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JM

Servant of God

Father Joseph Muzquiz

1912 to 1983

“Sanctity is not a matter of doing extraordinary things, but of doing ordinary things extraordinarily well.”

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Path to Sainthood

Diocesan phase completed May 2014, documentation sent to Rome

Servant of God

2011

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Venerable

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Blessed

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Saint

The Engineer Who Built Bridges for Souls

Jose Luis Muzquiz y de Miguel was born on October 14, 1912, in Badajoz, Spain. Trained as a civil engineer, he spent his early career building railroad bridges and stations across Spain. It was meticulous, exacting work, and the habits of precision and patience it instilled would shape everything that followed.

In 1941, drawn by the spirituality of sanctifying ordinary work, Muzquiz joined Opus Dei, then a young movement founded by Josemaria Escriva. He was ordained a priest in 1944. Five years later, Escriva entrusted him with a daunting mission: bring Opus Dei to the United States, a country where the movement had no presence, no contacts, and no resources.

Father Muzquiz arrived in America in 1949 and set to work with the same steady determination he had brought to engineering. He established the first Opus Dei center in Chicago, then another in Washington, D.C. He adapted to American culture while holding fast to the spiritual vision he carried. His approach was personal, patient, and rooted in friendship. He taught that holiness was not reserved for monasteries but belonged in offices, kitchens, and classrooms.

Over the following decades, Father Muzquiz helped lay the foundations for Opus Dei in Canada, Japan, and Venezuela. On June 21, 1983, while teaching a class in Plymouth, Massachusetts, he suffered a heart attack and died. He was seventy years old. The engineer who once built railroad bridges had spent the second half of his life building bridges between ordinary people and God.

In His Own Words

Sanctity is not a matter of doing extraordinary things, but of doing ordinary things extraordinarily well.

The work of God grows one soul at a time.

On his apostolate in America

Timeline
1912Born Jose Luis Muzquiz y de Miguel on October 14 in Badajoz, Spain
1930Begins studies in civil engineering, specializing in railroad infrastructure
1936Works as a railroad engineer building bridges and stations across Spain
1941Joins Opus Dei, drawn to the message of sanctifying ordinary work
1944Ordained to the priesthood
1949Sent by St. Josemaria Escriva to the United States to establish Opus Dei in North America
1950Establishes the first Opus Dei center in Chicago
1953Opens an Opus Dei center in Washington, D.C.
1957Helps lay foundations for Opus Dei in Canada
1958Assists in establishing Opus Dei in Japan
1962Helps plant Opus Dei in Venezuela
1983Dies June 21 of a heart attack while teaching a class in Plymouth, Massachusetts
2011Cause for canonization opened June 2 by Cardinal Sean O’Malley, Archdiocese of Boston
2014Diocesan phase completed in May; documentation sent to Rome
Support Father Muzquiz’s Cause

Father Joseph Muzquiz brought Opus Dei to North America and spent decades forming souls in the spirituality of ordinary work. His cause was opened in 2011 by Cardinal O’Malley, and the diocesan phase was completed in 2014. Pray for the advancement of his cause.

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Born

October 14, 1912

Badajoz, Spain

Died

June 21, 1983

Plymouth, Massachusetts

Cause Opened

June 2, 2011

Archdiocese of Boston

Stage

Servant of God

Docs sent to Rome 2014

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