Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 6 – In a conclusion
with obvious implications for the current situation not only for the Russian Orthodox
but also for other faiths, a Moscow commentator argues that the Soviets were
unable to destroy popular Christianity by killing priests but succeeded in
doing so after they had established a loyal and dependent Orthodox hierarchy.
As a result of Soviet anti-religious
efforts in the 1920s, there were almost no Orthodox priests left in the
country, the blogger “Tolkovatel’” writes in a post today, but the destruction
of the priesthood “did not affect the religiosity of Soviet people.” It only
drove it underground as various scholars have shown in recent years (ttolk.ru/?p=17016).
Lacking priests, members of the
laity began to hold services, and as a result, throughout the USSR, there was “a
wave” of sectarianism, with ever more self-proclaimed religious leaders proclaiming
themselves prophets and preaching their own, often highly individualistic
doctrines and practices, many of them highly eschatological.
Their followers did not pay taxes,
refused to serve in the Red Army, did not respond to Soviet campaigns, did not
have Soviet documents and did not send their children to Soviet schools. As a result, they quickly became the object
of attention from the secret police, but their arrests, exiles and even
executions did not have the desired effect: Many of these “popular” believers
saw such things as evidence that they were living in the end days.
Some of them, Russian historians
say, welcomed the arrival of the Germans and the reopening of churches in
German-occupied portions of the country, but most viewed the restoration of the
Patriarchate as unimportant because they believed that the priests who were
cooperating with the state were an even better reason to stay away from regular
churches.
In the late 1940s, reports by the
Council for the Affairs of the Russian Orthodox church attached to the USSR
Council of Ministers suggest that in some regions these underground groups
outnumbered the officially working churches by as many as two to one and were
attracting large crowds.
The officially recognized hierarchy
regularly asked the state for help in combatting its “popular” opponents, but
the record suggests that even in the worst days of Stalinism, the combined
forces of the church and the state were insufficient to suppress this
underground phenomenon.
The death of Stalin somewhat eased
pressure on the “popular Christians” who in some cases were allowed to register
officially their formerly illegal bodies.
But such tolerance for this group did not last long, and in 1958, Nikita
Khrushchev launched his campaign against the sectarians, one scholars say was “even
larger than in the 1930s under Stalin.”
This campaign cost the official
Russian Orthodox hierarchy many churches: in 1960, there were 13,008 Orthodox
churches but by 1970, there were only 7338. But those who were part of the
underground and popular form of Christianity were arrested and sentenced to
prison and the camps. Others were exiled from the places where they had been
active.
In Khrushchev’s anti-religious
campaign, the Moscow Patriarchate played a role, calling on its bishoprics to “conduct
work among believers about the impermissibility” of engaging in the kind of
activities associated with popular Christianity and even, it appears,
encouraging priests to denounce their “illegal” counterparts.
As a result, “Tolkovatel’” says, “that
which Stalin was unable to do was achieved under Khrushchev and the early
Brezhnev: the almost complete destruction of ‘popular Christianity’ in the USSR”
by means of government repression and the active complicity of the officially
recognized hierarchy.
This occurred, the blogger concludes
on the basis of the work of Russian historians, because “in contrast to the 1930s,
when the Russian Orthodox Church considered church dissidents to be its fellow
suffers of oppression, in the 1950s and 1960s, [the official church] together
with the state went over to the attack against ‘the illegals.’”
No comments:
Post a Comment