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Pope Francis has declared a Year of St. Joseph from Dec. 8, 2020 to Dec. 8, 2021 (CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz)

Baltimore-based Josephites, zealous promoters of devotion to St. Joseph, elated by year dedicated to the saint

March 16, 2021
By George P. Matysek Jr.
Catholic Review
Filed Under: #IamCatholic, Feature, Local News, News, Racial Justice, Radio Interview, Saints, Year of St. Joseph

A depiction of St. Joseph cradling the infant Jesus while Mary sleeps is seen in this illustration photo. (CNS photo/Gregory A. Shemitz)

Editor’s note: A Catholic Review Radio interview with Josephite Father Donald Fest about St. Joseph and the Year of St. Joseph is found at the end of this story.

For the more than 50 years Father Donald Fest has been a Josephite, he has watched his Baltimore-based religious community unsuccessfully petition the Holy See to declare a universal Year of St. Joseph.

After decades of disappointment, Father Fest and his brother Josephites were elated when Pope Francis surprised the world at the end of 2020 by finally announcing a long-sought year that celebrates the husband of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the foster father of Jesus.

“We’ve been waiting for this for a long time,” said Father Fest, a former longtime pastor of St. Veronica in the Cherry Hill section of Baltimore who now serves as pastor of St. Joseph in Alexandria, Va. “St. Joseph is finally getting his due.”

The pope announced the Year of St. Joseph Dec. 8, 2020, the 150th anniversary of Pope Pius IX’s naming of St. Joseph as the patron of the universal church. The Josephites have a special connection to that declaration through Cardinal Herbert Vaughan, the English founder of the Mill Hill Josephite missionaries sent by Pope Pius IX to Baltimore after the Civil War to minister to freed slaves in the United States.

Cardinal Herbert Vaughan founded the Mill Hill missionaries in England, the religious community from which the Baltimore-based St. Joseph’s Society of the Sacred Heart split in the early 1890s. (Courtesy Josephites)

St. Joseph’s Society of the Sacred Heart, the American-based Josephites, split from the Mill Hill missionaries in the early 1890s to form an independent religious society that continues ministry to African Americans today in the Baltimore-Washington area, New Orleans, the Gulf Coast, parts of the American south and as far west as Los Angeles.

The community sponsors several schools that serve the African-American community, including the nationally-recognized St. Augustine High School in New Orleans.

Cardinal Vaughan had led a campaign in the 19th century that amassed 150,000 petitions he sent to Pope Pius IX to entrust the universal church to St. Joseph.

“Cardinal Vaughan’s mother (Elizabeth Louisa Rolls Vaughan) is the one who inspired in him devotion to St. Joseph that would guide him throughout his whole life and even in founding this religious community of men,” Father Fest said. “His idea was that as Joseph was the one that took Jesus to a foreign land – during the flight into Egypt – that Vaughan wanted to bring his men to foreign lands that did not know Christ. And so he called Joseph the first missionary.”

It is said that Cardinal Vaughan’s mother prayed every day in front of the Blessed Sacrament, asking that her children would answer the call to religious life. She was the mother of 13, one of whom died soon after childbirth. Her five daughters became nuns and six of her eight sons became priests – three of them bishops, including Cardinal Vaughan. Rolls Vaughan died at age 42.

An 1835 painting by William Etty shows a young Louisa Elizabeth Rolls Vaughan, mother of English Cardinal Herbert Vaughan. (CR file/public domain)

Throughout his ministry, Cardinal Vaughan promoted St. Joseph. He compiled a book of prayers and devotions to the saint and named both his missionary seminary in London and his religious community after St. Joseph.

The American Josephites continued that tradition after they split from the Mill Hill missionaries. The Josephites’ seminary, the first integrated Catholic seminary in the United States, is named in honor of St. Joseph. It was founded in Baltimore but is now located in Washington, D.C. 

Today, the Josephites are known for promoting the 30 Days Prayer to St. Joseph, a meditation on the joys and sorrows of St. Joseph. Each day of the prayer represents one year of the earthly life of St. Joseph with the holy family.

Father Fest said St. Joseph is regarded as a powerful intercessor because he is a protector. The saint protected Mary’s life and reputation when she was pregnant with Jesus and when they were searching for lodging in Bethlehem at the time of Christ’s birth. He also protected the Holy Family during the flight into Egypt and as Christ grew up.

“The whole thing he does is protect, protect, protect,” Father Fest said. “I think people see that and they want a protector, they want someone strong, they want someone who knows what it’s like to be without – someone who is a home-life man, a pillar of families.”

Bishop John J. Ricard, superior general of the Josephites, welcomed the Year of St. Joseph as a “special gift” from Pope Francis. His religious community has set up a page on its website with resources for the Year of St. Joseph, including video reflections from Josephite Father Joseph Doyle.

“In Scripture, Joseph is a man of few words,” said Bishop Ricard, a former auxiliary bishop of Baltimore who also served as bishop of the Diocese of Pensacola-Tallahassee, Fla., “but his example and his actions call out to us now and through the ages.”

The Year of St. Joseph runs through Dec. 8, 2021.

For information about the Year of St. Joseph in the Archdiocese of Baltimore, including pilgrimage sites, details about plenary indulgences, prayers and more, visit www.archbalt.org/year-of-st-joseph.

Click play below to listen to a Catholic Review Radio interview with Father Fest about St. Joseph and the Year of St. Joseph.

CatholicReview · Mar. 14, 2021 | Josephites and the Year of St. Joseph

Email George Matysek at gmatysek@CatholicReview.org

Also see

Man of Action: Matt Birk boldly embraces pro-life cause

Knights of Columbus inspire devotion to St. Joseph with new film

Pope closes Year of St. Joseph with marginalized young adults

Year of St. Joseph wraps up with lasting impact in Archdiocese of Baltimore

The lonely can find an ‘ally’ in St. Joseph, pope says at audience

On the road with Joseph in the Archdiocese of Baltimore

Copyright © 2021 Catholic Review Media

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George P. Matysek Jr.

George Matysek, a member of the Catholic Review staff since 1997, has served as managing editor since September 2021. He previously served as a writer, senior correspondent, assistant managing editor and digital editor of the Catholic Review and the Archdiocese of Baltimore.

In his current role, he oversees news coverage of the Archdiocese of Baltimore and is a host of Catholic Review Radio.

George has won more than 100 national and regional journalism and broadcasting awards from the Maryland-Delaware-DC Press Association, the Catholic Press Association, the Associated Church Press and National Right to Life. He has reported from Guyana, Guatemala, Italy, the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland.

A native Baltimorean, George is a proud graduate of Our Lady of Mount Carmel High School in Essex. He holds a bachelor's degree from Loyola University Maryland in Baltimore and a master's degree from UMBC.

George, his wife and five children live in Rodgers Forge. He is a parishioner of the Cathedral of Mary Our Queen in Homeland.

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