HOME    SPECIALS    BOOKS  †  ORDERING INFO  †  SITE MAP  †  VOODOO DOLLS

 

St. Joseph Home Selling Kits

Those who believe sell their homes and any piece of real estate! St. Joseph, the husband of Mary and earthly father of Jesus Christ, is honored as the patron saint of families, fathers, expectant mothers (pregnant women), travelers, immigrants, house sellers and buyers, craftsmen, engineers and working people in general. America's home sellers and realtors are turning to St. Joseph statues to get an advantage in the tough home sellers market.  This spell is used to make a home or other property sell very fast once it is listed on the real estate market.

St. Joseph Home Selling Kit

The solemn tradition of burying St. Joseph in the earth began hundreds of years ago in Europe. During those times, an order of nuns prayed to St. Joseph (the patron saint of the family and household needs) when they needed more lands for convents. The Sisters were encouraged to bury their St. Joseph medals in the ground.

Over the years, the tradition arose of St. Joseph having a special power in real estate transactions and home sales. The medals evolved into statues, culminating with the complete St. Joseph Home Selling Kit currently available. Today, thousands of home sellers and real estate agents nationwide continue this successful tradition; they are looking for a little divine intervention.

The St. Joseph Home Selling Kit was developed to assist you in continuing this tradition. The kit contains everything thing you need to successfully bury your own St. Joseph Statue. Whether it is a myth or a mere act of faith, it has worked more than once!

Kit contains 1 glass encased St. Joseph candle, Saint Joseph oil, Saint Joseph holy card, Saint  Joseph statue, St. Joseph the Worker Booklet, and complete instructions for use.

 $32.50

Quantity

 

 

If you prefer not to order online via our Secure server, you can always order by U.S. Mail. Click here for an order form you can print directly from your web browser. NEW! Now you can order over the phone with a valid credit card! Simply call our toll-free number: 1(877)ERZULIE(379-8543).

 


 
Frequently Bought Together

St. Joseph Home Selling Kit

 

 

 

   +

Papa Legba Door Opener Voodoo Doll Ritual Kit

St. Joseph Home Selling Kit

Papa Legba's Door Opener Kit

 Price for both: $132.50

Quantity



 

Will burying St. Joseph help house sell?

by C.J. Schepers

Lincoln, Nebraska
January 5, 1992

There's a new real estate agent in town named St. Joseph.

He's thousands of years old, wears a long robe instead of a suit and calls upon God instead of a multiple listing book.

It is uncertain where the custom of burying St. Joseph statues originated, but those who follow it believe the saint will bring about a quicker sale of their property.

"It's one of the pecularities of certain traditions among the faithful," said the Rev. Kenneth Borowiak, spokesman for the Lincoln Diocese. "It certainly has no basis in Scripture. It belongs to the realm of pious traditions from the Middle Ages."

According to the U.S. Catholic Information Center in Washington, D.C., the tradition is traced back hundreds of years to Theresa of Avila, who prayed to St. Joseph when the convents needed more land and encouraged nuns to bury St. Joseph medals in the ground as a symbol of their devotion.

Mary Jane VanBerg decided to follow the custom after her sister in California, who had a friend trying to sell property, had buried a St. Joseph statue and sold the house within a week.

VanBerg put her summer cabin near Columbus on the market about two years ago, advertising it with a homemade sign. But it didn't sell.

"I just thought, if I could sell it, that'd be fine and I never got serious about it," she said.

Last summer VanBerg had a professional "For Sale" sign made. She also buried a St. Joseph statue.

"I sold my cabin within 24 hours. That statue didn't even get cold. I can't believe it. Everybody just giggled all over Duncan and Columbus. That was the topic, the conversation for months."

The buyer told VanBerg that something just told him to drive in, that there might be something available. He said he hadn't been at the lake for 20 years.

"We order them by the dozens," said Tim Franssen, manager of the family-owned Nebraska Church Goods, 1032 O Street, an ecumenical store that carries a large stock of Catholic supplies. He estimates the store sells from 400 to 500 St. Joseph statues a year.

Franssen has no idea if only Catholics are buying them.

