Dear Alex,
My friend, I must say that I strongly disagree with you on several of your statements.
As a person who is devoted to Saint Joseph, I am compelled to respond. The following responses are my own personal statements, and are not meant to push a particular interpretation of Saint Joseph on you or anyone else who may read this.
>>The inclusion of St Joseph for the Feast of the Synaxis of the Mother of God is a recent and Latinized innovation - our Basilian Fathers insist on it.<<
I do not agree that the inclusion of Saint Joseph to the "Synaxis of the Mother of God" should necessarily be termed a "latinization". Could it not be viewed as a long overdue recognition of the importance of Saint Joseph's role in the life of Our Lord Jesus Christ?
I did a Web search and found at least three ROCOR sites that list St.Joseph's feast as December 26th. St. John of Kronstadt Press - a ROCOR site- sells an Akathist to Saint Joseph for use on Dec. 26th. ROCOR definitely would not be a religious group one would accuse of "latinizations".
My pastor- whose parish has a well deserved reputation for being completely free of "latinizations" in church architecture and in the celebration of the liturgical services-- once gave a wonderful homily on St. Joseph on the Sunday after Nativity. He stated that the East would benefit greatly from re-discovering the importance of Saint Joseph.
At the following link, you will find interest in Saint Joseph by Orthodox Christians:
www.orthodoxchristianity.net/newboard/index.php?board=12;action=display;threadid=18 6 [
orthodoxchristianity.net]
>>Some prayerbooks even call it the "Feast of the Holy Family " a quite slavish imitation of the Roman Catholic devotion to the Holy Family.<<
Yes, my parish library has a book on the sermons of the late Major Archbishop Myroslav Lubachivsky, and one of the sermons he wrote was for the "Feast of the Holy Family".
>>St Joseph is commemorated on the Sunday after the Nativity - along with King David and St James - a kind of "extended family" commemoration.<<
While I celebrate with joy the feast of Saint Joseph on the Sunday after Nativity, I personally believe that his primary feast should be as part of the "Synaxis of the Mother of God".
As husband of the Theotokos and the foster-father of the Savior, Saint Joseph was an indispensible part of Their lives. I do not see how he could be seen as an "extended family" member.
>>St Joseph doesn't belong on this feast of the Synaxis of the Mother of God and he has no connection with the liturgical sense of that feast whatever.<<
Yet, the Gospel for the Synaxis of the Mother of God - the account of the flight into Egypt- prominently features Saint Joseph. It is to Joseph that the angel appears to tell him that he must take the Mother and Child to Egypt. It is also Saint Joseph's decision to go to Nazareth, thus fulfilling the prophecy that Jesus will be called a "Nazorean".
>>Our Latinized members want to have us resemble the West in as many ways as possible and they decry the fact that, apart from the Sunday following the Nativity, there is no feastday for St Joseph, as the West has on March 19th (adopted by the Melkites, however, as the Feast of the "Dormition of St Joseph.")
There is an Akathist to St Joseph the Betrothed and he also figures in the Nativity Feast, that of the Circumcision/Naming of Jesus and on the Feast of the Meeting in the Temple.<<
Yes. An akathist to Saint Joseph - as used by Ukrainian Catholics-can be found in the above link as well.
Yes, Saint Joseph does figure in the above events, including the Finding of the Child in the Temple, all the more reinforcing his role as the earthly father of Our Lord, and why he should be included in the Synaxis of the Mother of God.
>>But the East has another tradition regarding St Joseph.
Following the deutero-canonical tradition of the New Testament, St Joseph was elderly and a widower with four sons, two of which became Jesus' Disciples, I believe. St Joseph's brother, St Cleopas, met the Resurrected Christ on the road to Emmaus.<<
Yes, the Eastern tradition of Saint Joseph is based on several apocryphal books, such as the "Protoevangelium of James" and the "History of Joseph the Carpenter"
In short, Joseph was married for forty years to a woman named Melcha or Escha , having four sons-including James"the brother of the Lord", and two daughters. A year after his wife's death he is betrothed to Mary. At 90 years old, he is betrothed to a 13 year old Mary!!!!! That seems quite a stretch even for biblical times; I am not aware of Old Testaments couples with such a large age gap.
