A JESUIT'S BLOG
Wednesday, 18 March 2026
St. Joseph, model of faith, hope and love - March 19, 2026
St. Joseph, model of faith, hope and love
I. Introduction: St. Joseph is one of
the very few Saints who has two feast days to honour him. The scriptures do not
say much about this silent saint. As a matter of fact, St. Joseph does not
speak in the scriptures. His voice is not heard. This is to be expected because
St. Joseph was a man of action more than words.
II.
Inspiration from St. Joseph: As we celebrate a year dedicated to St.
Joseph we can draw inspiration from him in many areas of our own lives.
1) Attentive listening: Matthew is the only one
of the four Evangelists who places Joseph on the centre stage in his Infancy
Narrative. The angel appears to Joseph in a dream on four separate occasions.
(Mt 1:20-21; 2:13; 2:19-21; 2:22).
Before
(Mt 1:18-19) the first of these dreams (1:20-21) Joseph had already made up his
mind to follow the law because he was righteous. He became aware of the
pregnancy of Mary - to whom he was engaged or betrothed - and possibly
suspected her of adultery. The only logical explanation of the pregnancy was
that Mary was guilty of adultery. Joseph
had the choice to pursue a legal trial for adultery (Deut 22:23-27) or draw up
a bill of divorce. Joseph chose the latter option because he did not want to
publicly shame Mary and it would attract less attention
Hearing
with the ears of our head and seeing with the eyes of our head is only one way
of hearing and seeing. True hearing and seeing require that we hear and see
also with the ears and eyes of our hearts.
2) Trusting God’s word: The angel explains that
the child conceived in Mary is from the Holy Spirit (Mt 1:20) and Joseph must
take his pregnant betrothed as his wife. Not only is he to do that, he will
also not have the privilege as the foster father to name this child. This name
has already been chosen by God as communicated by the angel (1:21). His trust
in God’s word shows in his action.
When
things go the way we want, it is easy to believe and trust God’s word. However,
when God’s word calls us to act the opposite of the way want, it is not easy to
accept and follow.
3) Action more than words: Joseph’s trust in
God’s word does not end with his acceptance of Mary and Jesus as his wife and
son respectively. In the three dreams that follow the first (2:13; 2:19-20 and
2:22), he is asked to perform actions which are extremely difficult. However,
since it is God’s plan and God’s hand is at work, Joseph acts in obedience.
In
the first of these dreams, Joseph is asked to go to Egypt hastily. He obeys. In
the second, when the family is in Egypt, he is asked to go to Israel (2:19-20).
Once again, he obeys. The choice of Nazareth and not Judea in Israel as the
place of residence of the family is also attributed to Joseph’s obedience
(2:22-23).
We
sometimes look for God only in miracles or extraordinary events. Yet, God keeps
revealing God’s power, might and love in the ordinary events of our lives. Like
Joseph we must open our hearts wide to see.
4) Acting without expectation: In most of our
relationships with others including members of our families, we act with some
or other expectation. Sometimes, we expect those to whom we have been generous
and kind to also be generous and kind to us in return. At others times, we
expect a word of gratitude and even praise for reaching out. At still other
times, we expect that those to whom we have reached out will not be ungrateful.
With Joseph, there were no expectations whatsoever. He did what had to done.
Each
of us is also called by God in our own way to be God’s instrument of love and
peace. God does not expect that we do extraordinary things to reveal this love.
If like Joseph we can reach out to another even in a small way, we will have
done well.
5) Model for workers and the sanctity of work:
The Gospel of Matthew tells us that Joseph was a carpenter (13:55). He does not
state whether Jesus followed his foster father in this trade. In his Gospel, he
refers to Jesus as “the carpenter’s son” (13:55). The Gospel of Mark, however,
informs us that Jesus did follow Joseph in this trade. When Jesus goes back to
his hometown, the townsfolk identity him as “the carpenter” (Mk 6:3).
The
celebration of the feast of St. Joseph, the worker on the first day of May each
year – when Workers Day or Labour Day is celebrated in many countries of the
world - is a celebration of the saint and his work ethic, but also a
celebration of the participation of humans in God’s work of creation. In this
Joseph becomes an inspiration and model to workers of the meaning of hard work
and earning one’s living through the sweat of one’s brow.
6) Model of discernment and faith: Obedience to
God’s word required a lot of discernment and faith from Joseph. He was aware
that he would not have been able to recognise immediately whether he was indeed
doing God’s will. The dreams could have been the result of his own imagination.
