John XXIII: Pope Of Saint Joseph
by Father Blaine Burkey, O.F.M.Capuchin

The papal states had been tumbled; the fathers of
the First Vatican Council forced home. Rome
was occupied; the Pope commenced the long Vatican
captivity. On the surface, prospects appeared bleak for the papacy. In reality, things
were not nearly so bad as they seemed. He who
had preserved Christ Himself
from the designs of a wicked Herod, still stood
prepared to protect Christ's Vicar
from the plots of
a wicked world.
When
things appeared at their worst, Pope
Pius IX acceded to the desires of the faithful
and various members of the First Vatican Council, and invoked
the powerful protection of the guardian of
the nascent Church, Joseph
of Nazareth. On the Feast of the
Immaculate Conception that year, all Italy was
invited to offer up Holy Communion
for the Pope. December
8, 1870, was Catholic Italy's day of prayer for the See
of Peter. And Peter's heir seized
the occasion to perform a great act of his apostolic
authority. In the great Roman basilicas
he published the decree Quemadmodum Deus declaring
Saint Joseph patron and protector
of the universal Church.
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Pope Pius IX proclaims the
dogma of the Immaculate Conception |
Sixteen years earlier, to the day, the same Pope had
officially opened a great Marian era by
defining Mary's Immaculate Conception.
Now he opened a proportionately great era honoring
her life's
companion, Joseph.
The Church has been on a search ever
since then, for new ways of honoring her perennial protector. Numerous new forms of
devotion to him have resulted.
 Pius IX himself made
Joseph's feast
one of the first class.
Leo
XIII approved the Saint
Joseph Scapular and penned the encyclical
letter Quamquam Pluries
on devotion to Saint Joseph.
The Litany of Saint Joseph was endorsed for public
use by Pope Saint Pius X.
Benedict
XV sanctioned a proper preface in Joseph's honor and added his
invocation to the Divine Praises.
Pius
XI designated him
special protector against Communism.
Pius
XII instituted a first class feast of
Saint
Joseph the Worker.
Pope after Pope vied with his predecessors in amplifying this cult.
It was hardly surprising, then, that from the very outset of his reign, Pope
John XXIII should sing Joseph's
praises. So persistently and dynamically, however, did His
Holiness sustain this theme, that he has more than merited a
niche alongside Pius IX as a "Pope
of Saint Joseph."
This devotion of the Pontiff could be evidenced
already in the conclave that elevated him. Faced with selecting a name, Cardinal
Roncalli seriously considered "Joseph."
He demurred only because no Pope had ever had the name
before, admittedly curious words on the tongue of precedent-breaking Pope John.
Brushing aside the fact that he had long answered to the name of Angelo
and Angelino rather than Giuseppe or Beppo,
however, the Pope adopted March
19 (Feast of Saint Joseph) as his name day. At
the first celebration in 1959, the Holy
Father addressed Rome's street-cleaners. Not at all reticent about his
personal veneration of Joseph, the Pope
told of his thought of taking the name Joseph
as Pope, and on this occasion, as well as later in his apostolic
letters on devotion to Saint Joseph
(March 19, 1961) and on the Rosary
(September 29, 1961), he
referred to the prayer "To thee, O Blessed Joseph"
[ Ad te beáte Joseph ] (which Leo XIII prescribed to be said after the
October Rosary) as "the most beautiful
prayer that did so much to enrich the time of our childhood."
Skillfully His Holiness blended these reminiscences of personal
devotion with wise pastoral teachings on Saint Joseph.
All the saints in glory assured merit and honor and a
particular respect, but it is evident that Saint Joseph possesses just-title to a place in
our hearts, a place which belongs to him alone, sweeter, more intimate, and penetrating .
. . Add to all this the experience of life and the knowledge of Christian doctrine .
. . and we will be able to measure more completely the complete grandeur of Saint Joseph,
not only by reason of the fact that he was close to Jesus and Mary, but also by the
shining example which he has given us of all the virtues.
To these encomiums of the heights of the honor due to Joseph, and of the sanctity
which he possesses,
Pope John added a word on his patronage.
Saint Joseph is the protector par excellence of the family,
along with the other Two of Whom he was the incomparable guardian. The simple mention of
Jesus, Mary and Joseph reminds us that there [in the Holy Family] we find all human
history and there we find also the salvation, the grandeur, the beauty, the splendor of
the Catholic Church.
In another address later that same day, Pope John reminded
the sick and suffering
that Joseph was an example for them in how to bear
suffering patiently.
