20).
Once again, Joseph promptly obeyed. “He got up, took the child and his mother,
and went to the land of Israel” (Mt 2:21).
During the return journey, “when Joseph heard that Archelaus was ruling
over Judea in place of his father Herod, he was afraid to go there. After being
warned in a dream” – now for the fourth time – “he went away to the district of
Galilee. There he made his home in a town called Nazareth” (Mt 2:22-23).
The evangelist Luke, for his part, tells us that Joseph undertook the long
and difficult journey from Nazareth to Bethlehem to be registered in his
family’s town of origin in the census of the Emperor Caesar Augustus. There
Jesus was born (cf. Lk 2: 7) and his birth, like that of every
other child, was recorded in the registry of the Empire. Saint Luke is
especially concerned to tell us that Jesus’ parents observed all the
prescriptions of the Law: the rites of the circumcision of Jesus, the
purification of Mary after childbirth, the offering of the firstborn to God
(cf. 2:21-24).[15]
In every situation, Joseph declared his own “fiat”, like those of Mary at
the Annunciation and Jesus in the Garden of Gethsemane.
In his role as the head of a family, Joseph taught Jesus to be obedient to
his parents (cf. Lk 2:51), in accordance with God’s command
(cf. Ex 20:12).
During the hidden years in Nazareth, Jesus learned at the school of Joseph
to do the will of the Father. That will was to be his daily food (cf. Jn 4:34).
Even at the most difficult moment of his life, in Gethsemane, Jesus chose to do
the Father’s will rather than his own,[16] becoming
“obedient unto death, even death on a cross” (Phil 2:8). The
author of the Letter to the Hebrews thus concludes that Jesus “learned
obedience through what he suffered” (5:8).
All this makes it clear that “Saint Joseph was called by God to serve the
person and mission of Jesus directly through the exercise of his fatherhood”
and that in this way, “he cooperated in the fullness of time in the great
mystery of salvation and is truly a minister of salvation.”[17]
4. An accepting father
Joseph accepted Mary unconditionally. He trusted in the angel’s words.
“The nobility of Joseph’s heart is such that what he learned from the law
he made dependent on charity. Today, in our world where psychological, verbal
and physical violence towards women is so evident, Joseph appears as the figure
of a respectful and sensitive man. Even though he does not understand the
bigger picture, he makes a decision to protect Mary’s good name, her dignity
and her life. In his hesitation about how best to act, God helped him by
enlightening his judgment”.[18]
Often in life, things happen whose meaning we do not understand. Our first
reaction is frequently one of disappointment and rebellion. Joseph set aside
his own ideas in order to accept the course of events and, mysterious as they
seemed, to embrace them, take responsibility for them and make them part of his
own history. Unless we are reconciled with our own history, we will be unable
to take a single step forward, for we will always remain hostage to our
expectations and the disappointments that follow.
The spiritual path that Joseph traces for us is not one that explains,
but accepts. Only as a result of this acceptance, this
reconciliation, can we begin to glimpse a broader history, a deeper meaning. We
can almost hear an echo of the impassioned reply of Job to his wife, who had
urged him to rebel against the evil he endured: “Shall we receive the good at
the hand of God, and not receive the bad?” (Job 2:10).
Joseph is certainly not passively resigned, but courageously and firmly
proactive. In our own lives, acceptance and welcome can be an expression of the
Holy Spirit’s gift of fortitude. Only the Lord can give us the strength needed
to accept life as it is, with all its contradictions, frustrations and
disappointments.
Jesus’ appearance in our midst is a gift from the Father, which makes it
possible for each of us to be reconciled to the flesh of our own history, even
when we fail to understand it completely.
Just as God told Joseph: “Son of David, do not be afraid!” (Mt 1:20),
so he seems to tell us: “Do not be afraid!” We need to set aside all anger and
disappointment, and to embrace the way things are, even when they do not turn
out as we wish. Not with mere resignation but with hope and courage. In this
way, we become open to a deeper meaning. Our lives can be miraculously reborn
if we find the courage to live them in accordance with the Gospel. It does not
matter if everything seems to have gone wrong or some things can no longer be
fixed. God can make flowers spring up from stony ground. Even if our heart
condemns us, “God is greater than our hearts, and he knows everything” (1 Jn 3:20).