James is very young at the time of Joseph's betrothal to Mary and is raised by the Theotokos. He also accompanies Mary and Joseph to Egypt.
Joseph passes away in Nazareth at the age of 111.
I have trouble accepting the deutero-canonical tradition of Saint Joseph, because it raises questions in light of events found in Scripture such as the following:.
1) When the angel tells Joseph to flee to Egypt, the angel only mentions taking the Mother and Child. There is no mention of other family members- James- going to Egypt with them.
2) While there is mention of the "brothers and sisters" during Jesus' public ministry in the Gospels, they are noticeably absent at the Crucifixion, when Our Lord entrusts His Mother to Saint John the Apostle. The tradition has been that Our Lady stayed with John until Her dormition.
The apocryphal books were not accepted by all the Fathers of the Church. Several of the books that depict the infancy of Jesus tell of many miracles He performed, which conflict with the canonical tradition that Our Lord did not perform any miracles until the wedding feast at Cana. Is it not possible then that the apocryphal texts contain misinformation about Joseph?
>>The liturgical focus during the Nativity season is on the Incarnation of Christ Himself by His Mother and the Holy Spirit. St Joseph is only a Guardian of Mother and Son.<<
Saint Joseph was not only a Guardian. He was an extraordinarily holy man to have the Theotokos as his Spouse and to have the Son of God as his supposed Son. He was with Them 24/7; he certainly must have had a profound spiritually intimate relationship with the Mother of God and Christ. He was not just the guardian of Christ, but his earthly father as well. At the Finding in the Temple, the Theotokos refers to Joseph, when speaking to Jesus, as "your father".
In the Maronite Church and other churches of the Syriac, one of the Sundays prior to the feast of the Nativity is titled the "Sunday of the Annunciation to Joseph". He is liturgically commemorated because he does play a role in the Incarnation of the Lord.
>>St John the Baptist is the primary Saint of the Eastern Church, after the Mother of God and the Angels - the West has tended to emphasize the primacy of Joseph and has called his cult of veneration "Proto-dulia."<<
In the Western "Litany of Saints", Saint John the Baptist is listed before Saint Joseph. A lot of Western art depicts Saint Joseph as an elderly man as well. Devotion to Saint Joseph is a relatively recent development due in large part to the writings of Saint Teresa of Avila, who benefited tremendously from her own personal devotion to Saint Joseph.
>>The Synaxis is a Feast calling together the assembly of believers to celebrate the "Secondary Persons" involved with the primary Feast.
And so the Mother of God has Her Synaxis following the Nativity and St John the Baptist has his Synaxis following the Theophany and St Simeon and St Anna have their Synaxis following the Feast of the Meeting of the Lord.
St Joseph has no bearing on the Incarnation of our Lord - and for that reason it is liturgically nonsensical to include him in the Synaxis of the Theotokos feast.<<
Saint Joseph was a "secondary person" involved in the life of Christ. The Gospel of Matthew readings for the Sunday before Nativity, Eve of the Nativity, the Synaxis, and the Sunday after Nativity all mention Joseph. In fact the Gospel reading for the Synaxis and the feast of Saint Joseph on the Sunday after Nativity are the same. While he is not explicitly mentioned in the Gospel of Luke reading used for the feast of the Nativity, it is impossible to believe that he was not present.
It is to Joseph who is entrusted with the naming of Jesus, thus signifying the earthly authority he has over Christ. Is that not being involved in the Incarnation of Our Lord?
It surprises me to see that the prophetess Anna-who is only briefly mentioned in Scripture- is included in the synaxis the day after the "Encounter with Simeon", and yet St. Joseph, who is mentioned more times is excluded from the "Synaxis of the Mother of God".
I agree with my pastor that the East could benefit greatly fron re-discovering the role of Saint Joseph. Who knows, maybe a future Orthodox saint will emphasize devotion to Joseph.
Again, these are my own personal statements. Please feel free to disagree.
God bless you,
griego