The first day of May each year always
found Pope John, in the tradition of Pius XII,
addressing the Christian Associations of Italian Workers (A.C.L.I.),
always recommending devotion to and imitation of
their patron. On this occasion in 1959, he left them with a
beautiful prayer, which underscored Joseph's
eminent dignity and sympathetic patronage.
Glorious Saint Joseph, who disguised the incomparable and
sovereign dignity of guardian of Jesus and Mary under the humble appearance of an artisan
and with your work provided for their daily sustenance, give your protection to those who
are especially entrusted to your care.
You know their sufferings and their anxieties, because you
shared them yourself by the side of Jesus and His Mother. Do not allow them, under the
burden of so many worries, to forget the end for which God created them; do not allow the
poison of mistrust to conquer their immortal souls. Remind all workers that in the fields,
in the factories, in the mines and in the laboratories of science, they are never alone in
their joys and in their sorrow, but that Jesus is always with them, to wipe the
perspiration from their brow, and to ennoble their toil. Teach them to transform their
labor, as you did, into an exalted instrument of sanctification.
In his 1959 Christmas message, Pope John
spoke of the indispensable role of the family in human society and noted especially the
role of the Family-of-families
in Christ's
Incarnation and redemptive work.
Christmas is the great family feast. In coming upon earth to
save human society and restore it to its high destiny, Jesus manifested Himself with Mary
His mother, with Joseph His putative father who is there as the shadow of the eternal
Father. Thus was the great restoration of the entire world begun
Candlemas Day the following year, the Pope
sent candles to the principal sanctuaries of the world "where Mary smiles and where Saint Joseph is venerated."
He made special mention of the great Canadian sanctuary, Saint Joseph's Oratory, Montreal. The candles
burning in these shrines were to symbolize the petition of divine
assistance there for the future ecumenical council. To
this same end, Pope John exhorted a fervent devotion towards the glorious Patriarch. "He
is the best-known saint after the Blessed Virgin. He is the most powerful intercessor,
from whom nobody is turned away without being heard."
Once again in 1960, His Holiness
ended his May 1st allocution to the A.C.L.I.
with a priceless prayer to the patron of laborers,
which this time made special mention of the intimacy in which
Joseph lived with Jesus
and Mary.
O Saint Joseph, guardian of Jesus, chaste spouse of Mary, who
passed your life in the perfect fulfillment of duty, sustaining the Holy Family of
Nazareth with the labor of your hands, protect kindly those who trustingly turn to you.
You know their aspirations, their miseries, their hopes, and they have recourse to you
because they know that they will find in you one who will understand and protect them. You
too have known trial, labor and weariness. But, even in the midst of worries of the
material life, your soul was filled with profound peace and it exulted in unerring joy
through intimacy with the Son of God entrusted to you, and with Mary, His most sweet
mother. Make those whom you protect understand that they are not alone in their labor, but
show them how to discover Jesus near them, to receive Him with grace, to guard Him
faithfully, as you have done. And assure that in every family, in every factory, in every
workshop, wherever a Christian works, all may be satisfied in charity, in patience, in
justice, in seeking to do well, so that abundant gifts may descend from heaven.
A homily on the Ascension
that same year (May 26, 1960) afforded Pope
John the opportunity to assert that it may be piously believed that Saint
John the Baptist and Saint Joseph were
bodily assumed into heaven at
the time of our Lord's Ascension.
Two months later (July
26, 1960), the Pope reformed
and codified the Church's
liturgical law. Included in this legislation was the
provision promoting from a double-major to a second
class rank the Feast of the Holy Family,
Jesus, Mary
and Joseph.
Pope John spoke to the diplomatic corps and their families after midnight Mass that Christmas.
"Today, this Mass that has brought us together,"
he remarked, "has truly gathered the whole
world around the divine Child of Bethlehem, around Mary, the Virgin most pure, around
Joseph, whom we might call 'the most hidden of all the saints of God.' "
His
Holiness spoke once again, on March 5, 1961,
about Saint Joseph. After speaking at length
of the Joseph of Genesis, he added, that
turning "the pages of the New Testament, we encounter another
Joseph." This Joseph, the Pope
called "the pre-eminently just
man, spouse of Mary and putative father of Jesus." It was Joseph who determined the work to be done in the Holy Family at Nazareth,
the Pope observed"not the fresh-air
work in the fields, but work in the humble confines of a carpentry shop."
