I want to turn again during this year of St. Joseph, which Pope Francis proclaimed, to the saint himself. “WITH A FATHER’S HEART: that is how Joseph loved Jesus, whom all four Gospels refer to as “the son of Joseph”.” With these words Pope Francis begins his letter Patris Corde in which he proclaimed the year of St. Joseph. Joseph is truly called the father of Jesus in the Gospel stories, all of which acknowledge that Joseph is not what we may call the “biological father” of Jesus. Rather, his fatherhood is characterized by everything else that makes a man a father. In the letter, Patris Corde, Pope Francis identifies seven aspects of the fatherhood of Joseph to reflect upon. I encourage you to read this letter, it is not too long and is mostly a meditation on Scripture.
One aspect of this year of St. Joseph to which I want to draw our attention is that Joseph can be a father to all of us as well. In receiving him as our father we can learn to live and to rest more fully as a daughter or son of God the Father. Jesus is the only-begotten Son of the Father, this is His truest identity. Our adoption as daughters and sons of the Father, which is effected in Baptism, is the essence of the Christian life. To be a Christian precedes doing Christian things (such as prayer, worship, service to others, etc.). This is a truth that can easily become lost or forgotten, especially in our very driven, goal and achievement-oriented society.
We are always in need of a loving and tender father, like St. Joseph, who can reveal more fully to us the love of God the Father. Our own earthly fathers, whether they are/were the best of men or not, are the first to teach us about our heavenly Father. There are also others along the way who are fathers to us, who show us something more about the way that our heavenly Father loves and cares for us.
My writing here is meant to be an invitation to ask St. Joseph to be a father to each of us as he was and is a father to Jesus. And an invitation to receive from Joseph, a spiritual father, our sonship or daughterhood.
Fr. Scott Nolan
Pastor
St. Stephen Parish
723 Rosewood Ave SE
East Grand Rapids, MI 49506