Teofil Rutka


Teofil Rutka SJ - Polish Jesuit. Rhetorician, philosopher, theologian and missionary.
Teofil Rutka became a Jesuit in 1643 in Kraków and a priest in 1652 in Poznań. He was a professor of rhetorics, philosophy, polemical theology and moral theology in many Jesuit schools in Poland. He served as a professor in the years 1653–76, with short breaks for being a court missionary, a missionary to the Crimean Khanate, a poenitentiarius in Loreto, and a missionary to Constantinople. In the years 1676–1700 he served as a court missionary for the Ruthenian voievode Stanisław Jan Jabłonowski.
Rutka wrote in Latin, but he has also published translations of his works into Polish. He is renowned mainly for his works on rhetorics, primarily for his tractatus Rhetor polonus. He was a very prolific writer, beside of the rhetorics, an author of many polemical and ascetical works. Rutka was deeply interested in the problem of the relations between Eastern and Western Christianity, which was very vivid in the 17th century Poland, especially among the Jesuits. He wrote many books on the problem, especially on the filioque question. He has also acted for conversion of the Muslims, writing some books on the subject and trying to promote the idea of a league against the Ottoman Empire to be organized by the Christian monarchs.