Thursday 19 March 2020

MARCH 19TH: SOLEMNITY OF ST. JOSEPH, SPOUSE OF THE IMMACULATE VIRGIN MARY



To-dayJoseph, the spouse of Mary, the fosterfather of the Son of God, comes to cheer us by his dear presence. In a few days hence, the august mystery of the Incarnation will demand our fervent adoration: who could better prepare us for the grand feast, than he that was both the confidant and thd faithful guardian of the divine secret?

The Son of God, when about to descend upon this earth to assume our human nature, would have a Mother; this Mother could not be other than the purest of Virgins, and her divine maternity was not to impair her incomparable virginity. Until such time as the Son of Mary were recognized as the Son of God, His Mother’s honour had need of a protector: some man, therefore, was to be called to the high dignity of being Mary’s spouse. This privileged mortal was Joseph, the most chaste of men.

Heaven designated him as being the only one worthy of such a treasure: the rod he held in his hand in the temple suddenly produced a flower, as though it were a literal fulfilment of the prophecy of Isaias: ‘There shall come forth a rod from the root of Jesse, and a flower shall rise up out of his root.’[1] The rich pretenders to an alliance with Mary were set aside; and Joseph was espoused to the Virgin of the house of David, by a union which surpassed in love and purity everything the angels themselves had ever witnessed.

But he was not only chosen to the glory of having to protect the Mother of the Incarnate Word; he was also called to exercise an adopted paternity over the very Son of God. So long as the mysterious cloud was over the Saint of saints, men called Jesus the Son of Joseph and the carpenter's Son. When our blessed Lady found the Child Jesus in the temple, in the midst of the doctors, she thus addressed Him: ‘Thy father and I have sought Thee sorrowing’;[2] and the holy evangelist adds that Jesus was subject to them, that is, that He was subject to Joseph as He was to Mary.

Who can imagine or worthily describe the sentiments which filled the heart of this man, whom the Gospel describes to us in one word, when it calls him the just man?[3] Let us try to picture him to ourselves amidst the principal events of his life: his being chosen as the spouse of Mary, the most holy and perfect of God’s creatures; the angel’s appearing to him, and making him the one single human confidant of the mystery of the Incarnation, by telling him that his Virgin bride bore within her the fruit of the world’s salvation: the joys of Bethlehem, when he assisted at the birth of the divine Babe, honoured the Virgin Mother, and heard the angels singing; his seeing first the humble and simple shepherds, and then the rich eastern magi, coming to the stable to adore the new-born Child; the sudden fears which came to him, when he was told to arise, and, midnight as it was, to flee into Egypt with the Child and the Mother; the hardships of that exile, the poverty and the privations which were endured by the hidden God, whose foster-father he was, and by the Virgin, whose sublime dignity was now so evident to him; the return to Nazareth, and the humble and laborious life led in that village, where he so often witnessed the world's Creator sharing in the work of a carpenter; the happiness of such a life, in that cottage where his companions were the Queen of the angels and the eternal Son of God, both of whom honoured, and tenderly loved him as the head of the family—yes, Joseph was beloved and honoured by the uncreated Word, the Wisdom of the Father, and by the Virgin, the masterpiece of God’s power and holiness.

We ask, what mortal can justly appreciate the glories of St. Joseph? To do so, he would have to understand the whole of that mystery, of which God made him the necessary instrument. What wonder, then, if this foster-father of the Son of God was prefigured in the old Testament, and that by one of the most glorious of the patriarchs? Let us listen to St. Bernard, who thus compares the two Josephs: ‘The first was sold by his brethren, out of envy, and was led into Egypt, thus prefiguring our Saviour’s being sold; the second Joseph, that he might avoid Herod’s envy, led Jesus into Egypt. The first was faithful to his master, and treated his wife with honour; the second, too, was the most chaste guardian of his bride, the Virgin Mother of his Lord. To the first was given the understanding and interpretation of dreams; to the second, the knowledge of, and participation in, the heavenly mysteries. The first laid up stores of corn, not for himself, but for all the people; the second received the living Bread that came down from heaven, and kept It both for himself and for the whole world.’[4]

Such a life could not close save by a death that was worthy of so great a saint. The time came for Jesus to quit the obscurity of Nazareth, and show Himself to the world. His own works were henceforth to bear testimony to His divine origin; the ministry of Joseph, therefore, was no longer needed. It was time for him to leave this world, and await, in Abraham’s bosom, the arrival of that day, when heaven’s gates were to be opened to the just. As Joseph lay on his bed of death, there was watching by his side He that is the master of life, and that had often called this His humble creature, father. His last breath was received by the glorious VirginMother, whom he had, by a just right, called his bride. It was thus, with Jesus and Mary by his side, caring for and caressing him, that Joseph sweetly slept in peace. The spouse of Mary, the fosterfather of Jesus, now reigns in heaven with a glory which, though inferior to that of Mary, is marked with certain prerogatives which no other inhabitant of heaven can have.