"Together with his example of labor," His
Holiness continued, "we also have the splendor of
all the virtues; the exaltation of innocence, the basic principles of an harmonious social
life, the obedience, the humility, the abnegation. What an incomparable school for the
whole Christian family
"
Two weeks later (March
19, 1961), the Pope took a significant step towards
making "the most hidden of all the saints of God"
a little less hidden. This by writing two
important documents: one an apostolic
letter Le voci on
devotion to Saint Joseph, the
other an address to leaders of labor organizations under Joseph's patronage and to members of religious communities
dedicated to Saint Joseph.
At the beginning of the apostolic letter, John spoke
of the "kind and gentle, Saint Joseph, stately spouse of
Mary, a figure so dear to the minds and hearts of those who are most responsive to the
appeal of Christian asceticism and to forms of religious devotion which are quiet and
unobtrusiveand all the sweeter and more pleasing for being so."
Pope John pointed out how the devotion to Saint Joseph has approached due proportions only
in recent times. Further in the letter, he quoted Pope Pius XI's "wonderful words" on this subject:
You can make out the person and the mission of Saint Joseph
as he moves along quietly and thoughtfully, almost unobserved and unrecognized in his
humility and silence, a silence upon which light would be shed only later, a silence that
was bound to be succeeded by a loud, long cry of acclaim and glory through the ages.
In the meantime, the Pope re-examined briefly what his
predecessors from Pius IX to
Pius XII had said and had done concerning Saint
Joseph. Then he gave notice that he
intended to participate in the glorification of Joseph
by naming him the patron
of the Second Vatican Council. He
recalled that Saint Joseph
is always invoked to help the Church, its projects and concerns,
and stated that among present-day concerns, the first place is held by
the Council.
We need a heavenly protector on high during this period
who can call from heaven that divine power for preparing and holding this
Council
This could not be entrusted to a better heavenly protector than Saint
Joseph, distinguished head of the Holy Family of Nazareth and protector of the Holy Church.
After the issuance of Le voci, Pope
John availed himself of every opportunity to invoke
Joseph as patron of the Second
Vatican Council. In a letter to the Church's
hierarchy petitioning a worldwide novena before Pentecost in
preparation for the Council (April 11, 1961),
he wrote: ". . . And may Saint Joseph . .
. to whom we have already with complete confidence committed the Council, be pleased to
receive our wishes
" In his letter asking the clergy's
prayers for the Council (January
6, 1962), he added: "Who
is more fit than a priest to enjoy the close friendship of Saint Joseph 'whose privilege
it was . . . not just to see God and to hear Him, but to take Him in his arms and kiss
Him, clothe Him and protect Him.' "
Pope John's allocution to the central preparatory commission
(June 12, 1961), his bull convoking
the Council (December 25, 1961),
his letter to the bishops coming to the Council
(April 15, 1962), his letter
to nuns and sisters begging prayers for the Council
(July 2, 1962), and finally his
address at the opening of the Council (October
11, 1962), all carry like messages: Invoke
Saint Joseph, patron of the Council!
At a general audience near the beginning of March, 1962,
the Pope urged the thousands present: "Consecrate
yourselves
to Saint Joseph so that he may obtain grace and blessings for the
Council and so that the Council may be tranquilly prepared for and well-conducted, thus
bringing abundant fruit to souls."
Toward the end of Le voci, the Pope
announced his intention of seeing to it that the altar of
Saint Joseph in Saint
Peter's Basilica "takes on a new and fuller and
more solemn splendor . . . and becomes a point of attraction and of religious devotion for
individual souls and for countless crowds."
A few hours after the release of Le voci,
Pope John spoke to various lay and religious groups dedicated to Saint Joseph. Once again he
reminisced on his own devotion to the Saint,
offering at the same time his own precious views on various subjects, for
example, that Joseph presided
over the rite of circumcision and that he was not only present at the arrival of the Magi,
but was the one who received
them.
Pope John put in another word for Saint
Joseph on July 29,
1961. Before a large group of seminary rectors, he
associated devotion to Saint
Joseph with devotion to Christ
and Mary in a most forceful way. "The basic points of religious training stand out," he
said. Then he began enumerating devotions that the rectors should
propagate in their seminaries. First he listed
devotion to the Eucharist,
and "along with it, devotion to the Most Holy Name of
Jesus, to His Sacred Heart and to His Most Precious Blood." After this he
listed "devotion to our Lady, the
mother of Jesus and our mother." He then continued:
In addition to trust in Mary most holy, so too try to instill
in your young seminarians a special trust in Saint Joseph, whose presence which We
have decided to make more noticeable in this greatest temple of Christendom reveals
itself as quite timely in the Holy Church amid the splendors of the universal apostolate
and of the outstanding doctors and martyrs of the faith.
