Our Saint of the Day is a husband and father for the ages.❣️
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March 19, 2025

Dear John,

 

We are in the process of organizing our resources around these themes to better accompany you on your faith journey. This week we are highlighting our third theme of Rebuilding God’s Church: Listening to God. One of the reasons people leave the Catholic Church is that they do not feel listened to. Pope Francis’ vision of a more synodal church speaks to this concern. Listening to others is not only “being polite” or a “sign or respect,” it also dynamically confirms the dignity of the person—their words, their thoughts, their life. Listening to others is one of the most pastoral and charitable things we can do. If you are looking for things to give up or take on this Lent, try listening better. 

 

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With profound gratitude, 

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Deacon Matthew Halbach, PhD
President & Publisher,

Franciscan Media

SAINT OF THE DAY
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Saint of the Day for March 19:
  Joseph, Husband of Mary

(? – ?)

 

Listen to Saint Joseph’s Story Here

The Bible pays Joseph the highest compliment: he was a “just” man. The quality meant a lot more than faithfulness in paying debts.

 

When the Bible speaks of God “justifying” someone, it means that God, the all-holy or “righteous” one, so transforms a person that the individual shares somehow in God’s own holiness, and hence it is really “right” for God to love him or her. In other words, God is not playing games, acting as if we were lovable when we are not.

By saying Joseph was “just,” the Bible means that he was one who was completely open to all that God wanted to do for him. He became holy by opening himself totally to God.

 

The rest we can easily surmise. Think of the kind of love with which he wooed and won Mary, and the depth of the love they shared during their marriage.

It is no contradiction of Joseph’s manly holiness that he decided to divorce Mary when she was found to be with child. The important words of the Bible are that he planned to do this “quietly” because he was “a righteous man, yet unwilling to expose her to shame” (Matthew 1:19).

 

The just man was simply, joyfully, wholeheartedly obedient to God—in marrying Mary, in naming Jesus, in shepherding the precious pair to Egypt, in bringing them to Nazareth, in the undetermined number of years of quiet faith and courage.

 

Reflection

The Bible tells us nothing of Joseph in the years after the return to Nazareth except the incident of finding Jesus in the Temple (Luke 2:41–51). Perhaps this can be taken to mean that God wants us to realize that the holiest family was like every other family, that the circumstances of life for the holiest family were like those of every family, so that when Jesus’ mysterious nature began to appear, people couldn’t believe that he came from such humble beginnings: “Is he not the carpenter’s son? Is not his mother named Mary…?” (Matthew 13:55a). It was almost as indignant as “Can anything good come from Nazareth?” (John 1:46b).

 

Saint Joseph is the Patron Saint of:

Belgium
Canada
Carpenters
China
Families
Fathers

SAM_
MINUTE MEDITATIONS
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One Family

 

Within Franciscan spirituality is the kinship of creation, the theological insight that we (all of God’s creation) are all fellow creatures, each uniquely loved and valued by God. This means, of course, that we cannot treat any of our fellow creatures as if they exist without value. In spite of all the distinctions between us, we are family. The heart of ecological conversion is the invitation to see, feel, and act in this kinship of creation.

 

—from the book Care for Creation: A Franciscan Spirituality of the Earth
by Ilia Delio, OSF, Keith Douglass Warner, OFM, and Pamela Wood

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PAUSE+PRAY
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The Weight of Suffering

 

Reflect

Physical, mental, and emotional suffering are heavy crosses to bear. May this prayer comfort and strengthen you as you persevere through such hardship today.

 

Pray

Oh God,
I am weary of this suffering I carry;
weary of how long it has been,
weary of the toll it has taken.
I need you to comfort and hold me today
so I don’t sink into despair.
I believe that even this you can work for my good
but I need you moment by moment
to keep me from giving up hope.
Glorify yourself through my suffering.
Amen.

 

Act

Picture God carrying you, as a tender mother or father would. Rest in the knowledge that you have not been left to bear this suffering alone.

 

Today's Pause+Pray was written by Shannon K. Evans. Learn more here!

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