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Catholic News Herald

Serving Christ and Connecting Catholics in Western North Carolina

010319 christThe Catholic Church as always fostered a strong devotion to St. Joseph as the head of the Holy Family, yet he has become increasingly prominent in the spiritual life of the Church over the past 150 years as Patron of the Universal Church.

Here’s a look at why St. Joseph is so important to our faith and the Church:
Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ chose to enter the world through the human family. He came as an infant born into the marriage and home of the two holiest people who ever lived: Joseph and Mary.

Because of his special role as foster-father of Jesus, St. Joseph has merited singular privileges in heaven unmatched by any saint except the Blessed Virgin Mary. There is no greater model than St. Joseph from whom we can learn how to live virtuously in imitation of Jesus and Mary.

Certain saints have received special insight into his holiness and the wonderful power of his heavenly intercession.

“Devotion to St. Joseph is one of the choicest graces that God can give to a soul, for it is tantamount to revealing the entire treasury of our Lord’s graces,” wrote St. Peter Julian Eymard, “When God wishes to raise a soul to greater heights, he unites it to St. Joseph by giving it a strong love for the good saint.”

Read more testimonies about the power of St. Joseph’s intercession at www.yearofstjoseph.org.
Also on the website during this Year of St. Joseph, some of the saint’s titles and patronages – as listed in the Litany of St. Joseph – are being explored more deeply as monthly themes:

  • January – Most Valiant Protector of Church
  • February – Joseph Most Chaste
  • March – Joseph Most Just
  • April – Lover of Poverty
  • May – Model of Workers
  • June – Joseph Most Obedient and Head of Holy Family
  • July – Joseph Most Faithful
  • August – Mirror of Patience
  • September – Joseph Most Prudent
  • October – Terror of Demons
  • November – Patron of Dying and Solace of the Afflicted
  • December – Chaste Guardian of Virgins and Pillar of Families

St. Joseph is most well known as the patron saint of fathers, families and workers. However, he is in fact efficacious over many causes.

As St. Thomas Aquinas once noted, “Some saints are privileged to extend to us their patronage with particular efficacy in certain needs, but not in others; but our holy patron St. Joseph has the power to assist us in all cases, in every necessity, in every undertaking.”

Throughout history many of the Church’s sons and daughters have successfully gone to St. Joseph for various needs. As a result, St. Joseph has become known for his intercession for the following professions and causes: against doubt, against hesitation, accountants and bursars, attorneys, cabinetmakers and carpenters, cemetery workers and grave diggers, children, civil engineers, confectioners, craftsmen, dying people and for a happy and holy death, educators, immigrants and exiles, furniture makers, house hunters, interior souls, laborers, married people,

orphans, people in doubt, people who fight Communism, pioneers, pregnant women, social justice, teachers, travelers, unborn children, and working people.
— Catholic News Herald

Don’t miss this!

St. Joseph Vietnamese Church in Charlotte is offering a Votive Mass of St. Joseph every first Wednesday of the month at 6 p.m. The next Mass will be offered Wednesday, Feb. 5.
The parish also welcomes you to join in special prayers to St. Joseph in front of its St. Joseph Shrine, located in front of the church, every third Saturday at 8 p.m. The next prayer vigil will be held Saturday, Feb. 15.
St. Joseph Vietnamese Church is located at 4929 Sandy Porter Road in south Charlotte.

More online

At www.yearofstjoseph.org: Find educational resources, prayers and devotions, and “Year of St. Joseph” event details from across the diocese, as dates for special events are finalized.

122118 4thsundayEditor’s note: The Catholic News Herald offers these Advent reflections courtesy of Catholic Relief Services. These Advent reflections, activities and prayers invite us to prepare our hearts to welcome Emmanuel, “God with us” (Matthew 1:23), into our world at Christmas.

There is a Light in this World
122118 advent 2Loving Jesus,
In Your name, we mark this season:
As we bring forth light to defy the claims of darkness,
As we bring forth joy and song to defy the claims of sadness,
As we bring forth a spirit of generosity to defy the claims of want,
As we bring forth peace to defy the claims of war.
That in the darkest, saddest, most wanting, warring corner of the world,
All may look to Bethlehem
Where, in the humblest of circumstances,
In a time of repression
From the person of a poor refugee woman
In the filth of a manger
In the form of a most vulnerable child
You came among us to say, “No, there is a light in this world.”
Let us be this light to others.
Let us be the fruit of the branch of Jesse’s tree.
Let us be the bearers of the indescribable gift that is Your grace.
And so defy all false claims on Your people and their dignity.
And so, may You be born anew, into every season
Into every age
Into every land and every human heart.
Maranatha! Come, Lord Jesus, come.
Amen.

PRAY
122118 advent 3Photo courtesy of Ten Thousand VillagesLoving God, like Elizabeth,
who recognized Jesus in Mary,
we pray that we may recognize
Jesus in others, especially in
those who are suffering and
most in need. Amen.

REFLECT
Who in your life is most often left out? Why do you think that is? What can you do to include them?

ACT
This week, try to recognize the presence of Jesus in people who are sick. Think of someone you know who is sick – and reach out to him or her today.

GIVE
Buy a gift that supports people like Basu – and people who have been affected by natural disasters around the world. Visit ethicaltrade.crs.org.

 

122118 advent 4LIGHT THE ADVENT WREATH
In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit … Come Lord Jesus, be our light! Help us to recognize You in others.

READ THE GOSPEL
Fourth Sunday of Advent (Cycle C): Luke 1:39-45
“And how does this happen to me, that the mother of my Lord should come to me?”

REFLECT WITH A STORY
In this Gospel reading, Mary travels to see her cousin Elizabeth, who is pregnant with John the Baptist. When Elizabeth sees Mary, John the Baptist leaps within her. Elizabeth immediately knows this is because Mary is carrying Jesus, the son of God, in her womb. Nobody expected that Mary – a lowly Nazarene woman – would be the person to bring the Messiah into the world. And yet Elizabeth recognizes Jesus in her. We can still recognize Jesus in our world today. He tells us that whatever we do for those who are suffering and in need, we do for Him (Matthew 25:40). But it can be difficult to recognize Jesus in others – especially in those who are suffering or left out.
In Nepal, which suffered a devastating earthquake in April 2015, many people live in poor conditions. And many people like Basu Dev Dahal struggle with infectious diseases like leprosy. Leprosy is a disease that can permanently leave people with discolored skin and deformed limbs. When Basu first developed leprosy, he wasn’t welcome in his family or community because of the stigma attached to the disease. He received treatment and was cured, but he was left with deformed fingers.
The Nepal Leprosy Trust is an organization that hires people with leprosy. Like Elizabeth recognized Jesus in Mary, the staff at the Nepal Leprosy Trust recognize Christ in people often rejected by society.
Despite his deformed fingers, Basu began working in the leather goods workshop of the trust – he even became the supervisor! He was soon able to buy a home and provide for his wife and three sons.