Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 12 – The Moscow
Patriarchate, the Kremlin, and most observers have long been accustomed to
viewing the Russian Orthodox Church and its members as “monolithic,” but in
fact, there are already so many kinds of members that it is inappropriate to
speak “about ‘the Orthodox’ in general, according to a Moscow journalist.
In an article on the MN.ru portal,
Andrey Desnitsky identifies some of what he says are increasingly numerous
kinds of Russian Orthodox but notes that despite a development that would seem
to open the way for the expansion of membership and attendance, neither of
those trends are currently in evidence (mn.ru/woodwing_newspaper/20130102/334068180.html).
The
first kind, the journalist says, are “the Church grandmothers,” a group which
he suggestsappears to an outside observer as some kind of tribe of aboriginals
who have been preserved outside of time and space almost from the stone age.” But he notes that this is “not entirely so.”
When
he first attended church a quarter of a century ago, Desnitsky says that “there
were among them not a few who had been keeping the faith of their fathers and
grandfathers through all the persecutions [of the Soviet system] but all the
same had been Komsomol members in the 1930s and who on becoming pensioner could
finaly think about the soul and learn the faith.”
Since
then, he says, “the level of literacy among them has increased but not by much.”
Those in this category now are “simple women of the late Soviet period who have
become pensioners and for whom the main thing is that everything proceed
quietly and according to custom.” These women are “natural conservatives, but
they never take note of the distance between church teachings and their own
views.”
The second category Desnitsky identifies
includes “the intelligentsia believers.”
They are almost the opposite of the grandmothers in that “most often,
their “spiritual life is to a significant degree” highly individual. They are
guided by the Gospels, “and that is fine, but it is possible to read them in
different ways,” and members of this group do.
Within this category, there is “the
entire spectrum of opinion,” from “radical libertarianism” to “dyed in the wool
nationalism.” Each of them expects the church hierarchy to follow his or her
lead, but unfortunately, the hierarchy expects all of them to fall into line
with its views.
The third category among the Russian
Orthodox are “the sponsors,” a group that includes both wealthy people eager to
gain respect or political figures who want to gain support. All too often, Desnitsky says, these
individuals try to take over the church. But “there can only be a single boss,
and the people are not inclined to believe bosses” when they are multiple.
The fourth group the MN.ru
journalist identifies is made up of the Orthodox “careerists,” individuals who
see he church as a corporation in which they can earn their living and rise to
the top. As such people rise, they often
come to believe that they are entitled to their opinion on everything, but when
they express it, many Russians naturally ask “who is behind them.”
The fifth group includes “the
Orthodox activists,” a group that “appeared relatively recently,” and their
main goal is “the defense of holy things” according to the principle that “our
people have always beaten those who are not ours and will continue to do so.” This group is not large, but it is
influential because its simple answers have the capacity to attract the young.
And the sixth group consists of “the
eternal visitors,” people who come to church on high holy days or for family
occasions. This group is the largest and
its existence allows the hierarchy to “talk about 80 percent of the population
being Orthodox.” But it is largely indifferent to the church as a set of ideas
and thus “corresponds with the core electorate of the ruling party.”
According to Desnitsky, there are a
large number of other subgroups with the Russian Orthodox Church, and he ends
his enumeration by noting that there still is in Russia “people of God,”
individuals who seek to live according to the Gospels. “While such people
exist, the Church will be alive.”
And the Moscow journalist notes in
conclusion that “sociological polls give statistics [about Church members] that
at first glance appear absurd: the majority of the residents of the country
consider themselves Orthodox, a little over half believe in Bod, about a third
know the basic provisions of the faith, and about a tenth go to Church
regularly.”
In fact, that last statement may be
an exaggeration because new data show that the numbers of people taking regular
or even in the holiday services of the Russian Orthodox Church are far lower
than the church itself or its political allies routinely claim, as data
collected by the Russian interior ministry show.
Drawing on that source, Moscow’s
SOVA Center has assembled information on the number of churches that held
Christmas services this year in various cities, regions and republics, the
number of people attending these services, and the percentages of the local
population they form (www.sova-center.ru/religion/discussions/how-many/2013/01/d26162/):
·
Moscow:
348 churches held services, 226,000 people attended, and they represented
1.6-1.9 percent of the population,
·
Bryansk:
30 churches held services, 4500 people attended, and they represented 1.1
percent of the population.
·
Voronezh
oblast: 78,500 people attended Christmas services, representing 3.3 percent of
the population.
·
Kostroma
oblast: 74 churches held services, 6,000 people attended, and they represented
0.8 percent of the population.
·
Lipetsk
oblast: 187 churches held services, 20,000 people attended, and they
represented 1.8 percent of the population.
·
Ryazan
oblast: 293 churches held services, 75,000 people attended, and they
represented 6 percent of the population.
·
Tambov
oblast: 117 churches held services, 20,000 people attended, and they
represented 1.9 percent of the population.
·
Bashkortostan:
141 churches held services, 43,000 people attended, and they represented 1.1
percent of the population.
·
Nizhne-Novgorod
oblast: 348 churches held services, more than 80,000 people attended, and they
represented 2.5 percent of the population.
·
Mordvinia:
231 churches held services, 15,000 people attended, and they represented 1.8
percent of the population.
·
Orenburg
oblast: Approximately 20,000 people attended, and they represented 1 percent of
the population.
·
Perm
kray: 132 churches held services, more than 97,000 attended, and they formed
3.7 percent of the population.
·
Samara
oblast: 205 churches held services, 43,000 people attended, and they formed 1.4
percent of the population.
·
Saratov
oblast: 142 churches held services, more than 17,000 people attended, and they
formed 0.7 percent of the population.
·
Udmurtia:
81 churches held services, 30,000 people attended, and they formed 1.9 percent
of the population.
·
Tomsk
oblast: 5,000 people attended services, and they formed 0.5 percent of the
population.
·
Vologda
oblast: 14,000 people attended services,and they formed 1.3 percent of the
population.
·
Komi
Republic: 61 churches held services, more than 17,500 people attended, and they
formed 2 percent of the population.
·
Sverdlovsk
oblast: 317 churches held services, 64,500 people attended, and they formed 1.4
percent of the population.
·
Tyumen
oblast: 317 churches held services, 64,500 people attended, and they formed 0.3
percent of the population.
·
Adygey
Republic: 39 churches held services, 6,000 people attended, and they formed 1.4
percent of the population.
·
Rostov
Oblast: Approximately 100,000 people attended services, and they formed 2.3
percent of the population.
·
Cheboksary:
Seven churches held services, 3300 people attended, and they formed 0.6 percent
of the population.
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