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  1. Who is Saint Josaphat? The Life of Saint Josaphat, Martyr for Christian Unity St. Josaphat was born John Kuncevic about 1580 in Vladimir, a village of the Lithuanian Province of Volhynia (then a part of the Polish Kingdom begun under the Jagellonian Dynasty).

  2. www.franciscanmedia.org › saint-of-the-day › saint-josaphatSaint Josaphat | Franciscan Media

    Nov 12, 2020 · He was the first saint of the Eastern Church to be canonized by Rome. Josaphat’s death brought a movement toward Catholicism and unity, but the controversy continued, and the dissidents, too, had their martyr.

  3. Death: 1623. Author and Publisher - Catholic Online. Printable Catholic Saints PDFs. Shop St. Josaphat of Polotsk. Josaphat, an Eastern Rite bishop, is held up as a martyr to church unity because he died trying to bring part of the Orthodox Church into union with Rome.

  4. Josaphat Kuntsevych, OSBM ( c. 1580 – 12 November 1623) was a Basilian hieromonk and archeparch of the Ruthenian Uniate Church who on 12 November 1623 was beaten to death with an axe during an anti-Catholic riot by Eastern Orthodox Belarusians in Vitebsk, [a] in the eastern peripheries of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth .

  5. www.ewtn.com › catholicism › saintsSt. Josaphat | EWTN

    St. Josaphat was born in Lithuania about 1580 into a Catholic family and early promoted Catholic unity in a country divided between Orthodox and Catholic. He entered the Byzantine monastery of Holy Trinity in Vilna in 1604 and was elected Catholic archbishop of Polotsk in 1614.

  6. May 26, 2024 · Today, on the day of his martyrdom, Nov. 12, Roman Catholics and some Eastern Catholics remember St. Josaphat Kuntsevych, a bishop and monk whose example of faith inspired many Eastern Orthodox...

  7. November 12: Saint Josaphat, Bishop and Martyr—Memorial. 1580–1623. Patron Saint of Ukraine. Invoked for the reunification of Eastern and Western Christians. Canonized by Pope Pius IX on June 29, 1867. Liturgical Color: Red. Quote:

  8. Barlaam and Josaphat, also known as Bilawhar and Budhasaf, are Christian saints. Their life story was based on the life of the Gautama Buddha, [1] who historically lived several centuries before Jesus (and thus before Christianity). Their story tells of the conversion of Josaphat to Christianity.

  9. www.loyolapress.com › saints › saints-stories-for-all-agesSaint Josaphat | Loyola Press

    Josaphat was born John Kuncevic in the Ukraine around 1580. He worked as a merchant until 1604, when he became a monk of the Ukrainian Order of Saint Basil and took the name Josaphat. Five years later, he was ordained a priest of the Byzantine Church. People came to him for spiritual advice.

  10. www.ewtn.com › catholicism › libraryOn St. Josaphat | EWTN

    The great privilege of being both a saint and martyr belongs to Josaphat, Archbishop of Polotsk, of the Eastern Slavic Rite, who is rightly looked upon as the glory and support of the Eastern Slavs. Certainly it would be difficult to discover another man who has brought greater luster to his people or who has done more for their eternal welfare ...

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