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Jan 11 – The Holy Family
Description
It’s the Feast of Feast of the Holy Family, 2nd Class, with the color of White. In this episode: the meditation: “Jesus, the King of the Magi”, today’s news from the Church: “Euthanasia in France: Catholic Institutions Seriously Threatened”, and today’s thought from the Archbishop.
Have feedback or questions about the DD or our other shows? podcast@sspx.orgSources Used Today:
- “Jesus, the King of the Magi” – From Advent to Epiphany
- “Euthanasia in France: Catholic Institutions Seriously Threatened” (FSSPX.news)
- The Spiritual Life – Archbishop Lefebvre (Angelus Press)
The Feast of the Holy Family places before the Church the quiet mystery of Jesus, Mary, and Joseph living an ordinary human life infused with divine purpose. The Gospels tell us very little about those hidden years at Nazareth, yet what they do tell us is decisive. The Son of God chose to grow within a family, learning obedience, work, prayer, and love through daily life. Jesus submits Himself to Mary and Joseph. Mary treasures mysteries she does not yet fully understand. Joseph bears responsibility in silence, protecting and providing without a word recorded in Scripture. In this household, salvation advances not through spectacle, but through fidelity. The Holy Family reveals that holiness is formed slowly, through patience, sacrifice, and trust in God’s will amid ordinary circumstances.
Historically, devotion to the Holy Family developed later than many other feasts. While early Christians revered Mary and honored Christ’s hidden life, there was no distinct universal feast in the ancient calendar. The idea of formally celebrating the Holy Family emerged gradually in the late Middle Ages, especially as theologians and preachers reflected more deeply on Christ’s domestic life. By the seventeenth century, religious communities and local dioceses began promoting devotion to Jesus, Mary, and Joseph together as a model for Christian households, especially during times of social instability and moral decline.
The feast gained wider traction in the nineteenth century, as the Church responded to industrialization, urban poverty, and the weakening of family structures. Pope Leo XIII strongly encouraged devotion to the Holy Family, seeing in it a remedy for social disorder and a defense of marriage and family life. In 1921, Pope Benedict XV extended the Feast of the Holy Family to the universal Church, fixing it within the Octave of Epiphany in the traditi