Here, once again, we encounter that Christian realism which rejects nothing
that exists. Reality, in its mysterious and irreducible complexity, is the
bearer of existential meaning, with all its lights and shadows. Thus, the
Apostle Paul can say: “We know that all things work together for good, for
those who love God” (Rom 8:28). To which Saint Augustine adds,
“even that which is called evil (etiam illud quod malum dicitur)”.[19] In
this greater perspective, faith gives meaning to every event, however happy or
sad.
Nor should we ever think that believing means finding facile and comforting
solutions. The faith Christ taught us is what we see in Saint Joseph. He did
not look for shortcuts, but confronted reality with open eyes and accepted
personal responsibility for it.
Joseph’s attitude encourages us to accept and welcome others as they are,
without exception, and to show special concern for the weak, for God chooses
what is weak (cf. 1 Cor 1:27). He is the “Father of orphans
and protector of widows” (Ps 68:6), who commands us to love the
stranger in our midst.[20] I
like to think that it was from Saint Joseph that Jesus drew inspiration for the
parable of the prodigal son and the merciful father (cf. Lk 15:11-32).
5. A creatively courageous father
If the first stage of all true interior healing is to accept our personal
history and embrace even the things in life that we did not choose, we must now
add another important element: creative courage. This emerges especially in the
way we deal with difficulties. In the face of difficulty, we can either give up
and walk away, or somehow engage with it. At times, difficulties bring out
resources we did not even think we had.
As we read the infancy narratives, we may often wonder why God did not act
in a more direct and clear way. Yet God acts through events and people.
Joseph was the man chosen by God to guide the beginnings of the history
of redemption. He was the true “miracle” by which God saves the child and his
mother. God acted by trusting in Joseph’s creative courage. Arriving in
Bethlehem and finding no lodging where Mary could give birth, Joseph took a
stable and, as best he could, turned it into a welcoming home for the Son of
God come into the world (cf. Lk 2:6-7). Faced with imminent
danger from Herod, who wanted to kill the child, Joseph was warned once again
in a dream to protect the child, and rose in the middle of the night to prepare
the flight into Egypt (cf. Mt 2:13-14).
A superficial reading of these stories can often give the impression that
the world is at the mercy of the strong and mighty, but the “good news” of the
Gospel consists in showing that, for all the arrogance and violence of worldly
powers, God always finds a way to carry out his saving plan. So too, our lives
may at times seem to be at the mercy of the powerful, but the Gospel shows us
what counts. God always finds a way to save us, provided we show the same
creative courage as the carpenter of Nazareth, who was able to turn a problem
into a possibility by trusting always in divine providence.
If at times God seems not to help us, surely this does not mean that we
have been abandoned, but instead are being trusted to plan, to be creative, and
to find solutions ourselves.
That kind of creative courage was shown by the friends of the paralytic,
who lowered him from the roof in order to bring him to Jesus (cf. Lk 5:17-26).
Difficulties did not stand in the way of those friends’ boldness and
persistence. They were convinced that Jesus could heal the man, and “finding no
way to bring him in because of the crowd, they went up on the roof and let him
down with his bed through the tiles into the middle of the crowd in front of
Jesus. When he saw their faith, he said, ‘Friend, your sins are forgiven you’”
(vv. 19-20). Jesus recognized the creative faith with which they sought to
bring their sick friend to him.
The Gospel does not tell us how long Mary, Joseph and the child remained in
Egypt. Yet they certainly needed to eat, to find a home and employment. It does
not take much imagination to fill in those details. The Holy Family had to face
concrete problems like every other family, like so many of our migrant brothers
and sisters who, today too, risk their lives to escape misfortune and hunger.
In this regard, I consider Saint Joseph the special patron of all those forced
to leave their native lands because of war, hatred, persecution and poverty.
