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Feast of St Joseph the Worker honoured

WelCom June/July 2021

Mons Gerard Burns leads a Consecration Prayer and hymn in front of the statue of St Joseph The Worker, Photo: Annette Scullion

A special Mass at St Joseph’s Church, Mt Victoria, on Saturday 1 May was celebrated with a full congregation to honour the Feast of St Joseph the Worker, and as part of the Archdiocese’s contributions to the Year of St Joseph. 

Vicar General Mons Gerard Burns officiated. In his homily about St Joseph as a worker and Catholic social teachings (CST) around work and employment, Mons Gerard held up a Peruvian crucifix showing a sugar-cane worker crucified onto his work tools. It was a visible and tangible way to sum up the basic thrust of CST around work, that ‘Our work should lead us to resurrection rather than crucifixion.’

About 50 gathered after Mass in the courtyard in front of a St Joseph the Worker statue as Mons Gerard led a Consecration prayer and a hymn to St Joseph. The statue was once at Futuna in Karori. A presentation followed in the chapel about the origins and significance of many of the chapel’s design features and icons.

Participants were also invited to a discussion about work experiences and CST on worker’s rights and unions. Hosted by the Ecology Justice and Peace Commission, EJP Advisor Lisa Beech spoke about the dignity of work and workers. (See summary below.)

Meanwhile, other participants enjoyed a hīkoi from the church to the Soup Kitchen and on to the Home of Compassion in Island Bay. It was remembered how Suzanne Aubert had great devotion to St Joseph and that the Soup Kitchen was founded at a time of economic difficulty for homeless and workless people. 

Yet another group set off on a pilgrimage to St Joseph churches in Upper Hutt, Pauahatanui and Levin. Some journeyed as far as Hato Hōhepa Church at Hiruhārama-Jerusalem, where Suzanne Aubert founded the Daughters of Our Lady of Compassion 129 years ago.


Work is for the worker

In her presentation Lisa Beech said 2021 is the 130th anniversary of Pope Leo XIII’s encyclical Rerum Novarum – On new thing, which first recognised the rights of workers to join unions, and 2021 is also the 40th anniversary of Pope John Paul II’s encyclical Laborem Exercens – On human work.

The following is a summary of Lisa’s discussion. 

Catholic social teaching applies the Church’s moral and ethical principles to social and economic questions. Five key points Pope John Paul II made 40 years ago in Laborem Exercens continue to resonate strongly today:

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