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    St Joseph of Cupertino Personality Type, MBTI

    What is the personality type of St Joseph of Cupertino? Which MBTI personality type best fits? Personality type for St Joseph of Cupertino from Christianity and what is the personality traits.

    St Joseph of Cupertino
    ESFP

    ESFP (XwX)

    St Joseph of Cupertino personality type is ESFP, which means it belongs to the Extroverted Sensing Feeling Perceiving personality type. People with this personality type are often described as ‘outgoing, fun and charming’. To some people, they can be a bit of a show-off. However, if you get to know them better, you will realise that they can also be quite sensitive and shy at times.

    Where it gets even more interesting is that people with this personality type aren’t just extroverts. They are also Sensors. This means that they rely on their five senses to understand and interpret the world around them. They take in information and process it through their senses and then use this information to help them form judgments and decisions.

    People with this personality type are often more involved in their senses than others. If they see something, they will want to touch it, taste it or smell it. They get really excited about new experiences and truly enjoy learning new things. It’s also quite likely that they will be very important in creating new ideas and inventions.

    They can be very emotional people and they may get swept away in the moment of an emotional experience.

    Saint Joseph of Cupertino (17 June 1603 – 18 September 1663) was an Italian Conventual Franciscan friar who is honored as a Christian mystic and saint. He was said to have been remarkably unclever, but prone to miraculous levitation and intense ecstatic visions that left him gaping. Joseph began to experience ecstatic visions as a child, which were to continue throughout his life, and made him the object of scorn. He applied to the Conventual Franciscan friars, but was rejected due to his lack of education. He then pleaded with them to serve in their stables. After several years of working there, he had so impressed the friars with the devotion and simplicity of his life that he was admitted to their Order, destined to become a Catholic priest, in 1625.

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