At the end of every account in which Joseph plays a role, the Gospel tells
us that he gets up, takes the child and his mother, and does what God commanded
him (cf. Mt 1:24; 2:14.21). Indeed, Jesus and Mary his Mother
are the most precious treasure of our faith.[21]
In the divine plan of salvation, the Son is inseparable from his Mother,
from Mary, who “advanced in her pilgrimage of faith, and faithfully persevered
in her union with her Son until she stood at the cross”.[22]
We should always consider whether we ourselves are protecting Jesus and
Mary, for they are also mysteriously entrusted to our own responsibility, care
and safekeeping. The Son of the Almighty came into our world in a state of
great vulnerability. He needed to be defended, protected, cared for and raised
by Joseph. God trusted Joseph, as did Mary, who found in him someone who would
not only save her life, but would always provide for her and her child. In this
sense, Saint Joseph could not be other than the Guardian of the Church, for the
Church is the continuation of the Body of Christ in history, even as Mary’s
motherhood is reflected in the motherhood of the Church.[23] In
his continued protection of the Church, Joseph continues to protect the
child and his mother, and we too, by our love for the Church, continue to
love the child and his mother.
That child would go on to say: “As you did it to one of the least of these
who are members of my family, you did it to me” (Mt 25:40).
Consequently, every poor, needy, suffering or dying person, every
stranger, every prisoner, every infirm person is “the child” whom Joseph
continues to protect. For this reason, Saint Joseph is invoked as protector of
the unfortunate, the needy, exiles, the afflicted, the poor and the dying.
Consequently, the Church cannot fail to show a special love for the least
of our brothers and sisters, for Jesus showed a particular concern for them and
personally identified with them. From Saint Joseph, we must learn that same
care and responsibility. We must learn to love the child and his mother, to
love the sacraments and charity, to love the Church and the poor. Each of these
realities is always the child and his mother.
6. A working father
An aspect of Saint Joseph that has been emphasized from the time of the
first social Encyclical, Pope
Leo XIII’s Rerum Novarum, is his relation to work.
Saint Joseph was a carpenter who earned an honest living to provide for his
family. From him, Jesus learned the value, the dignity and the joy of what it
means to eat bread that is the fruit of one’s own labour.
In our own day, when employment has once more become a burning social
issue, and unemployment at times reaches record levels even in nations that for
decades have enjoyed a certain degree of prosperity, there is a renewed need to
appreciate the importance of dignified work, of which Saint Joseph is an
exemplary patron.
Work is a means of participating in the work of salvation, an opportunity
to hasten the coming of the Kingdom, to develop our talents and abilities, and
to put them at the service of society and fraternal communion. It becomes an
opportunity for the fulfilment not only of oneself, but also of that primary
cell of society which is the family. A family without work is particularly
vulnerable to difficulties, tensions, estrangement and even break-up. How can
we speak of human dignity without working to ensure that everyone is able to
earn a decent living?
Working persons, whatever their job may be, are cooperating with God
himself, and in some way become creators of the world around us. The crisis of
our time, which is economic, social, cultural and spiritual, can serve as a
summons for all of us to rediscover the value, the importance and necessity of
work for bringing about a new “normal” from which no one is excluded. Saint Joseph’s
work reminds us that God himself, in becoming man, did not disdain work. The
loss of employment that affects so many of our brothers and sisters, and has
increased as a result of the Covid-19 pandemic, should serve as a summons to
review our priorities. Let us implore Saint Joseph the Worker to help us find
ways to express our firm conviction that no young person, no person at all, no
family should be without work!
7. A father in the shadows
The Polish writer Jan Dobraczyński, in his book The Shadow of the
Father,[24] tells
the story of Saint Joseph’s life in the form of a novel. He uses the evocative
image of a shadow to define Joseph. In his relationship to Jesus, Joseph was
the earthly shadow of the heavenly Father: he watched over him and protected
him, never leaving him to go his own way. We can think of Moses’ words to
Israel: “In the wilderness… you saw how the Lord your God carried you, just as
one carries a child, all the way that you travelled” (Deut 1:31).
In a similar way, Joseph acted as a father for his whole life.[25]
Fathers are not born, but made. A man does not become a father simply by
bringing a child into the world, but by taking up the responsibility to care
for that child. Whenever a man accepts responsibility for the life of another,
in some way he becomes a father to that person.
Children today often seem orphans, lacking fathers. The Church too needs
fathers. Saint Paul’s words to the Corinthians remain timely: “Though you have
countless guides in Christ, you do not have many fathers” (1 Cor 4:15).
