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  1. St. Joseph was “of the house and lineage of David” (Luke 2:4). Because of this ancestry, St. Joseph is the linkage between the old covenant made with Abraham and Moses, and the new, perfect, and everlasting covenant which will be made through the blood of Jesus. He brings to a close the notion of the Patriarch’s promised land and King ...

  2. Indeed, the portrayal of St. Joseph also is conflicting. For example, Guido Reni’s “St. Joseph and the Child” depicts a gray-haired elderly man holding baby Jesus, whereas Jose de Ribera’s “St. Joseph and the Boy Jesus” and Bartolome Murillo’s “The Holy Family” depict a young man with the child Jesus.

  3. However, as mentioned in the question, Mary, St. Joseph, St. Elizabeth and St. Zechariah (the parents of St. John the Baptist), St. Ann and St. Joachim (the parents of our Blessed Mother) were also recognized as saints because of their holiness and the role they played in the plan of salvation. All of the apostles (all of whom died as martyrs ...

  4. St. Joseph . How Old was Saint Joseph when Jesus was Born? Find the Straight Answer. Search. Most Recent ...

  5. How Old was Saint Joseph when Jesus was Born? What is Candlemas Day? How should we prepare for Christmas? Who were the Magi? Do you have any good suggestions for how as a family we can prepare for Christmas? What is the origin of the Nativity Scene (crèche)? What is the origin of the Christmas tree?

  6. Were all saints canonized, even St. Joseph & Mary? Was Saint Peter Married? What is the difference between a solemnity, a feast, and a memorial? Why is St. Jude the apostle the one to whom we pray in time of hopeless causes? Who was Mary Magdalene? Was she a prostitute who repented? What is the significance of incorruptibility?

  7. The popular customs of showing love and affection on St. Valentine’s Day is almost a coincidence with the feast day of the saint: During the Medieval Age, a common belief in England and France was that birds began to pair on February 14, “half-way through the second month of the year.”. Chaucer wrote in his “Parliament of Foules” (in ...

  8. The scapular originates in the habits worn by the monastic orders, beginning with the Benedictines, and later adapted by many other religious communities. Basically, the scapular is a piece of cloth, about chest-wide from shoulder to shoulder, and drapes down the front and the back of the person with an opening for the head.

  9. First addressed by Pope Pius XII in 1956, the Church maintains that such transplants are morally acceptable on three conditions: (1) the transplanted organ does not impair the integrity of the genetic or psychological identity of the recipient, (2) the transplant has a proven biological record of possible success, and (3) the transplant does ...

  10. Since Jesus, the first born, had no “blood brother,” He entrusted Mary to the care of St. John, the Beloved Disciple. Interestingly, the Orthodox Churches solve this problem over brothers and sisters by speculating that St. Joseph was a widower who had other children before he married Mary. These brothers and sisters would really then be ...

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