Patron Saint Joseph of Home Sales

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darinhouston
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Patron Saint Joseph of Home Sales

Post by darinhouston » Sun Nov 16, 2008 10:03 pm

Who can question the idolatry of RC's when you read this? I saw a piece on this on Fox News last night, and it was portrayed as a "Christian" custom that was even being adopted by non-Christian home sellers.
http://www.st-josephstatue.com/st_joseph.htm wrote:How to bury Saint Joseph statues

Saint Joseph - Patron Saint of the Housing Market

Saint Joseph
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Worried about the mortgage crisis? Do balloon payments and rising interest rates have you down? Don't turn to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac for comfort. Relief from your high payments can come from a higher, divine source.

Saint Joseph the Betrothed, patron saint of craftsmen, carpenters and... mortgage brokers can help relieve you of your home and its hihg monthly payments. But how do you get the world's most famous step-father to work for you?

Ancient tradition (circa 1972) holds that burying a statue of Saint Joseph in the yard of your house will make it sell faster that oceanfront property in Arizona that is on the housing market. Burying a statue? It sounds a bit fishy but this is a tried and true, tested ritual.

In 1995 Maureen Williams relocated from Los Angeles to Savannah, Georgia. She left her 3 bedroom Craftsman in the capable hands of her friend and real estate agent. After 2 months the home still hadn't sold and Maureen was going broke keeping up with the payments. Desperate, she FedExed a plastic Saint Joseph, a shovel, and the promise of a bonus to her broker. While the agent was outside digging the hole under the For Sale sign a Catholiv priest new to the area was walking by. He saw the sign, the statue and offered full price on the spot.

Some say the practice began when a group of nuns looking for a new convent buried a medal of Saint Joseph asking him to intercede. Others say it was German carpenters who started burying the statues around the homes they build hoping they would sell quickly.

Whatever the origins of the tradition, it can't hurt to ask for a little help from a man who trained a world-renowned carpenter. Here's how to get Saint Joe working for you if you have your house on the market.

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1. Dig a hole. There are conflicting views on the best place to dig the hole -- some say right under the For Sale sign, others say in the backyard in a flower bed is best, still others say to dig exactly three feet from the back of the house. Perhaps begin with one place, wait a few weeks and move the statue if your house hasn't sold. Hopefully the numerous holes around the yard won't affect your property value.

2. Once the hole is about 12 inches deep place St Joseph in the hole. Againt, there is some debate over his position, though most say he should be placed upside-down (apparently he'll try harder to get out this way) facing the house. Don't have him face the street unless you want your neighbours to move.

3. Once your house has sold leave instructions for the new owners to dig up the statue, clean it off and display it prominently on the mantelpiece. Include a shovel and a treasure map in the purchase price.

With Saint Joseph on your side your housing crunch woes will be a thing of the past. Now if we could just get him to finish the basement, remodel the bathroom and fix the squek in the front door.

- Geoff Nail

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TK
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Re: Patron Saint Joseph of Home Sales

Post by TK » Mon Nov 17, 2008 8:19 am

he definitely has to be buried upside down, as indicated per #2, above. it wont work otherwise.

TK

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Suzana
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Re: Patron Saint Joseph of Home Sales

Post by Suzana » Mon Nov 17, 2008 4:14 pm

TK wrote:he definitely has to be buried upside down, as indicated per #2, above. it wont work otherwise.

TK
How very undignified. :shock: I think that's adding insult to injury.
Suzana
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TK
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Re: Patron Saint Joseph of Home Sales

Post by TK » Mon Nov 17, 2008 4:16 pm

well- we once had a neighbor who buried him upside down(i thought it was the strangest thing)- and she sold her house! what more proof can one ask for?

TK

Jill
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Post by Jill » Mon Nov 17, 2008 6:06 pm

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Last edited by Jill on Thu Feb 17, 2011 7:00 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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kaufmannphillips
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Re: Patron Saint Joseph of Home Sales

Post by kaufmannphillips » Mon Dec 22, 2008 10:38 pm

What? A church with over a billion members worldwide has some who are laughably peculiar? How could this be?

This is folk religion, and we should be measured in our reaction to this. Sometimes G-d stoops to meet us even in our sillyland. A child's cry for help, however comical it might seem on one level, can still touch the heart of a parent.

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RND
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Re: Patron Saint Joseph of Home Sales

Post by RND » Mon Dec 22, 2008 11:31 pm

kaufmannphillips wrote:What? A church with over a billion members worldwide has some who are laughably peculiar? How could this be?

This is folk religion, and we should be measured in our reaction to this. Sometimes G-d stoops to meet us even in our sillyland. A child's cry for help, however comical it might seem on one level, can still touch the heart of a parent.
I like you already! Nice thoughts.
"All truth passes through three stages. First, it is ridiculed, second it is violently opposed, and third, it is accepted as self-evident." Arthur Schopenhauer, Philosopher, 1788-1860

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Michelle
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Re: Patron Saint Joseph of Home Sales

Post by Michelle » Mon Dec 22, 2008 11:46 pm

RND wrote:
kaufmannphillips wrote:What? A church with over a billion members worldwide has some who are laughably peculiar? How could this be?

This is folk religion, and we should be measured in our reaction to this. Sometimes G-d stoops to meet us even in our sillyland. A child's cry for help, however comical it might seem on one level, can still touch the heart of a parent.
I like you already! Nice thoughts.
I agree! Well said, Emmet.

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darinhouston
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Re: Patron Saint Joseph of Home Sales

Post by darinhouston » Tue Dec 23, 2008 12:00 am

kaufmannphillips wrote:What? A church with over a billion members worldwide has some who are laughably peculiar? How could this be?

This is folk religion, and we should be measured in our reaction to this. Sometimes G-d stoops to meet us even in our sillyland. A child's cry for help, however comical it might seem on one level, can still touch the heart of a parent.
True to a point, but the New Advent site (though not authoritative, certainly mainstream) does list Joseph as patron saint of home sellers. If you'll just look at the thousands of patrons and patronages, I think it shows the depths to which the RC church will direct people away from Christ for your problems/needs.

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kaufmannphillips
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Re: Patron Saint Joseph of Home Sales

Post by kaufmannphillips » Thu Dec 25, 2008 9:26 pm

darinhouston wrote:
True to a point, but the New Advent site (though not authoritative, certainly mainstream) does list Joseph as patron saint of home sellers. If you'll just look at the thousands of patrons and patronages, I think it shows the depths to which the RC church will direct people away from Christ for your problems/needs.
The situation is not utterly different from asking your pastor to pray for you. Your pastor may have a reputation as a prayer warrior, particularly with respect to certain topics that are on their heart. Asking for their prayer is not necessarily turning away from Christ. It is, however, an acknowledgment that their additional prayer may make a difference with G-d. But if Protestant Christians did not believe that other people's prayers make a difference, why would they ask their brothers and sisters for prayer?

On another hand, Christian praying to Jesus could be seen as directing people away from G-d the Father.
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"The more something is repeated, the more it becomes an unexamined truth...." (Nicholas Thompson)
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