Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 30 – Over the last
two years, Patriarch Kirill has enthroned 69 new bishops for the Russian
Orthodox Church, a group quite different from its predecessors not only in
terms of education – more have secular degrees – but also origins – most of
them come from the dioceses they now head instead of being outsiders imposed
from the center.
Those changes and their age – most
are in their 40s – mean that Kirill will be able to control the direction of
the Russian church not only during his patriarchate but well beyond, according
to a survey of their biographies by the Orthodox weekly, “Neskuchny sad” (www.nsad.ru/articles/novye-arhierei-zachem-episkopu-svetskoe-obrazovanie).
Approximately a third of those
taking part in the church council in Moscow will be doing so for the first
time, the magazine says. At the last one, on February 4, 2011, 206 of the 221
hierarchs then serving did so. Since that time, Kirill has enthroned 69
bishops, most for bishoprics created since that time. (There were 35 new sees
established in 2011 alone.)
The average age of the new class of
bishops is only 40. That means that most of them were born in the early and
mid-1970s, finished their training during perestroika, and began serving as
priests in the 1990s. Thirty-four of the 69 completed their theological
training by correspondence, a remarkably high figure compared to the past.
The magazine notes that “the
majority of hierarchs, who were elevated in the 1960s and 1970s” -- that is, the
class before this one -- “studied at the Leningrad Spiritual Academy,” where
they were trained by Metropolitan Nikodim who trained Patriarch Kirill. But
under the late Aleksii II, “practically all the hierarchs … were graduates of
the Moscow” one and “began their monastic life in the Trinity-Sergeyev lavra.”
But the background of the new class
means that the Lavra group is being replaced by those from the regions. Yet
another way the new class is different, “Neskuchny sad” points out,is that “the
greater part” of the new hierarchs have secular university training as well as
theological studies. “This picture is not typical for the Russian Church.”
After finishing school, 35 of the 69
members of the new class studied in secular institutions and universities and
received training in medicine, physics or “even music.” Two of the new bishops
were even trained as “military specialists,” and some of them even received
their candidate degrees.
Twenty-two of the 69 served for a
significant period of time as instructors at the spiritual seminaries or “worked
as instructors at government faculties of theology.” But perhaps the most
interesting thing that sets this group of bishops apart is the following: 34 of
them come from the eparchates or regions where they will now be serving as
bishops. In the past, that was a rarity.
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