It required discernment to know that they were not. All decisions that he had
to take - the hastening to Egypt, remaining in Egypt when the threat to the
child was still alive, and the return to Nazareth - were life changing
decisions. They would affect not only his life, but also the life of his wife
Mary and Jesus. This is why he had to be convinced of that which he could not
see and hope that his actions were in accord with what God wanted him to do
One
important rule of a good discernment is that we do not make decisions when we
are upset or even elated. This is because these decisions will be based only on
emotion and not discernment. We have to be at equanimity before we make
important decisions and in this regard, Joseph is a model to be imitated.
7) Protector of the family and of the world: In
his role as foster father of Jesus, Joseph was protector of his family. The
safety of his family was of prime importance to Joseph and he placed their
needs and safety above his own.
This
quality of Joseph can be extended to include his protection of the whole world.
As he kept the interests of his family uppermost, so he keeps the interests of
the world uppermost in his intercession for the world.
When
we are tempted to live self-centered and selfish lives, Joseph’s selflessness
comes as a breath of fresh air inviting us to be other-centered and to make a
difference to the lives of others.
III. Conclusion: In the play Hamlet,
there is a scene in which Hamlet says to his friend Horatio “There are more
things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy”
(Hamlet 1.5). One understanding of this is that while there are many things
that the human person does know, there are possibly more things that we do not
yet know.
One
such happening is the Covid-19 pandemic. While theories abound about the origin
of the virus and how best to respond to it, the fact is that we are still
groping in the dark. This is why like St. Joseph we are called to listen
attentively.
We
live in times where many of us would prefer to see before we believe. If we are
of this mind, then there is no need for faith. St. Joseph teaches us to believe
even without seeing. He also teaches us to believe even when we cannot see.
This is because like him, we too must realise that God’s will for the world
will always be better than what we want for ourselves. We must learn from St.
Joseph how to make our will subservient to God’s.
Our
actions in most cases, even the seemingly altruistic ones are often with our
eye on the reward. St Joseph teaches us that we must learn to find the reward
in the doing of the action.
Thursday, March 19, 2026 - St. Joseph, Guardian of Jesus - When in a dilemma do you usually do the right thing or the loving thing? Would your life have been any different if Jesus had not been born?
To read the texts click on the texts: 2 Sam7:4-5a,12-14a,16; Rm 4:13,16-18,22;Mt1:16,18-24a
Devotion
to St. Joseph became popular from the 12th century onward and in the 15th
Century the feast of St. Joseph began to be celebrated on March 19 every year.
Devotion to St. Joseph as foster father of Jesus and husband of Mary grew
tremendously in the 19th Century and continues till this day.
The
Gospel text for the feast of today includes one verse of the genealogy, which
specifies that Joseph was the husband of Mary of whom Jesus was born. The
verses that follow narrate the story of his birth. Since Mary and Joseph were
engaged, they were legally considered husband and wife. Thus, infidelity in
this case would also be considered adultery. Their union could only be
dissolved by divorce or death. Though Joseph is righteous or just, he decides
not to go by the letter of the law and publicly disgrace Mary, but he chooses a
quieter way of divorcing her. God, however, has other plans for both Joseph and
Mary and intervenes in a dream. Joseph is addressed by the angel as “Son of
David” reiterating, once again after the genealogy, the Davidic origin of
Jesus. He is asked to take Mary as his wife and also informed that is the
Spirit’s action that is responsible for her pregnancy. He is told that he is to
give the child the name “Jesus". Jesus (Iesous) is the Greek form of
"Joshua" which, whether in the long form yehosua, ("Yahweh is
salvation") or in one of the short forms, yesua, ("Yahweh saves”),
identifies the son, in the womb of Mary, as the one who brings God’s promised eschatological
salvation. The angel explains what the name means by referring to Ps 130:8. The
name “Jesus” was a popular and common name in the first century. By the choice of such a name, Matthew shows
that the Saviour receives a common human name, a sign that unites him with the
human beings of this world rather than separating him from them.
Matthew
then inserts into the text the first of ten formula or fulfillment quotations
that are found in his Gospel. This means that Matthew quotes a text from the
Old Testament to show that it was fulfilled in the life and mission of Jesus.
Here, the text is from Isa 7:14 which, in its original context, referred to the
promise that Judah would be delivered from the threat of the Syro-Ephraimitic
War before the child of a young woman, who was already pregnant, would reach
the age of moral discernment. The child would be given a symbolic name, a short
Hebrew sentence “God is with us” (Emmanu‘el) corresponding to other symbolic
names in the Isaiah story. Though this text was directed to Isaiah’s time,
Matthew understands it as a text about Jesus, and fulfilled perfectly in him,
here in his birth and naming.
