CHAPTER IV.
THE HAPPY DEATH OF SAINT JOSEPH.
Already eight years saint Joseph had been exercised by his
infirmities and sufferings, and his noble soul been purified more and more each day in the
crucible of affliction and of divine love. As the time passed his bodily strength
gradually diminished and he approached the unavoidable end, in which the stipend of death
is paid by all of us children of Adam (Heb. 9, 27). In like manner also increased the care
and solicitude of his heavenly Spouse, our Queen, assisting and serving him with unbroken
punctuality. Perceiving, in her exalted wisdom, that the day and hour for his departure
from this cumbrous earth was very near, the loving Lady betook Herself to her blessed Son
and said to Him: "Lord God Most High, Son of the eternal Father and Savior of the
world, by thy divine light I see the hour approaching which thou hast decreed for the
death of thy servant Joseph. I beseech Thee, by thy ancient mercies and by thy infinite
bounty, to assist him in that hour by thy almighty power. Let his death be as precious in
thy eyes, as the uprightness of his life was pleasing to Thee, so that he may depart in
peace and in the hope of the eternal reward to be given to him on the day in which Thou
shalt open the gates of heaven for all the faithful. Be mindful, my Son, of the humility
and love of thy servant; of his exceeding great merits and virtues; of the fidelity and
solicitude by which this just man has supported Thee and me, thy humble handmaid, in the
sweat of his brow."
Our Savior answered: "My Mother, thy request is pleasing to me,
and the merits of Joseph are acceptable in my eyes. I will now assist him and will assign
him a place among the princes of my people (Ps. 115, 15), so high that he will be the
admiration of the angels and will cause them and all men to break forth in highest praise.
With none of the human born shall I do as with thy spouse." The great Lady gave
thanks to her sweetest Son for this promise; and, for nine days and nights before the
death of saint Joseph he uninterruptedly enjoyed the company and attendance of Mary or her
divine Son. By command of the Lord the holy angels, three times on each of the nine days,
furnished celestial music, mixing their hymns of praise with the benedictions of the sick
man. Moreover, their humble but most precious dwelling was filled with the sweetest
fragrance and odors so wonderful that they comforted not only saint Joseph, but
invigorated all the numerous persons who happened to come near the house.
One day before he died, being wholly inflamed with divine love on
account of these blessings, he was wrapped in an ecstasy which lasted twenty-four hours.
The Lord himself supplied strength for this miraculous intercourse. In this ecstasy he saw
clearly the divine Essence, and, manifested therein, all that he had believed by faith the
incomprehensible Divinity, the mystery of the Incarnation and Redemption, the militant
Church with all its Sacraments and mysteries. The blessed Trinity commissioned and
assigned him as the messenger of our Savior to the holy Patriarchs and Prophets of limbo;
and commanded him to prepare them for their issuing forth from this bosom of Abraham to
eternal rest and happiness. All this most holy Mary saw reflected in the soul of her
divine Son together with all the other mysteries, just as they had been made known to her
beloved spouse and She offered her sincerest thanks for all this to her Lord.
When saint Joseph issued from this ecstasy his face shone with
wonderful splendor and his soul was transformed by his vision of the essence of God. He
asked his blessed Spouse to give him her benediction; but She requested her divine Son to
bless him in her stead, which He did. Then the great Queen of humility, falling on her
knees, besought saint Joseph to bless Her, as being her husband and head. Not without
divine impulse the man of God fulfilled this request for the consolation of his most
prudent Spouse. She kissed the hand with which he blessed Her and asked him to salute the
just ones of limbo in her name. The most humble Joseph, sealing his life with an act of
self-abasement, asked pardon of his heavenly Spouse for all his deficiencies in her
service and love and begged Her to grant him her assistance and intercession in this hour
of passing away. The holy man also rendered humblest thanks to her Son for all the
blessings of his life and especially for those received during this sickness. The last
words which saint Joseph spoke to his Spouse were: "Blessed art Thou among all women
and elect of all the creatures. Let angels and men praise Thee; let all the generations
know, praise and exalt thy dignity; and may in Thee be known, adored and exalted the name
of the Most High through all the coming ages; may He be eternally praised for having
created Thee so pleasing in his eyes and in the sight of all the blessed spirits. I hope
to enjoy thy sight in the heavenly fatherland."
