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St. Joseph: The World’s Greatest Father |
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| Steve Wood |
We are living in the beginning stages of the most extraordinary men’s renewal movement in the history of Christianity. A sovereign wave of the Holy Spirit is moving in fathers’ hearts preparing God’s people to cross the threshold into the third millennium. We are seeing a fulfillment of Malachi’s prophecy fulfilled before our eyes:
Behold, I will send you Elijah the prophet before the great and terrible day of the LORD comes. And he will turn the hearts of fathers to their children and the hearts of children to their fathers, lest I come and smite the land with a curse. (Malachi 4:4-5 RSV[CE])
What role will St. Joseph play in the restoration of fatherhood? Catholic spiritual writers have known for centuries that St. Joseph would have a great role to play in the latter stages of the Church. These writers knew that St. Joseph, like the patriarch Joseph in Genesis, would remain hidden in God’s providence until the appointed time. A good example of such writers is Father Isidore Isolano, a sixteenth century Dominican priest, who wrote: The Holy Spirit will never cease to act on the hearts of the faithful until the Universal Church honors, with transports [strong emotions], St. Joseph with a new veneration…The Lord will send his light into the inmost places of minds and hearts. Great men will scrutinize the interior gifts of God hidden in St. Joseph, and they will find in him a treasure of inestimable price…We have every reason to believe that the immortal God wishes at the end of time to honor St. Joseph in the empire of the Church Militant with honors most brilliant, and to render him the object of most profound veneration (Quoted in Life with Joseph, p. 73).
The contemporary men’s movement needs St. Joseph. Abstract principles, promises, and commitments are not enough to bring about deep personal change. What we need in this age of crisis in fatherhood is an ideal man who can serve as a tangible model of Christian fatherhood. St. Joseph is unquestionably the world’s best model of fatherhood. By God’s design he is to be in the center of the renewal of fatherhood. Our families will experience genuine and lasting renewal to the extent they are like the Holy Family. To a significant degree, the various streams within the contemporary men’s movement will have long-term success, or succumb to the fizzle-effect, depending upon the role that the head of the Holy Family plays.
To discover the greatness of St. Joseph’s fatherhood we need to explore three key relationships in his life. They are: St. Joseph’s relationship with Mary, St. Joseph’s relationship with Jesus, and St. Joseph’s relationship with the Heavenly Father.
St. Joseph’s Relationship with Mary St. Joseph was not the biological father of Jesus, yet Holy Scripture and the Mother of our Lord call him Jesus’ father (Luke 2:48). How can this be?
Both for St. Joseph and ourselves, the marriage covenant is the root of fatherhood. St. Joseph’s fatherhood sprung entirely out of his marriage covenant with the Blessed Virgin Mary. Christian and Jewish theologians recognize that Joseph and Mary were legally married at their betrothal. Thus, Joseph and Mary were legally bonded in the marriage covenant at the time of the annunciation.
St. Joseph is much more than an "adoptive" father of Jesus. An adoptive father receives a child born outside of the marriage covenant. Jesus’ conception and birth were within the marriage covenant. Thus Joseph was the father of Jesus in every way, except biological.
The essence of St. Joseph’s fatherhood, like all Christian fatherhood, grows out of the marriage covenant. This is why the genuine restoration of fatherhood in our day must include a primary emphasis on marital covenant keeping. Ignoring the problem of marital covenant breaking by men may make them feel better in the short run, but it will abort any long-term success of the present renewal. We cannot build a lasting men’s movement if we allow men to short-circuit covenant keeping through divorce. Any doubters are urged to read Fatherless America by David Blankenhorn. Fatherhood finds its origin in the marital covenant.
St. Joseph’s Relationship with Jesus The profound oneness created by the covenant of marriage includes the complete and total sharing of goods. For marriage is the most intimate of all unions which from its essence imparts a community of gifts between those that by it are joined together (Quamquam Pluries/On Devotion to St. Joseph, Pope Leo XIII, 1889). St. Joseph shared with the Blessed Virgin both her unique graces and the supreme good given to their marriage, namely the Christ child.
Joseph is the father: his fatherhood is not one that derives from begetting offspring; but neither is it an "apparent" or merely "substitute fatherhood." Rather, it is one that fully shares in authentic human fatherhood and the mission of a father in a family. (Guardian of the Redeemer, Section 20, John Paul II)
It was the ancient Jewish custom for fathers to name their children. The Jewish people did not choose names lightly. Names had significance and meaning. St. Joseph received a divine command to name the child Jesus (Matthew 1:21) In conferring the name, Joseph declares his own legal fatherhood over Jesus, and in speaking the name he proclaims the child’s mission as Savior (Guardian of the Redeemer, Section 12).
As members of the New Covenant family of God, Jesus calls us "brothers" (Hebrews 2:2-13). This brotherhood with Christ is not just an abstract spiritualized notion. In the New Covenant we share a "flesh and blood" union with Christ our brother through the Blessed Eucharist. Think about this!