From heaven, he exercises a powerful protection over those that invoke him. In a few weeks from this time, the Church will show us the whole magnificence of this protection; a solemn feast will be kept in his honour in the third week after Easter. To-day the Liturgy sets before us his glories and privileges. Let us unite with the faithful throughout the world, and ofier to the spouse of Mary the hymns which are this day sung in his praise.

From Dom Prosper Gueranger's commentary on March 19th The Liturgical Year.

3 comments:

John Haggerty said...

Dom Prosper's citation of Joseph (Yosef) the patriarch is most instructive, since Yosef's life does prefigure Saint Joseph's.

Sold into slavery by his half-brothers, Joseph rose to become the second most powerful figure in Egypt, second only to Pharaoh.

The bones of Joseph were taken by Moses during the Exodus and buried in Shechem (Exodus 13:19).

As a child I lived across the road from a museum which had a collection of Egyptian artifacts, including a huge granite sarcophagus of the steward Pabasa of the 26th Dynasty (656-640 B.C.) and the mummy and coffin of Ankhesnefer (624-525 B.C.).

My first experience of the numinous must have been visiting this Egyptian collection, with my parents and older siblings, as a pre-school child; and later with my older brother, on winter afternoons when the northern Scottish light is at its most haunting.

Frightened as I was, it was difficult to take my eyes from the small mummified figure of Ankhesnefer; the terrifying image of the jackal-headed Anubis; and the god Thoth, who leads Ankhesnefer before Osiris, lord of the dead, where the heart is weighed on scales prior to judgement, everything being recorded by the monster Ammut.

Unlike the New Atheists, I thought deeply judgement even as a child, so that the death and historic resurrection of Jesus Christ really meant something to me, especially during Lent and Easter; and before the Stations of the Cross in chapel on Good Friday.

In school and in church we children sang that most consoling of hymns to Saint Joseph:

When the death shades round us gather,
Teach, O teach us how to die,
Teach, O teach us how to die.

At death we all must give an account of ourselves before God (Romans 14:12).

The Lord judges the heart (1 Samuel 16-17) weighing the person's character, and what that person has done or failed to do.

The Lord knows the secrets of men's hearts (Psalm 44:21) and their secret faults (Psalm 19-12), no human deviousness escapes him, He knows every twist and turn.

The Lord judges according to truth (Romans 2.2) so no one who is sent to Hell will be able to say *I am innocent* or *This is not just.*

On the Cross Christ bore divine judgement (Matthew 27-46); Christ was made a curse (Galatians 3:13); Christ was made sin (2 Corinthians 5:21).

The cry of dereliction of Jesus *My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?* shows that the chastisement of our sins was upon him, and that with his stripes we are healed (Isaiah 53:5).

John Haggerty said...

*Isolation: the first demon you will encounter.*
Father Mark Goring CC. 20 March 2020. YouTube.

Now that we are self-isolating to escape the coronavirus, Father Goring looks at how the Desert Fathers handled the solitary state. The first demon likely to attack us is the demon of idleness.

*Update: Young man who threw Pachamama into the Tiber releases new message from hospital.*
Life Site News. 18 March 2020. YouTube.

John-Henry Westen updates us on Alexander Tschugguel who contracted Covid-19 after flying home to Austria from Italy. *He is too ill to speak,* said his wife.

Pray and fast for Alexander's recovery; his witness is much needed in the Church today.

John Haggerty said...

In my first comment I neglected to insert the word *about* in one of the sentences.
The sentence should read:

*Unlike the New Atheists, I thought deeply about judgement even as a child.*

In a YouTube discussion the New Atheists lightly dismissed the solemn statement of Dostoevsky's, *If there is no God, everything is permitted.*

Solzhenitsyn as a slave in the Gulag Archipelago understood it only too well.

The reality of man's evil is hauntingly exposed in the Bible yet the atheists condescend to it as a book written in the Bronze Age.

We read in Genesis: *And it repented the Lord that he had made man on the earth, and it grieved him at his heart.*

Murderous despots and gangsters do what they do because they think they will get away with it. Scripture tells us that their judgement will be terrible, far more terrible than any human judgement.

*For he has set a date when he will judge the world with justice by the man he has appointed.* Acts 17:31.

Jesus, who is the man appointed, speaks about the eternality of Hell. Jesus wept above Jerusalem for all the souls who would reject him.

Talk like this today and you are called a Fundamentalist, the new F-word.