Then this man of God, turning toward Christ, our Lord, in profoundest
reverence, wished to kneel before Him. But the sweetest Jesus, coming near, received him
in his arms, where, reclining his head upon them, Joseph said: "My highest Lord and
God, Son of the eternal Father, Creator and Redeemer of the World, give thy blessing to
thy servant and the works of thy hand; pardon, O most merciful King, the faults which I
have committed in thy service and intercourse. I extol and magnify Thee and render eternal
and heartfelt thanks to Thee for having, in thy ineffable condescension, chosen me to be
the spouse of thy true Mother; let thy greatness and glory be my thanksgiving for all
eternity." The Redeemer of the world gave him his benediction, saying: "My
father, rest in peace and in the grace of my eternal Father and mine; and to the Prophets
and Saints, who await thee in limbo, bring the joyful news of the approach of their
redemption." At these words of Jesus, and reclining in his arms, the most fortunate
saint Joseph expired and the Lord himself closed his eyes. At the same time the multitude
of the angels, who attended upon their King and Queen, intoned hymns of praise in loud and
harmonious voices. By command of the Lord they carried his most holy soul to the
gathering-place of the Patriarchs and Prophets, where it was immediately recognized by all
as clothed in the splendors of incomparable grace, as the putative father and the intimate
friend of the Redeemer, worthy of highest veneration. Conformably to the will and mandate
of the Lord, his arrival spread inutterable joy in this countless gathering of the saints
by the announcement of their speedy rescue.
It is necessary to mention that the long sickness and sufferings which
preceded the death of saint Joseph was not the sole cause and occasion of his passing
away; for with all his infirmities he could have extended the term of his life, if to them
he had not joined the fire of the intense love within his bosom. In order that his death
might be more the triumph of his love than of the effects of original sin, the Lord
suspended the special and miraculous assistance by which his natural forces were enabled
to withstand the violence of his love during his lifetime. As soon as this divine
assistance was withdrawn, nature was overcome by his love and the bonds and chains, by
which this most holy soul was detained in its mortal body, were at once dissolved and the
separation of the soul from the body in which death consists took place. Love was then the
real cause of the death of saint Joseph, as I have said above. This was at the same time
the greatest and most glorious of all his infirmities for in it death is but a sleep of
the body and the beginning of real life.
The most fortunate of men, saint Joseph reached an age of sixty years
and a few days. For at the age of thirty-three he espoused the blessed Virgin lived with
Her a little longer than twenty-seven years as her husband. When saint Joseph died, She
had completed the half of her forty-second year; for She was espoused to saint Joseph at
the age of fourteen (as stated in the first part, book second, chapter twenty-second). The
twenty-seven years of her married life completed her forty-first year, to which must be
added the time from the eighth of September until the death of her blessed spouse. The
Queen of heaven still remained in the same disposition of natural perfection as in her
thirty-third year; for, as already stated in the thirteenth chapter of this book, She
showed no signs of decline, or of more advanced age, or of weakness, but always in that
same most perfect state of womanhood. She felt the natural sorrow due to the death of
saint Joseph; for She loved him as her spouse, as a man pre-eminent in perfection and
holiness, as her protector and benefactor.
I perceive a certain difference in the graces given to this great
Patriarch and those vouchsafed to other saints; for many saints were endowed with graces
and gifts that are intended not for the increase of their own sanctity, but for the
advance of the service of the Most High in other souls; they were, so to say, gifts and
graces freely given and not dependent upon the holiness of the receiver. But in our
blessed Patriarch all the divine favors were productive of personal virtue perfection; for
the mysterious purpose, toward which they tended and helped along, was closely connected
with the holiness of his own life. The more angelic and holy he grew to be, so much the
more worthy was he to be the spouse of most holy Mary, the depository and treasure-house
of heavenly sacraments. He was to be a miracle of holiness, as he really was. This
marvelous holiness commenced with the formation of his body in the womb of his Mother. In
this the providence of God himself interfered, regulating the composition of the four
radical humors of his body with extreme nicety of proportion and securing for him that
evenly tempered disposition which made his body a blessed earth fit for the abode of an
exquisite soul and well-balanced mind (Wisdom 8, 19). He was sanctified in the womb of his
mother seven months after his conception, and the leaven of sin was destroyed in him for
the whole course of life, never having felt any impure or disorderly movement. Although he
did not receive the use of his reason together with this first sanctification, which
consisted principally in justification from original sin, yet his mother at the time felt
a wonderful joy of the Holy Ghost. Without understanding entirely the mystery she elicited
great acts of virtue and believed that her Son, or whomever she bore in her womb, would be
wonderful in the sight of God and men.
The holy child Joseph was born most beautiful and perfect of body and
caused in his parents and in his relations an extraordinary delight, something like that
caused by the birth of saint John the Baptist, though the cause of it was more hidden. The
Lord hastened the use of his reason, perfecting it in his third year, endowing it with
infused science and augmenting his soul with new graces and virtues. From that time the
child began to know God by faith, and also by natural reasoning and science, as the cause
and Author of all things. He eagerly listened and understood profoundly all that was
taught him in regard to God and his works. At this premature age he already practiced the
highest kinds of prayer and contemplation and eagerly engaged in the exercise of the
virtues proper to his youth ; so that, at the time when others come to the use of reason,
at the age of seven years or more, saint Joseph was a perfect man in the use of it and in
holiness. He was of a kind disposition, loving, affable, sincere, showing inclinations not
only holy but angelic, growing in virtue and perfection and advancing toward his espousal
with most holy Mary by an altogether irreproachable life.