Every priest or bishop should be able to add, with the Apostle: “I became your
father in Christ Jesus through the Gospel” (ibid.). Paul likewise calls the
Galatians: “My little children, with whom I am again in travail until Christ be
formed in you!” (4:19).
Being a father entails introducing children to life and reality. Not
holding them back, being overprotective or possessive, but rather making them
capable of deciding for themselves, enjoying freedom and exploring new
possibilities. Perhaps for this reason, Joseph is traditionally called a “most
chaste” father. That title is not simply a sign of affection, but the summation
of an attitude that is the opposite of possessiveness. Chastity is freedom from
possessiveness in every sphere of one’s life. Only when love is chaste, is it
truly love. A possessive love ultimately becomes dangerous: it imprisons,
constricts and makes for misery. God himself loved humanity with a chaste love;
he left us free even to go astray and set ourselves against him. The logic of
love is always the logic of freedom, and Joseph knew how to love with
extraordinary freedom. He never made himself the centre of things. He did not
think of himself, but focused instead on the lives of Mary and Jesus.
Joseph found happiness not in mere self-sacrifice but in self-gift. In him,
we never see frustration but only trust. His patient silence was the prelude to
concrete expressions of trust. Our world today needs fathers. It has no use for
tyrants who would domineer others as a means of compensating for their own
needs. It rejects those who confuse authority with authoritarianism, service
with servility, discussion with oppression, charity with a welfare mentality,
power with destruction. Every true vocation is born of the gift of oneself,
which is the fruit of mature sacrifice. The priesthood and consecrated life
likewise require this kind of maturity. Whatever our vocation, whether to
marriage, celibacy or virginity, our gift of self will not come to fulfilment
if it stops at sacrifice; were that the case, instead of becoming a sign of the
beauty and joy of love, the gift of self would risk being an expression of
unhappiness, sadness and frustration.
When fathers refuse to live the lives of their children for them, new and
unexpected vistas open up. Every child is the bearer of a unique mystery that
can only be brought to light with the help of a father who respects that
child’s freedom. A father who realizes that he is most a father and educator at
the point when he becomes “useless”, when he sees that his child has become
independent and can walk the paths of life unaccompanied. When he becomes like
Joseph, who always knew that his child was not his own but had merely been
entrusted to his care. In the end, this is what Jesus would have us understand
when he says: “Call no man your father on earth, for you have one Father, who
is in heaven” (Mt 23:9).
In every exercise of our fatherhood, we should always keep in mind that it
has nothing to do with possession, but is rather a “sign” pointing to a greater
fatherhood. In a way, we are all like Joseph: a shadow of the heavenly Father,
who “makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends rain on the just
and on the unjust” (Mt 5:45). And a shadow that follows his Son.
* * *
“Get up, take the child and his mother” (Mt 2:13), God told
Saint Joseph.
The aim of this Apostolic Letter is to increase our love for this great
saint, to encourage us to implore his intercession and to imitate his virtues
and his zeal.
Indeed, the proper mission of the saints is not only to obtain miracles and
graces, but to intercede for us before God, like Abraham[26] and
Moses[27],
and like Jesus, the “one mediator” (1 Tim 2:5), who is
our “advocate” with the Father (1 Jn 2:1) and who “always
lives to make intercession for [us]” (Heb 7:25; cf. Rom 8:34).
The saints help all the faithful “to strive for the holiness and the
perfection of their particular state of life”.[28] Their
lives are concrete proof that it is possible to put the Gospel into practice.
Jesus told us: “Learn from me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart” (Mt 11:29).
The lives of the saints too are examples to be imitated. Saint Paul
explicitly says this: “Be imitators of me!” (1 Cor 4:16).[29] By
his eloquent silence, Saint Joseph says the same.
Before the example of so many holy men and women, Saint Augustine asked
himself: “What they could do, can you not also do?” And so he drew closer to
his definitive conversion, when he could exclaim: “Late have I loved you,
Beauty ever ancient, ever new!”[30]
We need only ask Saint Joseph for the grace of graces: our conversion.
Let us now make our prayer to him:
Hail, Guardian of the Redeemer,
Spouse of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
To you God entrusted his only Son;
in you Mary placed her trust;
with you Christ became man.
