Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 27 – Three
decisions by the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church of the Moscow
Patriarchate last week clearly indicate “the further transformation of the
leadership of the church into a rightwing organization of a fascist type,”
according to Nikolay Mitrokhin, a longtime analyst of Orthodoxy in Russia.
The first of these was the elevation
of Archimandrite Tikhon (Shevkunov), Putin’s advisor, to the rank of bishop;
the second, the formation of a joint commission with the Bulgarian Church to
seek canonization of a man notorious for his nationalist views; and the third a
call for a campaign against neo-paganism (grani.ru/opinion/mitrokhin/m.245335.html).
The
elevation of Shevkunov, Mitrokhin says, allows him to “shift from the church’s ‘officers’
into its ‘generals’” and opens the way for him to pursue an even greater church
career, possibly even to the point of succeeding Kirill as patriarch. At the
very least, it indicates that Kirill’s position is not as unchallenged as it
was.
The
decision to work with the Bulgarian Orthodox Church toward the canonization of
Archbishop Serafirm (Sobolev), one taken at Kirill’s personal insistence, is more
instructive. Serafim in the 1930s was an opponent of any ecumenical contacts
and also cooperated with Nazi groups. His works will now become more widely available
and influential.
And
the decision to pursue a campaign against neo-paganism is simultaneously an
indication of the Patriarchate’s failure to find points of cooperation with “’socially
close’ categories” of young people such as football fans and other sports
fanatics and a desire to find a way to rein them in for the service of the
Patriarchate.
But
all three of these decisions, Mitrokhin argues, must be seen in the context of
the problems that the Church has created for itself among patriotically inclined
rightwing radicals by its comments on Ukraine and represent an effort by some
in the hierarchy to reach out to those who had been alienated as a result.
More
important still, the religious affairs analyst says, these decisions are clear “signs
of the increasing tendency to adopt fascist positions by the leadership of the
church, with that being understood in this case as something which “describes
the process of indoctrinating the subject of the public space with a definite
complex of ideas and practices.”
Because
it was under the control of the communists for so long, he continues, “the
Russian Orthodo church in its ideological development was frozen for seven
decades and is now passing through those very same stages through which the
major Christian churches of Europe passed during the 20th century.”
If under Aleksii II, “mystical black
hundreds ideas” were dominant, now under Kirill, the church has passed “into
the stage of the modern fascist experiments characteristic of Europe in the
1920s and 1930s” and that was especially marked in the émigré Russian Orthodox
Church of that time.
This would be truly worrisome if the
entire church as opposed to the hierarchy were infected by this, but in large
measure, Mitrokhin says, “there are more generals in this army than there are
soldiers.” And it is even possible that the organizational innovations that the
hierarchy has made in an effort to promote its ideas will have exactly the
opposite effect and open the way to the further transformation of Russian
Orthodoxy in a more positive direction.
The real needs of the laity and the lower
clergy are very different than those of this group of hierarchs, the analyst
continues, and to the extent that they can become more important, there is
likely to be for the Russian Orthodox Church its very “own ‘Vatican 2” and even
“a post-GULAG theology.” If so, the church will modernize and so too will
Russia.
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