Meek, quiet, discreet; Saint Joseph is the perfect model for
imitation in circumstances that recur in every age and that call for self-denial and total
abandonment to God.
His Holiness went on to speak of other devotions and practices,
but the conjunctive he employed ("Besides
these devotions which are indispensable for the training of a clergy that will be holy and
sanctifying . . . ") is certainly interesting and indicative of the
importance the Pope ascribed to devotion to Saint
Joseph.
To celebrate his fourth name
day as Roman Pontiff (March 19, 1962), Pope John
created 10 new cardinals. Afterwards he
spoke of "this blessed feast of Saint Joseph which is
doubly dear to us; because we received the name of Joseph at the holy baptismal font and
it has kept us long and good company, and also because on this feast of Saint Joseph
thirty-seven years ago the Lord called us to the episcopate
." He
added then, "We rejoice in the fact that together with us,
at least 11 members of the Sacred College [Pizzardo, Ferretto, Frings, Mindszenty, Siri,
Garibi y Rivera, Bueno y Monreal, Lefebvre, Ritter, Quintero, de Costa Nanes not to
mention Francis Joseph Spellman and Leo Joseph Suenens] enjoy the same name as Saint
Joseph, patron of the universal Church and special patron of the forthcoming ecumenical
council."
The papal pilgrimage to Loreto and Assisi (October 4, 1962) offered, as might be expected, an
excellent opportunity for the Pope to reflect on Joseph. At the Holy House of Loreto,
traditionally the Holy Family's home
airborne by angels from Nazareth,
the Pope pointed out that Joseph's
importance in the history of salvation is
becoming more and more evident and urged the bishops coming to the Council
to study Joseph along with Mary and Jesus
in their task of revitalizing the family.
The mystery of the Incarnation consecrates the 30 years of
life spent in the silence of Nazareth with Mary and Joseph
From the hidden life
rises the canticle in praise of the dignity and greatness of the family, in praise of the
sacred duty of labor and its nobility.
When We came to Loreto in 1900, the lofty reminders of Leo
XIII of the sanctity of marriage, discipline in the home, responsibility of the parents
for the education of the children, and the safeguard of the sacred value of Christian
civilization were echoing throughout the world.
The living example, underlined with such strength by that
great predecessor of Ours, proceeded precisely from the Holy Family of Nazareth, with its
lessons in piety, love and sacrifice. Together with Jesus and his mother Mary, Joseph was
there also coming forward to take up at last the place which had been entrusted to him by
Providence in the wide prospect of the centuries and of the wonderful development of the
Mystical Body.
The ecumenical council is intended to be a solemn reminder of
the greatness of the family and of the duties it implies. Beloved sons, take as a first
taste of the council Our words urging you to consider ever more thoroughly and in the
light of the Holy Family the greatness of the tasks which the Church expects from you.
In four short years, Pope John
gave a great deal to honor Saint Joseph. A
study of nearly three thousand documents of
the Holy See relating to Saint Joseph
reveals no comparable period in the history of the devotion to Saint
Joseph. Besides the many documents of Pope John mentioned
so far, more than forty other addresses and
sermons have touched on in some way or other Mary's virginal husband. Pope John has,
moreover, furthered the causes for beatification of two of Saint
Joseph's most prominent devotees: Ven. Leonard Murialdo
(d. 1900), founder of the Pious
Society of Saint Joseph of Turin, and Brother Andre, C.S.C. (d. 1937), founder of Saint Joseph's Oratory,
Montreal. Time and space naturally forbid detailed examination of all of these
things.
On to the peak, then, of the present crescendo in Josephite devotion: Pope John's
decision to insert Saint Joseph's
name in the very center of the Church's
prayer life, the Canon of the Mass.
Long before the First Vatican Council in 1815
in fact petitions began pouring into Rome requesting this
privilege for Joseph. Many petitions went
even further and asked that there be accorded to Joseph
the highest veneration among all the angels
and saints "the public cult of dulia after the Mother of
God but before anyone else in heaven." Over the years, close to a million signatures were appended to petitions of
this sort. The most famous of these petitions were the three
issuing from some four hundred fathers
of Vatican I. One
of these was signed by, among others, thirty-eight
of the forty-two cardinals
then living, including Joachim Cardinal Pecci (later Leo XIII).
