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St. Joseph
St. Joseph (flourished 1st centuryce, Nazareth, Galilee, region of Palestine; principal feast day March 19, Feast of St.Joseph the Worker May 1) was, in theNew Testament,Jesus’ earthly father and theVirgin Mary’s husband. St. Joseph is thepatron of the universal church inRoman Catholicism, and his life is recorded in theGospels, particularlyMatthew andLuke.
Joseph was adescendant of the house ofKing David. After marryingMary, he found her already pregnant and, “being a righteous man and unwilling to expose her to public disgrace” (Matthew 1:19), decided to divorce her quietly, but an angel told him that the child was the Son of God and was conceived by theHoly Spirit. Obeying the angel, Joseph took Mary as his wife. After Jesus’ birth atBethlehem inJudaea, where theHoly Family received theMagi, an angel warned Joseph and Mary about the impending violence against the child by KingHerod the Great of Judaea, whereupon they fled to Egypt. There the angel again appeared to Joseph, informing him of Herod’s death and instructing him to return to the Holy Land.
Avoiding Bethlehem out of fear of Herod’s successor, Joseph, Mary, and Jesus settled inNazareth (Matthew 2:22–23) inGalilee, where Joseph taught his craft of carpentry to Jesus. Joseph is last mentioned in the Gospels when he and Mary frantically searched for the lost young Jesus inJerusalem, where they found him in the Temple (Luke 2:41–49). Like Mary, Joseph failed to comprehend Jesus’ironic question, “ ‘Why were you searching for me? Did you not know that I must be in my Father’s house?’ ” The circumstances of Joseph’s death are unknown, except that he probably died before Jesus’ public ministry began and was certainly dead before the Crucifixion (John 19:26–27).

Some of the subsequentapocryphal narratives concerning Joseph are extravagantly fictitious. The 2nd-centuryProtevangelium of James and the 4th-centuryHistory of Joseph the Carpenter present him as a widower with children at the time of his betrothal to Mary, contributing to the confusion over the question of Jesus’ brothers and sisters. Theallegation that he lived to be 111 years old is spurious. Reliable information about Joseph is found only in the Gospels, for the later pious stories distort his image and helped delay his commemoration.
Although the veneration of Joseph seems to have begun in Egypt, the earliest Western devotion to him dates from the early 14th century, when theServites, an order of mendicant friars, observed his feast on March 19, the traditional day of his death. Among the subsequent promoters of the devotion were PopeSixtus IV, who introduced it atRome about 1479, and the celebrated 16th-century mysticSt. Teresa of Ávila. Already patron ofMexico,Canada, andBelgium, Joseph was declaredpatron of the universal church by PopePius IX in 1870. In 1955 PopePius XII established theFeast of St. Joseph the Worker on May 1 as a counter-celebration to the communists’May Day.












