Saint Joseph, A Working Man

Joseph the WorkerSaint Joseph has two ‘feast’ days in the universal Church, neither of which is technically a ‘feast’.  The first, on March 19th, is his principal day, celebrated as a full solemnity, usually in Lent (unless bumped into Easter by its falling during Holy Week).

 

Then there is today’s ‘optional memorial’ of Saint Joseph the Worker.  I personally think this day could do with a bumping up at least into memorial territory, or even a feast, due to the importance of the issue of work in our world, and what it means for Man.  Pope Pius XII instituted this feast in 1955 (when it was a feast, and still is, as far as I know, in the usus antiquior), as a Catholic alternative to the Communist-inspired ‘International Workers’ Day’.

 

Workers of the world unite?  Yes, indeed, but around the proper principle of work:  Not as a materialistic endeavour, whose sole purpose is to produce ‘goods’ for the State or the marketplace, but rather, as a free and ennobling activity whose primary purpose is to perfect the worker himself.

 

This is what Pope John Paul II in Laborem Exercens, his masterful meditation on human labour, calls the ‘subjective’ dimension of work, making the worker himself better, and more apt for heaven, by exercising his talents, which exceeds in importance the ‘objective’ dimension, the production of goods themselves.  As he puts it:

 

the primary basis of the value of work is man himself, who is its subject. This leads immediately to a very important conclusion of an ethical nature: however true it may be that man is destined for work and called to it, in the first place work is “for man” and not man “for work”

 

And he continues:

 

Through this conclusion one rightly comes to recognize the pre-eminence of the subjective meaning of work over the objective one. Given this way of understanding things, and presupposing that different sorts of work that people do can have greater or lesser objective value, let us try nevertheless to show that each sort is judged above all by the measure of the dignity of the subject of work, that is to say the person, the individual who carries it out.

 

Before concluding:

 

in the final analysis it is always man who is the purpose of the work, whatever work it is that is done by man-even if the common scale of values rates it as the merest “service”, as the most monotonous even the most alienating work. (#6)

 

All labour is therefore dignified by the very fact that it is a human person, made in the imago Dei, who is working.  Yes, some should be remunerated more than others based on the objective value of their work (we value neurosurgeons more than baristas, or most do, at least those suffering traumatic brain trauma).  But every worker deserves a just wage, dignified work conditions, and for their work to be valued.  Everyone has a right to work, in some way, shape or form, which is why the Magisterium can truly call the plague of widespread unemployment a ‘scourge’, recalling of course that this right also implies a duty on the worker’s part to work well, with excellence, diligence and greatness of soul.

 

We can safely surmise that this is how the foster father of the Christ worked, teaching his divine Son the ways and means of human labour.  And this is what Saint Joseph teaches all of us in today’s feast/memorial.

 

(I will add a note here in response to a reader:  In the original Latin, ‘foster father’ is ‘nutricie’, which imples something different than our modern notion of ‘foster father’.  Saint Joseph was indeed the real, although not biological, father of the Christ).

 

As Saint Paul wrote to the Colossians:

 

And whatsoever ye do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God and the Father by him.

 

Sancte Joseph, ora pro nobis!