St. Josaphat of Polotsk
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In
1054, a formal split called a schism took place between the Eastern Church
centered in Constantinople and the Western Church centered in Rome.
Trouble between the two had been brewing for centuries because of
cultural, political, and theological differences. More
than five centuries later, in what is now known as Belarus and Ukraine,
but what was then controlled by Poland-Lithuania, the metropolitan of Kyiv
and five other bishops decided to commit the millions of Christians under
their pastoral care to reunion with Rome. Josaphat Kunsevich who was born
in 1580 or 1584 was still a young boy when the Synod of Brest-Litovsk took
place in 1595-96, but he was witness to the results both positive and
negative. Many
of the faithful did not agree with the bishop’s decision to return to
communion with Rome and both sides tried to resolve this disagreement not
only with words but with violence. Martyrs died on both sides. Josaphat
was a voice of Christian peace in this dissent. After
an apprenticeship to a merchant, Josaphat turned down a partnership in the
business and entered the monastery of the Holy Trinity at Vilna in 1604.
Within the monastery he found a soul mate in Joseph Benjamin Rutsky.
Rutsky shared the young Josaphat's passion to work for reunion with Rome.
Rutsky eventually became the metropolitan of Kyiv and Josaphat the abbot
at Vilna. Josaphat
faced problems when he became first bishop of Vitebsk and then Polotsk in
1617. The church there was literally and figuratively in ruins with
buildings falling apart, clergy marrying two or three times, and monks and
clergy everywhere not really interested in pastoral care or model
Christian living. Within three years, Josaphat rebuilt the church by
holding synods, publishing a catechism to be used all over, and enforcing
rules of conduct for clergy. But his most compelling argument was his own
life which he spent preaching, instructing others in the faith, visiting
the needy of the towns. Despite
all his work and the respect he had, dissenters found fertile ground with
they set up their own bishops in the exact same area. Meletius Smotritsky
was named his rival archbishop of Polotsk. Riots broke out when the King
of Poland named Josaphat the only legitimate archbishop. His former
diocese of Vitebsk turned completely against the reunion along with two
other cities.
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been
his support didn't like the way he insisted on the use of the Byzantine
rite instead of the Roman rite. Out of fear or ignorance, Leo Sapiah,
chancellor of Lithuania, chose to believe stories that Josaphat was
inciting the people to violence and instead of coming to his aid,
condemned him. In
October 1623, Josaphat decided to return to Vitebsk to try to calm the
troubles himself. The dissenters saw their chance to get rid of Josaphat
and discredit him if they could only stir Josaphat's party to strike the
first blow. Then they would have an excuse to strike back. But Josaphat
insisted that his party not react in anyway that did not show patience and
forbearance. When the dissenters saw that they were not getting the
violent response they had hoped for they decided to wear Josaphat and the
others down as they plotted more direct action. A priest named Elias went
to the house where Josaphat was staying and shouted insults and threats to
everyone he saw, focusing on denouncing Josaphat and the Church of Rome.
Josaphat knew of the plot against him and spent his day in prayer. When
Elias came back the next morning of November 12, the Josaphat’s servants
were at their wits' ends and begged permission
to do something. Before he went off to say his office he told them they
could lock Elias away if he caused trouble again. When he returned to the
house he found that the servants had done just that but Josaphat let Elias
out of the room. It
was, however, too late. The mistake had been made. Elias had not been hurt
in anyway but as soon as the mob saw that Elias had been locked up they
rejoiced in the excuse they had been waiting for. Bells were rung and mobs
descended on the house. Josaphat
came out in the courtyard to see the mob beating and trampling his friends
and servants. He cried out, "My children what are you doing with my
servants? If you have anything against me, here I am, but leave them
alone!" With shouts of "Kill the papist" Josaphat was hit
with a stick, then an axe, and finally shot through the head. His bloody
body was dragged to the river and thrown in. |