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The state of Louisiana just made May 1 St. Joseph the Worker Day

SAINT JOSEPH, JESUS, CARPENTER
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J-P Mauro - published on 07/12/21
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The resolution also formally recognizes the Year of St. Joseph, as set by Pope Francis.

The Louisiana State Senate has just established May 1 as a new state holiday: St. Joseph the Worker Day. The resolution also formally recognized the period between December 8, 2020, and December 8, 2021, as “The Year of St. Joseph.” 

The Catholic Telegraph reports that Resolution 116 was sponsored by Sen. Fred Mills, a Catholic. It will go into effect on May 1, 2022, as the first celebrated St. Joseph the Worker Day in Louisiana. The day will also honor “the dignity of all working men and women in Louisiana.”

According to NCR, Senator Mills said of the resolution: 

The resolution highlighted many reasons why St. Joseph is close to the heart of Louisiana. Not least of all is the “Exodus 290 St. Joseph Pilgrimage.” This pilgrimage is a 290-mile trek through Louisiana, with stops at 14 churches along the way. The route has pilgrims follow in the footsteps of St. Joseph, traveling approximately the same distance covered by the Holy Family in their flight to Egypt. 

Upon signing the resolution, a copy was sent to Louisiana’s prelates, along with Father Donald H. Calloway, who was named in the missive. Fr. Calloway has sold more than 1 million copies of his consecration book, St. Joseph: The Wonders of Our Spiritual Father. When he learned of the new holiday, Fr. Calloway remarked that he didn’t even know it was a possibility. 

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