He gave his life for the unity of the Church |
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In
designing his Church God worked with such skill that in the fullness of
time it would resemble a single great family embracing all men. It can
be identified, as we know, by certain distinctive characteristics,
notably its universality and unity.
Christ the Lord passed on to his apostles the task he had received from the Father: I have been given all authority in heaven and on earth. Go, therefore, and make disciples of all nations. He wanted the apostles as a body to be intimately bound together, first by the inner tie of the same faith and love which flows into our hearts through the Holy Spirit,
and, second, by the external tie of authority exercised by one apostle
over the others. For this he assigned the primacy to Peter, the source
and visible basis of their unity for all time. So that the unity and
agreement among them would endure, God wisely stamped them, one might
say, with the mark of holiness and martyrdom.
Both these distinctions fell to Josaphat, archbishop
of Polock of the Slavonic rite of the Eastern Church. He is rightly
looked upon as the great glory and strength of the Eastern Rite Slavs.
Few have brought them greater honor or contributed more to their
spiritual welfare than Josaphat, their pastor and apostle, especially
when he gave his life as a martyr for the unity of the Church. He felt,
in fact, that God had inspired him to restore world-wide unity to the
Church and he realized that his greatest chance of success lay in
preserving the Slavonic rite and Saint Basil’s rule of monastic life
within the one universal Church.
Concerned mainly with seeing his own people reunited
to the See of Peter, he sought out every available argument which would
foster and maintain Church unity. His best arguments were drawn from
liturgical books, sanctioned by the Fathers of the Church, which were in
common use among Eastern Christians, including the dissidents. Thus
thoroughly prepared, he set out to restore the unity of the Church. A
forceful man of fine sensibilities, he met with such success that his
opponents dubbed him “the thief of souls.”
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