Joseph
was born in 1603 in the small village of Cupertino, Italy, to very poor
parents. After his father died, his mother spared him no love and
considered him a burden. She would often abuse Joseph, which caused him
to become slow and absentminded. He was forgetful, and wandered around
the village with his mouth open, causing him to become nicknamed
“Boccaperta,” or “the gaper.”
When he was seventeen, Joseph went
out in search of a job. However, the abuse he suffered as a child caused
him to lack self discipline, and he never lasted long. The first two
times he tried to enter religious life, he was turned away, but the
third time, the Conventual Franciscans of Grottella accepted him as a
stable boy. Joseph came closer to Christ, and often did extreme fasting
and acts of mortification. He was ordained in 1628 after a five-year
struggle with his priestly studies.
During the seventeen years
Joseph remained at Grottella, God worked many amazing miracles through
him. Over seventy times, people saw him rise from the ground while
saying Mass or praying and he often went into ecstasy and would be
completely rapt up in talking with God. Joseph became so famous for
these miracles that he was often followed by large crowds of people and
had to be kept hidden.
From 1653 until his death, Joseph was
placed in complete seclusion from the outside world, restricted from
writing letters and receiving visitors. Though he was isolated from
humanity, he became even more loved of God: his supernatural
manifestations had begun to occur daily, and his seclusion left him free
of distraction to pray.
Joseph fell ill and died in 1663. He was canonized by Pope Clement XIII in 1776.
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