Saint Joseph the Worker
On
May 1, 1955, Pope Pius XII granted a public audience to the Catholic
Association of Italian Workers, whose members had gathered in Saint
Peter's Square to celebrate the tenth anniversary of their society. They
were solemnly renewing, in common, their promise of loyalty to the
social doctrine of the Church, and it was on that day that the Pope
instituted the liturgical feast of May 1st, in honor of Saint
Joseph the Worker. He assured his audience and the working people of
the world: You have beside you a shepherd, a defender and a father in
Saint Joseph, the carpenter whom God in His providence chose to be the
virginal father of Jesus and the head of the Holy Family. He is silent
but has excellent hearing, and his intercession is very powerful over
the Heart of the Saviour.
We
can conclude from the role for which Saint Joseph was chosen and named
by Heaven that he was a man of tried virtue and consummate holiness. No
other mortal man would ever hold a higher office. Saint Joseph surpassed
all the Saints of the Old Law in sanctity; in him the virtue of his
ancestors reached its culmination and perfection. Like Abraham, he was a
man of faith and obedience; like Isaac, one of prayer and vision; like
Jacob, he was patient and self-sacrificing; like Joseph of Egypt, his
chastity was inviolable. And like David, of whom he is the direct
descendant, he is a royal intercessor according to the heart of God. Ite ad Joseph — Go to Joseph; to
Joseph of Egypt, the pharaoh told the needy to go for assistance to
receive the grain that would save their lives. To the new Joseph, the just man to
whom the Son of God Himself was subject as to a father, all Christians
can go with confidence, and he will see to their spiritual and temporal
needs with paternal goodness.
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