Ukrainian
Orthodox Church of Moscow Patriarchate Caught in an Unsustainable Situation,
Soldatov Says
Paul
Goble
Staunton,
July 23 – The former Ukrainian exarchate of the Moscow Patriarchate, which now
styles itself as the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate), has
continued to flourish when other “survivals of post-Soviet Russian imperialism”
have not, Aleksandr Soldatov says; but its own nature means that it is caught
in an ultimately unsustainable situation.
The
UOC (MP), the Russian religious affairs expert says, is caught between its own
caesaro-papist traditions of at least implicit deference to the government of
country on which it is located and the aspirations of Moscow Patriarchate to
reduce it to a set of bishoprics within the Moscow church itself (risu.org.ua/ru/index/expert_thought/open_theme/71875/).
And consequently, Soldatov continues, the
UOC (MP)’s repeated declarations that it is the only institution that
represents Ukrainians on both sides of the conflict in the Donbass ring hollow
given how the Moscow Patriarchate has behaved with respect to the UOC (MP)’s
parishes in Russian-occupied Crimea and towards the UOC (MP) as a whole.
After the Anschluss, the Moscow
Patriarchate not only liquidated all churches in Crimea loyal to the Kyiv
Patriarchate but took over all their property and imposed its right to control
the appointment of all religious leaders there, Soldatov says, thus completely
undermining the still-existing statutes of the UOC (MP).
The Moscow Patriarchate has been even more
active in the Donbass, seeking to gain direct control over all Orthodox
churches there, a step that violates Patriarchate Kirill’s talk about
“canonical territories” whose defense has gotten him into trouble with the
Kremlin but negates the UOC (MP)’s efforts to present itself as a defender of
the faith in Ukraine.
“Among the bishops, clergy, and laity of
the UOC (MP),” Soldatov says, “there are patriots of Ukraine; and their number
is gradually growing. But the collective identity of this Church up to now is
based on an imperial or if you prefer post-imperial model with its center in
Moscow.”
According to the analyst, “the ideologues
of the UOC (MP) really are offering a certain program for overcoming ‘the
contradictions’ of East and West, but they all are infected by ‘Moscowcentrism,”
on a return to the ‘Great Russian’ type of church relationship and to the
Moscow historical myth.”
There are many reasons for the vitality of
this approach, psychological, cultural, political and financial, Soldatov says;
but its ultimate duplicity is on display in the double standards applied to
Orthodoxy in Ukraine and to Orthodoxy in Russian-occupied territories where the
church supports Moscow’s position in all things even as the UOC (MP) attacks
Kyiv policies.
That is gradually becoming increasingly
obvious to Ukrainians in the UOC (MP) and depriving it of its flocks precisely
because its hierarchs toe Moscow’s line.
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