It’s fairly obvious from the Infancy Narratives found in both Saint Matthew’s and Saint Luke’s Gospels that Jesus’ Davidic lineage comes through Saint Joseph. Nonetheless, Joseph, the very end of whose genealogy marks the start of our Gospel reading for this Solemnity, remains an intriguing figure.
It was only in the nineteenth century that popular devotion to Saint Joseph really took off. If Saint Patrick’s Day is the “Irish” day, then Saint Joseph’s Day is the Italian day. But since 1870, Joseph has been Patron of the Universal Church. Being a Solemnity, today is a holy day of obligation in traditionally Catholic countries.
In the words of Saint Paul from our second reading, Saint Joseph is certainly to be numbered among “those who follow the faith of Abraham.”1 Like Abraham, Joseph led his family from their home to a foreign land. Unlike Abraham, when the danger they were fleeing subsided, Joseph led his family back to the land promised to Abraham and his descendants.
If we adhere to Matthew’s narrative, God communicated to Saint Joseph by means of angels who appeared in his dreams. Joseph was meticulously faithful to the divine direction he was given. We learn of his first dream in our Gospel reading today.
It isn’t hard to imagine the consternation Joseph must've felt upon learning that Mary, his betrothed, was pregnant. It’s clear Joseph knew that the child was not his. He understood how pregnancies normally occur.
Do you think that if Joseph had been angry, resentful, and bitter upon learning the woman to whom was betrothed was pregnant that he would’ve been receptive to the revelation he was given concerning the child’s conception? Do you think that he might not have received it in the first place?
Even though Joseph “was a righteous man” and, like the Blessed Virgin, no doubt chosen by God for this very important vocation, like her, he was free to decide how to respond to circumstances.2 You miss a lot if you fail to see that God is a big risk taker! What’s riskier than love in any of its forms?
Rather than seethe with anger and resentment, upon learning that Mary was pregnant, Joseph was concerned about protecting both her dignity and her safety. You see, genuine love is selfless. It is about desiring the good of the other, even above your own good. Joseph gives us an example of how to move this from a nice sentiment to a living reality. It is no small matter that he is forced to confront.
To mark the one hundred fiftieth anniversary of Pope Pius IX declaring Saint Joseph Patron of the Church Universal, on 8 December 2020, which is also the Solemnity of the Immaculate Concepion, Pope Francis promulgated his Apostolic Letter on Saint Joseph, Patris Corde- “With a Father’s Heart.” I recommend Patris Corde to you. It is an exquisite reflection on Saint Joseph by someone with a deep devotion to this righteous man.
After noting that every Catholic prayerbook contains prayers to Saint Joseph and that each Wednesday as well as the entire month of March are to dedicated to him, just as Saturdays and the month of May are dedicated to the Blessed Virgin, Pope Francis revealed in a footnote to Patris Corde that each day for more than forty years, at the end of Morning Prayer, he “recited a prayer to Saint Joseph” from a nineteenth century prayerbook published by a Congregation of French sisters.
Pope Francis noted that this prayer, “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. Amen3In addition to being Patron of the Universal Church, Saint Joseph is the patron of a happy death, the patron of workers (the Church observes the Memorial of Saint Joseph the Worker on 1 May), Guardian of the Redeemer. And last but not least, Saint Joseph is the Terror of demons.
So, don’t hesitate to entrust cares and concerns to Saint Joseph’s intercession. As Sacred Scripture teaches, “The fervent prayer of a righteous person is very powerful.”4
1 Romans 4:16.↩
2 Matthew 1:19.↩
3 Pope Francis. Apostolic Letter, Patris Corde, footnote 10. Promulgated 8 December 2020.↩
4 James 5:16.↩






