Monday, May 11, 2009

The Powerful Intercession of St. Joseph the Worker and Our Lady of Fatima – Lessons in Catholic Education

by Dr. Joseph Bound
Director of Catholic Education

Diocese of Green Bay

For those of us who can remember the Cold War, May Day, May 1st, was an important day in all socialist and communist countries. Military, government officials, workers, and Young Pioneers paraded through the major squares of major cities to celebrate the glories of communism and the ‘workers’ paradise’. These May Day celebrations were major productions involving precision marching to patriotic music, banner and flag waving, lines of military equipment and missiles, and floats extolling industrial might, socialist labor, communism, and solidarity with the proletariat of the world. In essence, they were celebrations of the triumph of man over God. The religious icons of the past were replaced in these celebrations by pictures of Marx, Engels, Lenin, Stalin, Mao, and other communist leaders – all atheists. Many of these former celebrations can be viewed on YouTube today.


These celebrations were not only found in Eastern Europe and Asia. Many countries in western Europe, principally France and Italy, also staged similar celebrations. In response to those celebrations of labor, in 1955 Pope Pius XII established May 1 as the Feast of St. Joseph the Worker, a date that coincided with Labor Day celebrations around the world, in democratic as well as communist countries. He did this so that Catholics would look to the example of St. Joseph as the model worker and see labor as our participation in God’s creative processes. It was the Church’s way of extolling the dignity of labor. It was also a way to counter the influence of communism throughout the world.

May is an interesting month in recent Church history. Prior to the Russian Revolution of October 1917, and the advent of the communist government in Russia, Our Lady began a series of appearances to three children in Fatima, Portugal on May 13, 1917. She warned of hell and the spreading of Russia’s errors, while promoting the necessity for prayer for the consecration and eventual conversion of Russia.

In 1952, Pope Pius XII reminded the Russian people who were suffering under communism that Mary would help them and that the errors of communism and atheism would eventually be overcome with her assistance and God’s grace. In 1984, Pope John Paul II consecrated the entire world to Mary and on December 25, 1991, the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, which had included Russia, ceased to exist. A free Russian Federation was established in its place instead. Today Russia sees a revival of religious practice and freedom. Catholic and Orthodox churches are being built, seminaries are full, religion is taught in public schools, and monastic centers for men and women are being restored or established.

What does this have to do with Catholic education? I believe a lot. We are currently experiencing in western society the spread of what is called the new atheism. Popular writers in America and Europe are debunking belief in God, the soul, and the afterlife. In some cities in Europe signs have appeared on the sides of buses poking fun at the belief in God.

We should never forget that the fundamental philosophical underpinning of communism was atheism. Key principles of Communism were: that man could solve all of his problems by himself; the supreme importance of materialism; the centrality of science; and the supremacy of the state over the individual. As we look at what is happening in western society today, do we see a shift in people’s thinking in these directions? That gives us all the more reason to counter these trends through Catholic education in the love of God, in the importance and dignity of the individual, the need for God in our lives, and the importance of the soul and spirit in each person.

Through Catholic education adults and youth come to know, love, and serve God and their fellow citizens of the world. They learn how to balance science with faith, materialism with spirituality, and labor with leisure. They learn that humankind was not created to serve the state but that the state was created to protect each person’s freedom: freedom to worship God, reap the rewards of his or her labor, practice stewardship, and protect and defend one’s family and property.

During this lovely month of May let us contemplate the wonderful example of St. Joseph the Worker and Our Lady of Fatima. Through their intercession and example we can restore and strengthen belief in the dignity of labor, the power of prayer, as well as the importance of the individual and family.

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