Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 10 – The Ukrainian
Autocephalous Orthodox Church and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kyiv
Patriarchate, two of the three largest Orthodox denominations in Ukraine (the
other is the UOC subordinate to the Moscow Patriarchate), have agreed to hold a
meeting later this month to discuss unification.
That move, agreed upon at a meeting
in Kyiv on Monday, puts the two on the road to unification and toward the
formation of a single autocephalous Orthodox church in Ukraine, something that
the Moscow Patriarchate will do everything in its power to prevent because the
emergence of such a church would cost it most of its bishoprics and
parishioners there.
Such an independent national church,
subordinate only to the Universal Patriarchate in Constantinople which sent
delegates to the Monday meeting and appears to be actively supporting the
Ukrainian move, would not only attract many bishops and the faithful of the
ROC-MP but would also boost Ukrainian national identity separate from Russia.
But in addition, it would have
serious consequences in Russia itself: Because more than half of the Moscow
Patriarchate’s parishes are in Ukraine and because many of the newly created
bishops there are Moscow Patriarch Kirill’s base, such a move represents a
devastating blow to the Moscow church and its leader, reducing the ROC-MP to the
third largest Orthodox church in the world and undercutting Kirill’s power and
influence.
Consequently, it is entirely
reasonable to assume that Kirill and Moscow will do everything they can to block
this development, including the use of FSB-orchestrated provocations, blackmail,
bribes, and other forms of official pressure both within Ukraine itself and in
the Orthodox world more generally.
These truly tectonic shifts follow
from what may have struck many as a modest announcement by the press service of
the Kyiv Patriarchate press service. It reported on the meeting, including
attendees from both churches, the Ukrainian church in the US, and the Universal
Patriarchate to which the meeting formally expressed its gratitude and asked
that it be represented in all unity meetings (cerkva.info/en/publications/articles/6958-rishennia.html).
The press service said the meeting
had resolved that the leaderships of the UOC-Kyiv Patriarchate and the UAOC
should by June 1 decide on a date for the convening of a Unity Council “for the
final union” of the two churches – this meeting proposed September 14 as an
opportune date -- and even specified how each church was to be represented at
that meeting.
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