Buried St. Joseph… a big one

Buried St. Joseph… a big one

Years ago, after the Great Salem Fire of 1914, a 12-foot, 6-ton statue of St. Joseph was one of the only remaining pieces of the original St. Joseph Church in Salem (Massachusetts), sitting atop one of two towers that survived. However, by 1944 the church was being reconstructed and the twoers were to come down. Evidently the statue wasn’t going to be re-used so they did what you’re supposed to do with sacred objects you’re disposing of: they buried it on consecrated ground. And that ground is now the parking lot of the present-day St. Joseph’s church, built in 1949, and suppressed a couple of years ago. Now with plans to tear down the church and re-develop the property, the question has arisen: What do we do with the statue?

The statue itself was badly cracked in four places, which is why they were disposing of it in the first place.

The Planning Office for Urban Affairs, the developer of a proposed affordable and market-rate housing project at the site, is aware of the stories.

“We’ve heard it’s there, and the photograph certainly helps to confirm that, although no one seems to know for sure where it is,” said David Armitage, director of design and construction for the Planning Office, a Boston nonprofit affiliated with the Archdiocese of Boston.

“I think our position would be that we’d try to locate it before the start of any work. We’d obviously be sensitive to its presence and, if we do come upon it, we’d determine at the time, depending on its (condition), what the disposition of the statue would be.”

Maybe that’s why the property sold so quickly. (Okay, Yes, I think the whole practice is downright crass and superstitious. It has nothing to do with faith and everything to do with"magical” formulae. Don’t do it. Still, I though the juxtaposition was funny.)

Technorati Tags:, , ,

bk_keywords:saint joseph.

Share:FacebookX
4 comments
  • Once you own and try to sell a home, you will learn the practice of the Saint Joseph technique.

    When you buy the statue, it says right on the box: THE SECRET IS NOT THE STATUE, BUT SAYING THE PRAYERS TO ASK THE INTERCESSION OF THE SAINT.

    Therefore, when properly applied, the practice is neither crass nor superstitious, rather a devotion asking the intercession of the Patron of Christian families, whom the Church ranks #3 (with 2 seleminties which he does not share), right behind the Blessed Virgin Mary.

  • I guess I should have said number 2, but Our Lord and Savior is #1.

    Dom, don’t discount the mystical.

  • It seems silly to me too.&bbsp; However, so did putting the Blessed Mother in the window the week before our wedding to ensure good weather, but I did it anyway.  Ya never know, ya know?

    Gee…what if there was a severe drought in your area? I mean, ya never know. You’d be putting Our Lady’s statue in quite a pickle, ya know? Rain for the thirsty, or sunshine for the bride??? wink

    God works in mysterious ways, His wonders to perform—don’t put Him (or St. Joseph) in a box.

    We’re talking about a STATUE, people! Accept the miracle—they happen, by the way, a zillion times a day—but don’t credit it to idolatry.

    And by the way…you’re not implying that the Saint Joseph statue (a) punished the casual Catholics by not allowing them to buy the house, but (b) rewarded you folks, knowing that two years later (after successfully purchasing the home) you’d convert to Catholicism and (c) incidently meet a priest who was “devoted to Saint Joseph”…are you? Hope not! grin

Archives

Categories