WHO WAS ST. JOSEPH?
"Joseph, son of
David, do not fear to take Mary your wife, for that which is conceived in her is
of the Holy Spirit; she will bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus, for
he will save his people from their sins."
--Matthew 1:20
St. Joseph's part in the Nativity story
is a familiar feature of every Christmas pageant. But for many centuries
the Church paid him scant attention. This is especially obvious compared
the the extraordinary concern for the role of Mary in the economy of
salvation. So eager was the Church to emphasize Jesus' divine paternity
that Joseph, the surrogate father, was consigned to the shadowlands. It
was only in the sixteenth century that any official encouragement was extended
to his supporters. Around that time St. Joseph, in a somewhat romanticized
image of the Holy Family, began to figure more widely in popular preaching as
the ideal "provider and protector." In 1870 Pius IX declared him
Patron of the Universal Church.
Besides his feast day on March 19 an
additional feast, for St. Joseph the Worker, was assigned by Pope Pius XII on
May 1. Aside from his virtues as a father or a man of faith, it is also
worthwhile to note Joseph's status as
a poor working man - a detail not without significance in the gospel.
Although he is linked to the house of King David, Joseph remains a carpenter
from a Galilean town so miniscule that it serves as the butt of jokes. His
wife gives birth in a stable. Warned in a dream of King Herod's murderous
intentions, Joseph must lead his family into exile in Egypt. And then, having returned the family to
the town of Nazareth, Joseph effectively disappears from the story. By
receding before the inauguration of Jesus' public ministry he does not interfere
with Jesus' privileged relationship with God.
By taking into his home his wife
"found with child through the Holy Spirit," Joseph gave Jesus his
legitimacy in David's lineage (Matthew 1:16-21), he saved the child from Herod
who wanted to kill him, and lastly he brought him back from Egypt and settled in
Galilee with the child and his mother (Matthew 2:19-23). In Matthew's
gospel, Joseph appears as the direct and personal representative of the Father
at the side of his Son come to earth, the guardian whom the Father chose because
he could totally trust him and with whom he remains in close touch to show him
what he must do.
Excerpted from All Saints by
Robert Ellsberg, New York: Crossroad Publishing, 1997 and Days of
the Lord edited by Robert Gantory and Romain Swaeles, Collegeville: The Liturgical Press, 1997.