RISMedia
  • News
  • Premier
  • Reports
  • Events
  • Power Broker
  • Newsmakers
  • More
    • Publications
    • Education
No Result
View All Result
  • Agents
  • Brokers
  • Teams
  • Marketing
  • Coaching
  • Technology
  • More
    • Headliners New
    • Luxury
    • Best Practices
    • Consumer
    • National
    • Our Editors
Join Premier
Sign In
RISMedia
  • News
  • Premier
  • Reports
  • Events
  • Power Broker
  • Newsmakers
  • More
    • Publications
    • Education
No Result
View All Result
RISMedia
No Result
View All Result

Home Sellers Turn to St. Joseph for Help

Home News
By Sam Wood
February 5, 2009
Reading Time: 4 mins read

house-webRISMEDIA, February 6, 2009-(MCT)-Faith might move mountains, but can a small piece of plastic move a four-bedroom house? In this dismal real estate market, lots of people think so, provided that the plastic is a figurine of St. Joseph.

Shops that sell religious paraphernalia are reporting phenomenal sales of tiny statuettes of St. Joseph-the earthly father of Jesus and the patron saint of the home and house sellers-to real estate agents and homeowners.

“We have over 5,000 items in our store,” said Norma DiCocco, who owns the St. Jude Shop in Havertown, Pa. “And you know what the No. 1 item is? The St. Joseph statue.”

DiCocco buys the figurines by the gross. Real estate agents purchase up to a dozen at a time. DiCocco estimated she had sold 6,000 to 8,000 diminutive Josephs in the last year.

They’re hardly a deal breaker. A two-inch figure sells for as little as $1.39. Home-selling kits-with more ornate, stone-colored figurines; a prayer card; and a short history-sell for $5.95 and up.

“It wasn’t until the real estate market really tanked that St. Joseph took off the way it did,” said Dan Loughman, president of Roman Inc. of Bloomingdale, Ill., which distributes the St. Josephs nationally.

“It was always a best-seller, but now it’s a super-best-seller,” he said. “It sells everywhere. You can find it in hardware stores, gift shops and religious stores.” And not only Roman Catholics look to St. Joseph for help.

“It’s not unusual for people of other faiths to come in a little sheepishly and ask, ‘Do you have that statue you use to sell your home?'” said DiCocco’s son, Robert.

On a blustery, snow-swept day last week, Connie Berg, an Abington Township, Pa., real estate agent who is Jewish, conceded that she needed a small miracle as she walked with a shovel to a four-bedroom home.

“This is a fabulous house-brand-new roof, white picket fence, plenty of gorgeous space-but it needs some help. It’s been on the market since August,” said Berg, a 26-year veteran at Prudential Fox & Roach.

She scraped at the ice-glazed earth near a fence post and loosened a few inches of frozen dirt. She planted her two-inch St. Joseph statue head down, feet pointing toward the heavens, face pointed toward the house.

“There’s an entire ritual to it,” she said as she filled in the hole. “And you have to remember where you planted it so you can dig it up after the house sells.”

Berg said she believed in the power of St. Joseph to help move stalled properties.

“It really does help,” she said. “It seems to work no matter what faith you are. Recently we planted one, and in three weeks the house sold.”

The practice of burying St. Joseph isn’t officially condoned by the Roman Catholic Church, said Stephen J. Binz, a biblical scholar and author of “St. Joseph, My Real Estate Agent,” a lighthearted look at the phenomenon.

“It’s pop spirituality and not endorsed by any religious organization,” Binz said. “And like all grassroots phenomena, the origin of the practice is very hard to track down.”

The most common story attributes the custom to an order of medieval nuns who placed medallions in the ground in the hope of gaining a new convent. They did. Binz encountered the St. Joseph phenomenon after several frustrating months of trying to sell his own house in Little Rock, Ark.

“My Presbyterian Realtor suggested that I bury a statue of St. Joseph in the yard,” Binz said. “I dismissed it as a ridiculous and superstitious practice. I wasn’t about to bury anything to get what I wanted from God.

“But after a few more months of waiting, I decided to give it a prayerful try. My house sold within a week. Coincidence? Who knows. Would it have sold anyway? Who can tell?”

Robert DiCocco said there was more to the ritual than burying the statue.

“The most important part of it is saying the novena, the prayer that accompanies the statue, for nine days,” he said. “It doesn’t matter how big or small the statue is. It’s the devotion and the prayer that’s important.”

And, say believers, sellers in search of a little divine intervention don’t even need a front yard to bury a St. Joseph.