For the confirmation and increase of his good qualities was then added
the intercession of the blessed Lady; for as soon as She was informed that the Lord wished
Her to enter the married state with him, She earnestly besought the Lord to sanctify saint
Joseph and inspire him with most chaste thoughts and desires in conformity with her own.
The Lord listened to her and permitted Her to see what great effects his right hand
wrought in the mind and spirit of the patriarch saint Joseph. They were so copious, that
they cannot be described in human words. He infused into his soul the most perfect habits
of all the virtues and gifts. He balanced anew all his faculties and filled him with
grace, confirming it in an admirable manner. In the virtue and perfection of chastity the
holy spouse was elevated higher than the seraphim; for the purity, which they possessed
without body, saint Joseph possessed in his earthly body and in mortal flesh; never did an
image of the impurities of the animal and sensible nature engage, even for one moment, any
of his faculties. This freedom from all such imaginations and his angelic simplicity
fitted him for the companionship and presence of the most Pure among all creatures, and
without this excellence he would not have been worthy of so great a dignity and rare
excellence.
Also in the other virtues he was wonderfully distinguished, especially
in charity; for he dwelt at the fountainhead of that living water, which flows on to
eternal life (John 4, 14); he was in close proximity to that sphere of fire and was
consumed without resistance. The best that can be said of the charity of our saint is what
I have already said in the preceding chapter namely, that his love of God was really the
cause of his mortal sickness and of his death. The manner of his death was a privilege of
his singular love, for his sweet sighs of love surpassed and finally put an end to those
of his sickness, being far more powerful. As the objects of his love, Christ and his
Mother, were present with him always and as both of Them were more closely bound to him
than to any of the woman-born, his most pure and faithful heart was unavoidably consumed
by the loving effects of such a close union. Blessed be the Author of such great wonders
and blessed be the most fortunate of mortals, saint Joseph, who so worthily corresponded
to their love. He deserves to be known and extolled by all the generations of men and all
nations since the Lord has wrought such things with no other man and to none has He shown
such love.
The divine visions and revelations vouchsafed to saint Joseph, I have
particularly mentioned in the course of this history (Vol. II 422, 423, 471); but there
were many more than can be described, and the greatest of them was his having known the
mysteries of the relation between Christ and his Mother and his having lived in their
company for so many years as the putative father of the Lord and as the true spouse of the
Queen of heaven. But I have been informed concerning certain other privileges conferred
upon saint Joseph by the Most High on account of his great holiness, which are especially
important to those who ask his intercession in a proper manner. In virtue of these special
privileges the intercession of saint Joseph is most powerful: first, for attaining the
virtue of purity and overcoming the sensual inclinations of the flesh; secondly, for
procuring powerful help to escape sin and return to the friendship of God; thirdly, for
increasing the love and devotion to most holy Mary; fourthly, for securing the grace of a
happy death and protection against the demons in that hour; fifthly, for inspiring the
demons with terror at the mere mention of his name by his clients; sixthly, for gaining
health of body and assistance in all kinds of difficulties; seventhly, for securing issue
of children in families. These and many other favors God confers upon those who properly
and with good disposition seek the intercession of the spouse of our Queen, saint Joseph.
I beseech all the faithful children of the Church to be very devout to him and they will
experience these favors in reality, if they dispose themselves as they should in order to
receive and merit them.
WORDS OF THE QUEEN.
My daughter, although thou hast described my spouse, saint
Joseph, as the most noble among the princes and saints of the heavenly Jerusalem; yet
neither canst thou properly manifest his eminent sanctity, nor can any of the mortals know
it fully before they arrive at the vision of the Divinity. Then all of them will be filled
with wonder and praise as the Lord will make them capable of understanding this sacrament.
On the last day, when all men shall be judged, the damned will bitterly bewail their sins,
which prevented them from appreciating this powerful means of their salvation, and
availing themselves, as they easily could have, of this intercessor to gain the friendship
of the just Judge. The whole human race has much undervalued the privileges and
prerogatives conceded to my blessed spouse and they know not what his intercession with
God is able to do. I assure thee, my dearest, that he is one of the greatly favored
personages in the divine presence and has immense power to stay the arms of divine
vengeance.
I desire that thou be very thankful to the divine condescension for
vouchsafing thee so much light and knowledge regarding this mystery, and also for the
favor which I am doing thee therein. From now on, during the rest of thy mortal life, see
that thou advance in devotion and in hearty love toward my spouse, and that thou bless the
Lord for thus having favored him with such high privileges and for having rejoiced me so
much in the knowledge of all his excellences. In all thy necessities thou must avail
thyself of his intercession. Thou shouldst induce many to venerate him and see that thy
own religious distinguish themselves in their devotion. That which my spouse asks of the
Lord in heaven is granted upon the earth and on his intercession depend many and
extraordinary favors for men, if they do not make themselves unworthy of receiving them.
All these privileges were to be a reward for the amiable perfection of this wonderful
saint and for his great virtues; for divine clemency is favorably drawn forth by them and
looks upon saint Joseph with generous liberality, ready to shower down its marvelous
mercies upon all those who avail themselves of his intercession.
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