PATRON OF A BLESSED DEATH:
Saint Joseph, how fitting it was that at the hour of your death Jesus should stand at your bedside with
Mary, the sweetness and hope of all mankind. You gave your entire life to the service of Jesus and Mary; at
death you enjoyed the consolation of dying in Their loving arms. You accepted death in the spirit of loving
submission to the Will of God, and this acceptance crowned your hidden life of virtue. Yours was a merciful
judgment, for your foster-Son, for whom you had cared so lovingly, was your Judge, and Mary was your
advocate. The verdict of the Judge was a word of encouragement to wait for His coming to Limbo, where He
would shower you with the choicest fruits of the Redemption, and an embrace of grateful affection before
you breathed forth your soul into eternity.
You looked into eternity and to your everlasting reward with confidence. If our Savior blessed the
shepherds, the Magi, Simeon, John the Baptist, and others, because they greeted His presence with devoted
hearts for a brief passing hour, how much more did He bless you who have sanctified yourself for so many
years in His company and that of His Mother? If Jesus regards every corporal and spiritual work of mercy,
performed in behalf of our fellow men out of love for Him, as done to Himself, and promises heaven as a
reward, what must have been the extent of His gratitude to you who in the truest sense of the word have
received Him, given Him shelter, clothed, nourished, and consoled Him at the sacrifice of your strength and
rest, and even your life, with a love which surpassed the love of all fathers.
God really and personally made Himself your debtor. Our Divine Savior paid that debt of gratitude by
granting you many graces in your lifetime, especially the grace of growing in love, which is the best and
most perfect of all gifts. Thus at the end of your life your heart became filled with love, the fervor and
longing of which your frail body could not resist. Your soul followed the triumphant impulse of your love
and winged its flight from earth to bear the prophets and patriarchs in Limbo the glad tidings of the
advent of the Redeemer.
Saint Joseph, I thank God for your privilege of being able to die in the arms of Jesus and Mary. As a token
of your own gratitude to God, obtain for me the grace of a happy death. Help me to spend each day in
preparation for death. May I, too, accept death in the spirit of resignation to God's Holy Will, and die,
as you did, in the arms of Jesus, strengthened by Holy Viaticum, and in the arms of Mary, with her rosary
in my hand and her name on my lips!
NOVENA PRAYER