Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 21 – Two of the
leading experts on the Russian Orthodox Church, Nikolay Mitrokhin of Bremen
University and Sergey Chaplin, former head of the Moscow patriarchate’s
publications arm, say Patriarch Kirill’s effort to grab power and property is alienating
Russians, marginalizing the church, and reducing its influence at home and
abroad.
In a commentary for the Grani
portal, Mitrokhin says that the conflict over St. Isaac’s has now become “an
all-Russian scandal,” one that has not ended despite Putin’s decision to return
things to where they were before it started, given that church services had
been held there even when it was only a museum (graniru.org/opinion/mitrokhin/m.258944.html).
“Initially,” he writes, “the authorities
simply intended to satisfy Patriarch Kirill’s request about the transfer of St.
Isaac’s” and assumed that they would not face serious protests and could ignore
any that might occur. But the protests turned out to be far larger and far more
widely supported than anyone anticipated.
Indeed, Mitrokhin says, “by their
size, these protests in Petersburg were no smaller than those against the
beginning of the war in Ukraine three years ago. [And] by their importance,
they exceeded them because they showed that ‘the Putin majority’” was now
distancing itself from Putin and his officials.
Most immediately, however, the
people have been distancing itself from the Russian Orthodox Church and
Patriarch Kirill personally. Discussions on television and in the media show that
neither has the standing it did and that those who might have been unwilling to
criticize it are now attacking both across the board.
Kirill had to use “to the full his
personal resources in the battle for specific objects of property,” Mitrokhin
continues, “and to attract to his cause ever more doubtful allies, right-wing
radicals from the personal guard of ‘Forty by Forty’ and the young football
fanatics from ‘the Nevsky Front.’”
That accelerated the decline in his
influence far more than even the drift of the Ukrainian Orthodox Churh away
from Moscow. In fact, it is now totally possible
to speak about “the intensification of the process of the dissolution of the Russian
Orthodox church in Russia itself.” And that process is now feeding upon itself.
“The Internet is filled with stories”
written by “’former priests’ who are disappointed and seeking for themselves a
new place in life,” Mitrokhin reports. There is now an extremely active site, ahilla.ru/, filled with such stories, and it is
supplemented by others on a VKontakte page, vk.com/atheist__blog.
As a result, the Germany-based
Russian scholar says, however things develop around the conflict over St. Isaac’s,
the position of the church inside Russia is going to be weakened, as is that of
those who thought they could use the church as a fundamental support for the
existing political system.
Chaplin makes a similar article in Gazeta, saying that the church has only
itself to blame for what has happened because it has refused to treat the
population as an equal and has assumed it can behave crudely and even viciously
because of its good relations with Putin’s power vertical (gazeta.ru/comments/2017/02/16_a_10529081.shtml).
Not all the
statements made by priests and hierarchs are approved by the patriarch, Chaplin
says. “On the contrary,” many now feel free to say what they like with little
regard for anyone or anything. But all of their remarks show that the Moscow
Patriarchate does not feel than any “serious conversation with society” is
needed.
Instead, these people only talk to
and speak like mid-level officials with all the crudeness Russians have long
expected. And that in turn means that
neither the church as a body of believers nor as a bureaucratic structure is
capable of “controlling the situation,” something all Russians can see.
It may be, Chaplin says, that in a
post-secular society where the church is a participant, extremist and crude
declarations will win some support; but it is absolutely certain that these
statements will alienate more than they attract and thus undermine any
possibility that the Russian Orthodox Church can play the role it aspires to.
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