Paul Goble
Staunton,
September 7 – Ilya Zabezhinsky, an Orthodox commentator from the Northern capital,
says that the Russian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate by its
promotion of the Kremlin’s agenda of “a Russian world” has failed in its
Christian mission to the peoples of the former USSR and been reduced to a small
national church of the Russian Federation.
Under
Patriarch Kirill and President Vladimir Putin, the writer says, the Russian
Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate has become “the ideological
department of the powers that be of the Russian Federation and essentially
ceased to be the Russian Orthodox Church. Instead, it is becoming the Church of
the Russian Federation” (facebook.com/permalink.php?story_fbid=2068798353179455&id=100001479301887).
Instead of reaching out to the
faithful in Russia and in the former Soviet republics, Zabezhinsky says, Kirill
and his subordinates have “kissed only one president … blessed only one army …
prayed for only one Olympic team” and in general shown indifference to all the
others.
Moreover, he continues, the Moscow
Patriarchate has cursed liberals and the West as sources of evil and threats to
Russian values, but what forces of evil are these? “In America, there are six
million practicing Orthodox Christians, but among us there are no more than
three or four million.”
No one in the Moscow Patriarchate
should be surprised that all are running away from it, the Christian churches
in the former Soviet space, the Russian believers who put Christ ahead of
Putin, and all those who care about the rights and freedoms they should have as
citizens of a modern country.
Our church, he says, has spent the
last 20 years promoting things that have nothing to do with Christianity and not
promoting the things that are at the core of the faith. Its members should not
be surprised that others are running away from us, as the Ukrainian Orthodox
now are, and that unless we change, others will do the same.
Today, Zabezhinsky says, “we are
small little local church with a small flock, something that is not bad in
principle.” