Paul
Goble
Staunton, November 3 – Faced with an
ever more militant, nationalist and obscurantist Russian Orthodox Church, ever
more Russians are asking whether their country would benefit from a protestant
reformation of its own or whether such a reformation would destroy the very foundations
of Russian national life that they hold most dear.
Because of the approaching 100th
anniversary of the Russian Revolution and the 500th anniversary of
the Protestant Reformation, Sergey Ryakhovsky writes in MK.ru, ever more
Russians are talking about whether Russia needs “a revolution, a restoration or
a reformation” (mk.ru/social/article/2013/10/30/938900-komu-i-zachem-v-rossii-nuzhna-reformatsiya.html).
Reflecting their national culture,
most Russians are focusing on revolution or restoration, actions that promise
as politics always does a quick and immediate fix to their problems by
installing the right kind of leader, but some are focusing on reformation
because it raises the question “not about power but about the individual” and
how the latter must change.
The essence of the Protestant
Reformation, the Moscow commentator argues, is that it says every individual
must face God not just in some future heavenly court but “here and now, every
day, in the course of the most ordinary activities,” a confrontation that “changes
an individual forever.”
“The European Reformation began as a
movement for the renewal of the Church,” he says, noting that “one can often
hear that ‘we don’t need this,’ that Holy Rus has preserved the faith in its original
genuineness.” But given “the epidemic of
alcoholism and drug use, the large number of divorces, abortions and the shamefully
large number of orphans … the unprecedented gap between rich and poor … and
corruption as a norm of life,” such claims sound hollow.
Radzikhovsky cites the words of
Nikolay Leskov, who said that “Rus has been baptized but not yet enlightened,”
a reference not to the lack of people with secondary or higher educations but
to the lack of those who had been transformed by the force of the Gospels
instead of simply taking part in the ritual of the church.
“The Reformation,” he insists, was “not
a break with tradition. [It] was an effort to return to foundations, to break
through the splendor of ritual, the wealth of traditions and stagnation.” As
such of course, the Reformation was hardly “an exclusively religious phenomenon”
but rather something that affected the entire society.
That is because the Reformation was
a return to the individual, a restoration of genuine human dignity. And as a
result, it changed the world. The
transformation of the world began with the transformation of the individual.”
“So does contemporary Russia need a
Reformation?” Radzikhovsky concludes his article rhetorically. Although he does not say so directly, it is
quite clear that he does.
But an anonymous commentator on the
Newsland.com aggregator site equally clearly does not. He argues that the
Reformation and the Protestant churches it produced are at the core of “Western
liberalism” and, as such, are a direct threat to Russia and its unique culture
(newsland.com/news/detail/id/1272145/).
Because of that, he continues,
Protestantism is opposed “not only by the Orthodox but by all the rest of
normal representatives of the Russian people,” who understand that Protestant’s
stress on individual salvation and pre-destination inevitably undercuts the
strength of the social collectives on which Russia relies.
“Religion is not simply part of culture,”
he says, “it is to a great extent its distilled expression,” and consequently, efforts
to change religion are efforts to change culture. Protestantism seeks to change Russia and make
it like the West, something Russians according to this commentator do not want.
Indeed, he continues, Russians are
deeply offended and horrified by Protestantism’s blessing of the pursuit of
wealth and individual success and its willingness to tolerate conflict within
society rather than being interested in trying to ensure social unanimity and promote
social justice.
Protestantism has triumphed in the
United States, but its impact elsewhere has been limited not only by the
presence of Catholic and Orthodox churches but, at least in the past, by the
rise of the Soviet Union, whose social and economic policies forced the US to
adopt a less Protestant and more humane program.
Just what an important role the USSR
played can be seen in how the Protestant US has reacted now that it is no more.
American leaders are actively destroying the system of social supports they had
felt compelled to build during the Cold War because such support supposed are “ineffective”
or inconsistent with market principles.
Watching this, the Moscow commentator
says, should be enough to inoculate any Russian against the idea that a
Protestant Reformation would be in the interests of his or her nation – or indeed
in the interests of anyone else’s.
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