  
   Apparently in response to the “May Day” celebrations for workers 
sponsored by Communists, Pius XII instituted the feast of St. Joseph the
 Worker in 1955. But the relationship between Joseph and the cause of 
workers has a much longer history. 
 
In a constantly necessary effort to keep Jesus from being removed
 from ordinary human life, the Church has from the beginning proudly 
emphasized that Jesus was a carpenter, obviously trained by Joseph in 
both the satisfactions and the drudgery of that vocation. Humanity is 
like God not only in thinking and loving, but also in creating. Whether 
we make a table or a cathedral, we are called to bear fruit with our 
hands and mind, ultimately for the building up of the Body of Christ. 
   Comment:  “The Lord God then took the man and settled him in 
the garden of Eden, to cultivate and care for it” (Genesis 2:15). The 
Father created all and asked humanity to continue the work of creation. 
We find our dignity in our work, in raising a family, in participating 
in the life of the Father’s creation. Joseph the Worker was able to help
 participate in the deepest mystery of creation. Pius XII emphasized 
this when he said, “The spirit flows to you and to all men from the 
heart of the God-man, Savior of the world, but certainly, no worker was 
ever more completely and profoundly penetrated by it than the foster 
father of Jesus, who lived with Him in closest intimacy and community of
 family life and work. Thus, if you wish to be close to Christ, we again
 today repeat, ‘Go to Joseph’” (see Genesis 41:44). 
            Quote:  In Brothers of Men, René Voillaume of 
the Little Brothers of Jesus speaks about ordinary work and holiness: 
“Now this holiness (of Jesus) became a reality in the most ordinary 
circumstances of life, those of work, of the family and the social life 
of a village, and this is an emphatic affirmation of the fact that the 
most obscure and humdrum human activities are entirely compatible with 
the perfection of the Son of God....this mystery involves the 
conviction that the evangelical holiness proper to a child of God is 
possible in the ordinary circumstances of someone who is poor and 
obliged to work for his living.” | 
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