"It could be anybody really. The people who come in here and ask for St. Joseph statues, I always say: `Well, are you selling a house?' And then they say, 'How did you know?'

"Somebody tells me you're supposed to bury them upside down, facing the house. And then I hear right side up, against the house."

Most sources say to bury the statue head first, with the feet pointing toward heaven.

To settle the confusion - and make a few bucks - a company out of Modesto, Calif., is marketing the saint in a kit, which contains a 3-1/2-inch-tall plastic statue, a bag to carry it in, instructions on how to bury it, and even a prayer:

"Oh, St. Joseph, guardian of household needs, we know you don't like to be upside down in the ground, but the sooner escrow closes, the sooner we will dig you up and put you in a place of honor in our new home. Please bring us an acceptable offer (or any offer!) and help sustain our faith in the real estate market."

Instructions also recommend a little reverence.

Custom dictates that once the house is sold, St. Joseph be dug up and put in a place of honor in the new home.

These "Underground Real Estate Agent" kits sell for $8 each.

Co-owner Karin Reenstierna said she first heard about the custom through a friend's mother, a Methodist, who buried a statue in her yard in Wisconsin. Her house sold after two weeks.

Reenstierna said the custom has been occurring for years on the East Coast.

"We just decided to put two and two together, and market the whole concept," said Reenstierna. She quit her personnel manager job to start this business with her husband, Phil Cates, who is in the mortgage business.

Reenstierna said the custom is not only practiced by Catholics, but that Lutherans, Methodists, even Jews, have tried it.

Jim Franssen, owner of Nebraska Church Goods, said perhaps people feel it shows a true commitment to selling their house. He realizes some view it as superstitious.

"It's a matter of faith, really," he said.

Another woman, who declined to use her name, said she buried the statue in her back yard near some rose bushes. Then when someone told her the saint needed to be buried head first, she went to dig him up. But she couldn't find him.

So she ended up buying a new statue.

And did it work? "Eventually," she said, adding that it took six months to sell the house.

The Roman Catholic Church encourages devotion to the saints, and does not mind appeals for divine intervention.

What the church does mind, however, are superstitions and sales gimmicks. "If it's a pious practice, of just a way of some devotion to Joseph, then it's fine," said Omaha Archbishop Daniel E. Sheehan.

"(But) if it's the kind of thing that is superstitious, that is, there's some kind of infallible result, then I think the church would frown on it. Because we don't look upon any kind of intercession with the saints or any kind of prayers as having those kind of infallible results."

The Rev. James Coen, head of the Catholic Information Center, in a New York Daily News article complained that real estate brokers "are turning this into a first-class sales gimmick."

According to the Dictionary of Saints by John J. Delaney, Joseph is a multifaceted saint. He is known as patron of the Universal Church, a model for fathers of families, a protector of workingmen and a patron for social justice.

There are two St. Joseph statues - St. Joseph the worker, who carries a water pitcher, a loaf of bread and an ax by his feet, and St. Joseph patron of the family, who is holding his foster son, the child Jesus.

Reenstierna's company is selling the worker. But Jim Franssen, whose store carries both kinds, says the patron of the family is the correct one to bury.

One Lincoln real estate agent, who asked that her name not be used, she has heard from a variety of sources about the custom, and has decided to try it.

She said that the custom is prevalent in the Chicago area and that her broker brought it up at a meeting, saying it was time to bury the saint.

Is she using the statue then?

"Well, we don't like to say that," she said, laughing. "Yes, I am. We're going to try anything at this point in time."

Jim Franssen said that one real estate agent came into his store, bought one, and it worked. So the agent came back and bought six more.

 


Virtual Voodoo Temple

 

 

Follow us on Twitter: Twitter.com/PlanetVoodoo for up to the minute news...

 

 

 

Our Lady of Sorrows

Our Lady of Sorrows print

 

Erzulie Freda is syncretized with Our Lady of Sorrows

Erzulie Freda Altar Poster

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright 2006-2009 Planet Voodoo. All Rights Reserved Worldwide.

The content on this site may not be used, distributed, or reproduced without the express written permission of the owner. Terms of Use. Privacy Policy. Customer Support.

Our toll-free number: 1(877)ERZULIE