For condo owners, a potted plant on a windowsill will suffice, said Kathy Victor, who works at the St. Jude religious-goods shop in Northeast Philadelphia. “We had a couple from Ocean City, Md., who had a Rita’s Water Ice franchise they wanted to sell,” Victor said. “They bought one to put in the freezer because they didn’t have a piece of ground to bury him.”

At a townhouse in Philadelphia’s Center City, broker Mike McCann and a client buried a St. Joseph in a backyard garden plot.

The 1760 house, a three-bedroom that once was a bakery, has been on the market for five months and has been repriced twice, from $769,000 down to $699,000.

“I’m going to make sure I say the prayer faithfully,” McCann said. “‘Ask, believe, trust’ is what it says on the box it came in. And, hey, it’s made in the U.S.A.”

John Badalamenti, an associate broker at Weichert Realtors in Collegeville, Pa., keeps a St. Joseph on his desk. He recommends the figures when all else fails. “But first,” he said, “I offer a few other thoughts: Make sure the house is properly priced, take care of deferred maintenance, and consider paying the buyer’s closing costs in a slow market.”

© 2009, The Philadelphia Inquirer.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.

ShareTweetShare
Paige Tepping

Paige Tepping

As RISMedia’s Managing Editor, Paige Tepping oversees the monthly editorial and layout for Real Estate magazine, working with clients to bring their stories to life. She also contributes to both the writing and editing of the magazine’s content. Paige has been with RISMedia since 2007.

Related Posts

Market Momentum: November: A Month Defined by Balance
Industry News

Market Momentum: November: A Month Defined by Balance

December 19, 2025
Mortgage
Industry News

Mortgage Mix: CFPB Proposal Raises Fair Housing Concerns

December 19, 2025
Improving Conversations With Real-Time Coaching
Industry News

Improving Conversations With Real-Time Coaching

December 19, 2025
compass
Agents

Democratic Senators Center Consumer Issues in Letter Opposing Compass-Anywhere Deal

December 19, 2025
Sales
Industry News

Existing-Home Sales Up for Third Month; Inventory Growth Stalls for Winter

December 19, 2025
Consumer sentiment
Economy

Consumer Sentiment Improves Slightly at Year’s End

December 19, 2025
Tip of the Day

Safe at Home: Holiday Tips That Keep Risks and Hazards to a Minimum

Getting back in touch through emails or notes can provide a subtle reminder that you want to stay connected, as well as providing useful information. Instead of sending a generic Happy Holidays card, why not add helpful holiday safety tips? Read more.

Business Tip of the Day provided by

Recent Posts

  • Market Momentum: November: A Month Defined by Balance
  • Mortgage Mix: CFPB Proposal Raises Fair Housing Concerns
  • Improving Conversations With Real-Time Coaching

Categories

  • Spotlights
  • Best Practices
  • Advice
  • Marketing
  • Technology
  • Social Media

The Most Important Real Estate News & Events

Click below to receive the latest real estate news and events directly to your inbox.

Sign Up
By signing up, you agree to our TOS and Privacy Policy.

About Blog Our Products Our Team Contact Advertise/Sponsor Media Kit Email Whitelist Terms & Policies ACE Marketing Technologies LLC

© 2025 RISMedia. All Rights Reserved. Design by Real Estate Webmasters.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Premier
  • Reports
  • News
    • Agents
    • Brokers
    • Teams
    • Consumer
    • Marketing
    • Coaching
    • Technology
    • Headliners New
    • Luxury
    • Best Practices
    • National
    • Our Editors
  • Publications
    • Real Estate Magazine
    • Past Issues
    • Custom Covers
  • Events
    • Upcoming Events
    • Podcasts
    • Event Coverage
  • Education
    • Get Licensed
    • REALTOR® Courses
    • Continuing Education
    • Luxury Designation
    • Real Estate Tools
  • Newsmakers
    • 2025 Newsmakers
    • 2024 Newsmakers
    • 2023 Newsmakers
    • 2022 Newsmakers
    • 2021 Newsmakers
    • 2020 Newsmakers
    • 2019 Newsmakers
  • Power Broker
    • 2025 Power Broker
    • 2024 Power Broker
    • 2023 Power Broker
    • 2022 Power Broker
    • 2021 Power Broker
    • 2020 Power Broker
    • 2019 Power Broker
  • Join Premier
  • Sign In

© 2025 RISMedia. All Rights Reserved. Design by Real Estate Webmasters.

X