After returning from Italy, he had a various pastoral assignments and served as superior and hegumen at the Basilian Institutes in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.[1]
With his initiative, a seminary for the Greek Catholics was opened in Chełm in 1759.[1] Also during the First Partition of Poland Bishop Rylo was imprisoned by Russian Government for some months in 1774.[3]
^Butterwick, Richard (2012). Polska rewolucja a Kościół katolicki 1788-1792 (in Polish). Kraków. p. 158.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)