This
birth narrative of Matthew invites us to reflect on a number of points. Of
these, two are significant. First, many
of us are often caught in the dilemma of doing the right thing which might not
always be the loving thing. If we follow
only the letter of the law, we may be doing the right thing but not the most
loving thing. However, if we focus every
time on the most loving thing, like Joseph, it is surely also the right thing.
Though Joseph could have done the right thing and shamed Mary by publicly
divorcing her, he decides to go beyond the letter of the law and do the loving
thing, which in his case was also the right thing.
Second,
the story also shows us who our God is.
Our God is God with us. Our God is one who always takes the initiative,
who always invites, and who always wants all of humanity to draw closer to him
and to each other. This God does not come in power, might, and glory, but as a
helpless child. As a child, God is vulnerable. He is fully human and, in his
humanity, is subject to all the limitations that humanity imposes on us. Yet,
he will do even that, if only humans respond to the unconditional love that he
shows.
Tuesday, 17 March 2026
Wednesday, March 18, 2026 - Jesus revealed the Father through all that he said and did. Will you reveal Jesus by what you say and do today?
To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 49:8-15; Jn 5:17-30
These
verses contain the first discourse in the Gospel of John. It is made up of many
closely related themes. The Jews are outraged that Jesus has healed on the
Sabbath and in answer to this outrage Jesus answers them in the following
verses. To the charge that Jesus was making himself equal to God, Jesus answers
that he as Son can do nothing apart from the Father. He is completely dependent
on the Father and merely does the Father’s work. The Father reveals all that he
does to his Son including raising the dead and giving them life. Thus the Son
shares in the life giving work of the Father. The Son has also been given the
power and authority to judge. This implies that everyone is under the Son’s
reign and rule, and thus must confer on him the same honour that is conferred
on the Father. The one who does not honour the Son does not honour the Father
since it is the Father who has sent the Son.
To
hear the Son’s word and believe in God opens the gift of eternal life. The
alternative is judgement. This judgement will be based on the response to the
Son in the present. Those who accept him and do good will be granted the
resurrection of life whereas those who reject the Son and thus do evil will go
to the resurrection of condemnation. The now will determine the later, the
present will determine the future. This part of the pericope ends with an idea
expressed earlier namely that the Son can do nothing on his own and will do
nothing on his own, because he seeks only to do the will of his Father.
Monday, 16 March 2026
Tuesday, March 17, 2026 - How do I show that I have really been forgiven? What does it means that I can rise, take up my mat and walk?
To read the texts click on the texts: Ezek47:1-9, 12; Jn 5:1-3, 5-16
The
miracle of the healing of the paralytic is exclusive to the Gospel of John. The
story is set in Jerusalem and the miracle occurs during one of the Jewish festivals
though John does not specify which one. Later in the narrative we are told that
the day of the festival was also the Sabbath and this adds to the significance
of both the festival and the Sabbath and thus the miracle and the controversy
that follows. Festivals in John are used as a platform for a deep revelation of
the person of Jesus and this festival is no exception.
John
gives a detailed description of the place where the miracle was performed as if
encouraging the reader to place him/herself in that place. Three kinds of
invalids are mentioned: the blind, the lame and the paralyzed. These are at the
pool waiting for the stirring of the water. Popular belief was that an angel
was responsible for the stirring of the water and thus for the inexplicable
bubbling at the surface. Of these one is singled out. He is a man who has been
ill for thirty-eight years, which symbolizes that his illness is almost
permanent. At this point the text does not tell us what his illness is. Jesus
picks out this man and again we are not given a reason. Did he come across to
Jesus as the one most in need? Was he the only one who did not have someone to
help him? We are only told that Jesus “knew that he had been there a long
time”. Jesus initiates the miracle by approaching the man. Yet, he does not
force his healing on the man as is evident in the question that he asks him;
“Do you want to be made well?” The man does not answer the question but begins
his litany of complaints. He has already set limits to what he believes can be
done for him. He does not expect the impossible. Jesus responds to the man’s
complaints with three imperatives: “stand up, take your mat and walk”. That
Jesus’ words are effective and transformative is evident in the fact that the
man was made well. He obeys Jesus’ commands to the letter: “He took up his mat
and walked”.
Immediately
after the miracle, there is an objection on the part of “the Jews” (which here
refers to the Jewish authorities who oppose Jesus and not the Jewish people in
general) because the man was carrying his mat on the Sabbath and this
constituted work which was not allowed on the Sabbath. The man responds that he
is simply obeying what Jesus asked him to do. The Jewish leaders prefer to
focus not on the fact that he had been made well, but on the one who told him
to violate the Sabbath. The man cannot respond to the question of the Jewish
leaders about who Jesus is, since he does not know Jesus.