It was in answer to these petitions that Pius IX proclaimed
Joseph protector and patron
of the Church in 1870. But even then Joseph
lacked full liturgical honors.
In 1961, as preparations for Vatican
II were underway, three centers of
Josephological studies in Montreal (Canada), Valladolid
(Spain) and Viterbo (Italy) undertook to bring this question once more to
the attention of the hierarchy. Father Guy-Marie Bertrand,
C.S.C., then acting-director of the research and documentation center in Montreal,
drafted an anonymous memorandum outlining the theological, historical
and liturgical aspects of such a move, skillfully answering the various
objections that had previously been opposed to adding Joseph's
name to the Canon. This seventy-four-page memorandum was translated from
French into several major modern languages and sent to almost the entire hierarchy
of the Church. It
bore the signatures of five prominent Josephologists: Father Francis J. Filas,
S.J., chairman of Loyola University's theology department, Chicago, and vice-president of
the Saint Joseph Research and Documentation Center, Montreal; Father Roland
Gauthier, C.S.C., director of the Center in Montreal, editor of the Cahiers de
Josephologie and now president of the North-American Society of Josephology; Father
Jose Antonio del Nino Jesus, O.C.D., president of the Ibero-American Society of
Josephology; Father Angelo Battiston, C.S.J., of the Center of
Josephology, Viterbo, Italy; and Father Isidore de San Jose, O.C.D.,
director of the Spanish Center for Josephological Research, Valladolid, Spain, and editor
of the Estudios Josefinos.
Besides the memorandum, a Latin formula requesting the addition was
printed and circulated to all the cardinals and archbishops of the world, to the general
superiors of religious orders of men, and to the entire hierarchy of Italy. This effort
was thus limited only because the scholars involved lacked time in which to communicate
with all the bishops of the world. As it was, the operation was carried on in a period of
but a few months by a very small staff. Sponsors of the project were more than gratified
when some five hundred future fathers of the
Council returned the formulas signed.
In March 1962, these petitions were
presented personally to His Holiness by Amleto Giovanni Cardinal
Cicognani, together with the memorandum in five languages. The following morning,
Pope John informed the cardinal that he
had read through the material and was delighted with it. He forthwith
instructed the cardinal to submit the petitions to the preparatory
commission on the liturgy accompanied by a letter of special recommendation from himself.
The matter came before the Council itself during the 12th
general congregation on November 6.
Bishop Albert Cousineau, C.S.C., of Cap Haitien, Haiti (a former rector
of Saint Joseph's Oratory, Montreal),
and at least one other bishop are reported to have spoken in favor of the addition to the Canon.
On the following day, the thirteenth general congregation made a preliminary vote on the
second chapter of the schemata on liturgy, the chapter in which the insertion was treated.
Just what decisions were arrived at have not yet been released, but one thing is sure, a
final vote has not yet been made on this chapter by the Council.
A final vote on the addition of Joseph's name
may still be made by the Council, but it will now be only affirming what
is already a reality. On or about November 13,
Pope John made the decision motu proprio
to honor Joseph in the Canon.
He inserted Joseph's name
in the age-old Communicantes, effective as of December
8, 1962 thus making this the first of the matters discussed by the Council
to go into effect.
In making this decision public at the 18th general congregation, November 13, the president of the Council's
Secretariat for Extraordinary Affairs, Cardinal Cicognani, said that Pope John
decided to give Saint Joseph the new honor
to put it on record that the Second Vatican Council so honored its
patron.
December 8, 1962 exactly ninety-two years after Pope Pius IX
proclaimed Joseph to be the Church's patron and protector
Joseph's name was added
to the daily Mass. In the Church's most solemn of prayers he is now honored with
his wife Mary. Those whom God has joined together, the Church-at-prayer
now daily invokes together, thanks to Pope John XXIII, Pope of
Saint Joseph.
United in one communion, we venerate the
memory, first, of the glorious ever Virgin Mary, Mother of our God and Lord Jesus Christ: as
also of blessed Joseph, her most chaste spouse, and thy blessed Apostles and
Martyrs, Peter and Paul, Andrew, James, John, Thomas, James, Philip, Bartholomew, Matthew,
Simon and Thaddeus: Linus, Cletus, Clement, Xystus, Cornelius, Cyprian, Lawrence,
Chrysogonus, John and Paul, Cosmas and Damian: and of all thy Saints; grant that by their
merits and prayers we may in all things be defended with the help of thy protection. . . .
. Through the same Christ our Lord.
Amen.

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