Blessed Joseph, to us too,
show yourself a father
and guide us in the path of life.
Obtain for us grace, mercy and courage,
and defend us from every evil. Amen.
Given in Rome, at Saint John Lateran, on 8 December, Solemnity of the Immaculate
Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary, in the year 2020, the eighth of my
Pontificate.
Franciscus
[1] Lk 4:22; Jn 6:42;
cf. Mt 13:55; Mk 6:3.
[2] S. RITUUM
CONGREGATIO, Quemadmodum Deus (8 December 1870): ASS 6
(1870-71), 194.
[3] Cf. Address
to ACLI on the Solemnity of Saint Joseph the Worker (1 May 1955): AAS
47 (1955), 406.
[4] Cf. Apostolic
Exhortation Redemptoris Custos (15 August 1989):
AAS 82 (1990), 5-34.
[5] Catechism of
the Catholic Church, 1014.
[6] Meditation in the Time of Pandemic (27
March 2020): L’Osservatore Romano, 29 March 2020, p. 10.
[7] In Matthaeum
Homiliae, V, 3: PG 57, 58.
[8] Homily (19
March 1966): Insegnamenti di Paolo VI, IV (1966), 110.
[9] Cf. Autobiography,
6, 6-8.
[10] Every day, for
over forty years, following Lauds I have recited a prayer to Saint Joseph taken
from a nineteenth-century French prayer book of the Congregation of the Sisters
of Jesus and Mary. It expresses devotion and trust, and even poses a certain
challenge to Saint Joseph: “Glorious Patriarch Saint Joseph, whose power makes
the impossible possible, come to my aid in these times of anguish and
difficulty. Take under your protection the serious and troubling situations
that I commend to you, that they may have a happy outcome. My beloved father,
all my trust is in you. Let it not be said that I invoked you in vain, and
since you can do everything with Jesus and Mary, show me that your goodness is
as great as your power. Amen.”
[11] Cf. Deut 4:31; Ps 69:16;
78:38; 86:5; 111:4; 116:5; Jer 31:20.
[12] Cf. Apostolic
Exhortation Evangelii Gaudium (24 November
2013), 88, 288: AAS 105 (2013), 1057, 1136-1137.
[13] Cf. Gen 20:3;
28:12; 31:11.24; 40:8; 41:1-32; Num 12:6; 1 Sam 3:3-10; Dan 2,
4; Job 33:15.
[14] In such cases,
provisions were made even for stoning (cf. Deut 22:20-21).
[15] Cf. Lev 12:1-8; Ex 13:2.
[16] Cf. Mt 26:39; Mk 14:36; Lk 22:42.
[17] SAINT JOHN PAUL
II, Apostolic Exhortation Redemptoris Custos (15 August 1989), 8:
AAS 82 (1990), 14.
[18] Homily at Mass and Beatifications, Villavicencio, Colombia (8 September
2017): AAS 109 (2017), 1061.
[19] Enchiridion de
fide, spe et caritate, 3.11: PL 40, 236.
[20] Cf. Deut 10:19; Ex 22:20-22; Lk 10:29-37.
[21] Cf. S. RITUUM
CONGREGATIO, Quemadmodum Deus (8 December 1870): ASS 6
(1870-1871), 193; BLESSED PIUS IX, Apostolic Letter Inclytum
Patriarcham (7 July 1871): l.c., 324-327.
[22] SECOND VATICAN
ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution on the Church Lumen Gentium, 58.
[23] Catechism of
the Catholic Church, 963-970.
[24] Original
edition: Cień Ojca, Warsaw, 1977.
[25] Cf. SAINT JOHN PAUL
II, Apostolic Exhortation Redemptoris Custos, 7-8: AAS 82 (1990),
12-16.
[26] Cf. Gen 18:23-32.
[27] Cf. Ex 17:8-13;
32:30-35.
[28] SECOND VATICAN
ECUMENICAL COUNCIL, Dogmatic Constitution Lumen Gentium, 42.
[29] Cf. 1 Cor 11:1; Phil 3:17; 1
Thess 1:6.
[30] Confessions,
VIII, 11, 27: PL 32, 761; X, 27, 38: PL 32, 795.
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