At
this point Jesus reenters the story and finds the man in the temple confirming
that he has been made well and speaks to him about sin. He invites the man to
move from the mere physical healing to spiritual healing. The man on
encountering Jesus again, announces to the Jews that it was Jesus who made him
well. While some see these words of the man as pointing Jesus out to the Jewish
leaders, others interpret them as an announcement of the man about who Jesus
is. Again the leaders refuse to focus on the positive action of the man being
made well and focus instead on the violation of the Sabbath. This is why they
decide to persecute him.
Two
issues are brought out in this story. The first is that of illness. While we
may be able to see with the eyes of our head, it is possible that we too like
many of those who were at the pool may be psychologically or spiritually blind.
We may not be able to see another person’s point of view and imagine sometimes
that ours is the only correct viewpoint. We may also be blind to the sufferings
of the numerous people around us and close ourselves in on our own small
worlds. We may have the facility and use of both of our legs, but may have
given in to lethargy or laziness. We may have lost the desire and drive to do
what we have to do. We may be able to use all our limbs and move about freely,
but may have given in to fear. We may also be carrying resentments, bitterness,
anger, jealousy and even rage in our hearts because of which we are paralyzed
and not able to move freely.
The
second issue which the story brings out is that of law versus love. Like the
Jewish leaders we are also guilty sometimes of focusing too much on the law and
not enough on love. Like they were not able to focus on the man’s wholeness but
only on the violation of the Sabbath, so we are sometimes prone to focus on the
negatives rather than on the positive. We prefer often to give a negative
interpretation to a person’s actions and words rather than a positive one.
The
miracle thus calls each of us to give up the blindness of our heart and the
lameness of our mind and the paralysis of our spirit and to focus on the
positive of God’s unconditional healing and love made visible in Jesus.
Sunday, 15 March 2026
Monday, March 16, 2026- Do you believe in God only when things go the way you plan or do you continue to believe in all circumstances? Is your God only a miracle worker or is he a God with you and for you?
To read the texts click on the texts: Isa 65:17-21; Jn 4:43-54
The
healing of the royal official’s son (4:46-54) which is part of our text today
begins after the dialogue with the Samaritan woman (4:1-42). The first two
verses of today’s text (4:43-45) serve as an interlude between the two stories.
John uses the saying of the prophet having no honour in his own country, to
show why Jesus came to Galilee. In John, Judea is Jesus’ own country and since
he was not accepted there, he had to go to others including the Samaritans.
Like the Samaritans, the Galileans welcome him.
The
first verse of the miracle story that follows is an introduction narrating the
case. The son of a royal official is ill in Capernaum. The mention of Cana and
a summary of the first miracle of turning water into wine anticipate another
miracle. The healing in this miracle, however, is done at a distance. The
official makes a request for Jesus to come down and heal his son who is at the
point of death. The immediate response of Jesus is directed not to the official
alone but to all. That Jesus did heal the official’s son is an indication that
his words are not meant merely as a rebuke, but go deeper. Though the people
will base their faith in him merely on signs and wonders, Jesus invites them to
realize that these are not what will motivate him to act. He will act only in
accordance with the will of God. Human expectation cannot determine his action.
Even after hearing this seeming rebuke, the official is not deterred. He
perseveres in his request. With a word and from a distance, Jesus performs the
healing. The official’s faith is Jesus is seen in his obedience to the command
to “Go”. He does go on his way.
The
attestation of the miracle is provided by the servants of the official who meet
him when he is still on his way to his home. The official on further enquiry
realizes that Jesus is the one who has performed the healing and is led to
faith. The man now believes in Jesus, not only in Jesus’ word.
At
the end of the miracle John remarks that this was then second sign that Jesus
worked after coming to Galilee. In his Gospel, John always refers to the
miracles of Jesus as signs.
Sickness
and brokenness are very much visible in our world today and most are in need of
some form of healing or another. At times doctors are not able to diagnose an
illness and at other times when they are and perform a complicated operation,
ask the patient and family members to pray and have faith. There is only so
much that they can do, the rest is in God’s hands. The official in the story
had probably gone to Jesus as a last resort (his son was not merely ill but at
the point of death) after having explored and exhausted all other avenues. He
is single minded in his purpose and will let nothing deter him. He believes and
perseveres. His faith gains for him not only his son’s life but also the gift
of faith in Jesus.
This
means that faith cannot be based on external signs alone and remain at that
level. If it is and does, then one will look at Jesus as a mere miracle worker.
The focus here would be only on the actions of Jesus and not on his person from
which his actions flow. If one is able to go beyond the action to the person of
Jesus, then one will also be able to see who God is: God with us, for us and in
us.