Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 20 – For many
years, Western sociologists have talked about “self-loathing Jews,” people who
by their origins are Jews but base their identity on denying and opposing
everything Jewish. Now a St. Petersburg sociologist is suggesting that an
analogous group has emerged in Russia, “the self-loathing Orthodox Christians.”
Elena Ryigas, a scholar at the Sociological Institute
in the northern capital, says this term refers not to those who call themselves
Orthodox but don’t take part in the life of the church but rather to those who are
fully “churched” as far as practice is concerned but who dissent from what they
see Orthodoxy having become (echo.msk.ru/blog/elena_ryg/2039968-echo/).
Up to now, these people
form an insignificant minority, she writes; but because they are middle class
and display a high level of social activity, they are worrying the church
hierarchy by their constant raising of “inconvenient questions” about church
financing, the election of hierarchs or “simply by citing too often the holy
word.”
Deacon
Andrey Kurayev explains their appearance by the fact that “the Russian Orthodox
Church was too rapidly transformed from an oppressed Church into a corporation”
which enjoys the full backing of the state and does what it wants regardless of
its own rules or the laws of the state.
Many
who can be described as self-loathing Orthodox, Ryigas suggests, might seem to
be good candidates for shifting to another denomination altogether. But instead, they are standing their ground
within the church but forming various groups like Stalinists, Mizulinists and
Milonovs especially after the patriarch met Pope Francis in Havana.
According
to the sociologist, “the Orthodox church is gradually becoming like one large
communal apartment,” in which the original residents are being openly
challenged by new ones, some of whom simply assert that they are Christians
rather than members of any particular faith, including that of the Russian
Orthodox Church.
In
many respects, Ryigas says, “the self-loathing Orthodox are really closer to
Protestantism and Catholicism” than to the ROC. They are more active in social
work than are traditional Orthodox.
Indeed, in some ways, they are like many who say “’I don’t need the
church; God is in my soul.’”
As
the number of churches have grown, there has been observed a trend toward “self-organization
of those believers” who are not prepared simply to obey the priest in all
things. They use the church as a kind of
base, but in fact have “emigrated” into a kind of Kitezh in which they are on
their own.
“The
relationship between state Orthodoxy and the internal Kitezh city” is
complicated. Both say they are for the same things, but the one does one thing
and the other something quite different.
And that makes the self-loathing Orthodox a new “variety of religious opposition
and even dissent.”
Such
ideological competition can play “a positive role” in many cases, Ryigas says,
but not in this one. The clash between
the official church and the self-loathing Orthodox will only grow, she
suggests, and last as such religious disputes tend to “no less than 40 years”
before one group succeeds in suppressing or displacing the other.
No comments:
Post a Comment