If Jesus is our "brother", then St. Joseph is also our "father." We have both an earthly and a heavenly father in the throne room of the universe. We all have a tendency to underestimate the richness of the inheritance Christ shares with us in the New Covenant. Do we realize that we have an exalted earthly father in heaven who cares for us as much as he cared for Jesus in Bethlehem, Egypt, and the carpenter shop in Nazareth?
Now the divine house which Joseph ruled with the authority of a father, contained within its limits the scarce-born Church. From the same fact that the most holy Virgin is the mother of Jesus Christ is she the mother of all Christians whom she bore on Mount Calvary amid the supreme throes of the Redemption; Jesus Christ is, in a manner, the first-born of Christians, who by the adoption and redemption are his brothers. And for such reasons the Blessed Patriarch looks upon the multitude of Christians who make up the Church as confided specially to his trust - this limitless family spread over the earth, over which, because he is the spouse of Mary and the Father of Jesus Christ he holds, as it were, a paternal authority. It is natural and worthy that as the Blessed Joseph ministered to all the needs of the family at Nazareth and girt it about with his protection, he should now cover with the cloak of his heavenly patronage and defend the Church of Jesus Christ. (Quamquam Pluries, Section 3)
To the thousands of men deprived of a healthy relationship with their fathers: Go to St. Joseph! To those seeking to overcome a negative father image: seek no further than St. Joseph for a potent cure. To the millions of children in fatherless families: Go to St. Joseph! You will find an earthly father who, like the heavenly father, is a father of the fatherless. The heavenly father has provided a link to himself through the fatherhood of St. Joseph over the whole family of God.
St. Joseph’s Relationship with the Heavenly Father St. Joseph has been called the "Shadow of the Father." Like every father, Joseph was called to be a living image of the heavenly father to his child. Any father contemplating this high calling of imaging the heavenly father might be tempted to despair because of personal inadequacies. God is willing and able to abundantly provide for what he commands. The calling to fatherhood is no exception.
Since it is inconceivable that such a sublime task would not be matched by the necessary qualities to adequately fulfill it, we must recognize that Joseph showed Jesus "by a special gift from heaven, all the natural love, all the affectionate solicitude that a father’s heart can know (Guardian of the Redeemer, Section 8 quoting Pope Pius XII).
If, then, St. Joseph is not the father, how could he have the love of a father? It is here that we must understand the action of the power of God in this work. By an effect of this power Joseph has the heart of a father; and if nature does not bestow it upon him God gives him one from His own hand...The same hand which forms each of the hearts of men makes the heart of a father in Joseph and the heart of a son in Jesus…The true Father of Jesus Christ, God who generates Him from all eternity, having chosen holy Joseph to act as the father of His Son in time has in a certain fashion infused a ray or spark of the infinite love which He bears His Son. This changes Joseph's heart, and gives him the love of a father. (Joseph and Jesus: A Theological Study of Their Relationship by Francis L Filas, quoting Bossuet an 18th century writer, p. 104).
God the Father’s plan is to do extraordinary things in the lives of ordinary men. Our problem is that our expectations of what God wants to do to us and through us as fathers are too small. "Joseph had the heart of a father bestowed on him by the Eternal Father in the sharing of their common name" (ibid. page 95). Centuries ago the prophet Malachi told us to expect something miraculous to happen in the hearts of fathers. Can you dare to believe that God’s desire is to place within you the heart of a father as he did to St. Joseph?
Ephesians 3:14 For this reason I bow my knees before the Father, 15 from whom every family in heaven and on earth is named, 16 that according to the riches of his glory he may grant you to be strengthened with might through his Spirit in the inner man, 17 and that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith; that you, being rooted and grounded in love, 18 may have power to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and height and depth, 19 and to know the love of Christ which surpasses knowledge, that you may be filled with all the fullness of God. 20 Now to him who by the power at work within us is able to do far more abundantly than all that we ask or think, 21 to him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus to all generations, for ever and ever. Amen.
Recommended Resources:
Available from the Family Life Center Catalog: St. Joseph, Fatima and Fatherhood by Msgr. Joseph A. Cirrincione (booklet).
Life With Joseph by Rev. Paul J. Gorman (booklet).
Guardian of the Redeemer, Apostolic Exhortation of Pope John Paul II (booklet).
Fatherless America: Confronting Our Most Urgent Social Problem by David Blankenhorn (available in paperback).
Available on EWTN Online Services: the Catholic computer network formerly called CRNET. See back cover for Internet address.
Quamquam Pluries, 1889, encyclical of Pope Leo XIII on St. Joseph. (At EWTN.com download L13JOS.txt, or L13JOS.zip). Highly recommended!
The Family for Families: Reflections on the Life of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph by Francis L. Filas. (At EWTN.com download P11DIVIN.txt, or P11DIVIN.zip.) For those using Word for Windows we recommend using your autoformat feature to nicely lay out this invaluable book available free from ETWN Online Services!
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