Monastic Founder and Reformer
Joseph founded the Joseph-Volokolamsk Monastery in 1479 near Volokolamsk, approximately 90 kilometers northwest of Moscow. The typikon (rule) he wrote for the community became one of the most influential monastic constitutions in Russian Orthodoxy, emphasizing strict common life, absolute obedience to the abbot, and a detailed schedule of prayer and work. The monastery became a center for the training of bishops and abbots and exercised wide influence on the institutional development of the Russian Church in the sixteenth century.
The Possessor Controversy
The most significant theological dispute of Joseph's era concerned whether monastic communities should hold land and other property. Joseph led the Josephites (Possessors), who argued that monastic wealth was necessary to support schools, hospitals, charitable works, and the dignity of divine worship. Their opponents, the Non-Possessors or Skete-dwellers (associated with Nilus of Sora), held that monks should live in apostolic poverty and that the Church's wealth corrupted her spiritual mission. The conflict was debated at the Council of 1503, where Joseph's position prevailed and remained dominant in the Russian Church for generations.
Joseph also articulated a doctrine of the relationship between the tsar and the Church, arguing that the ruler held divine authority but was morally bound by Church teaching — a formula that placed him in the tradition of Byzantine symphonia while also developing a distinctly Muscovite ideology of sacred monarchy.
The Enlightener
Joseph's principal literary work, *The Enlightener* (*Prosvetitel*), consisted of sixteen chapters directed against the Judaizers and in defense of Orthodox doctrine and practice. It addressed the divinity of Christ, the veneration of icons, the authority of Church tradition, and the duty of Christian rulers to suppress heresy. The work established Joseph as a systematic theologian in the Russian tradition and earned him the epithet *Prosveshchenitel* (Enlightener), by which the customs entry for his feast also identifies him.
Veneration
Joseph's feasts are observed on September 9 (date of repose) and October 18 in the Russian Orthodox Church. He is invoked, among other purposes, as a patron saint of business and commerce — a reflection of his role in defending the Church's legitimate engagement with temporal and economic affairs. His monastery, now known as the Joseph-Volokolamsk Stavropegic Monastery, remains an active community.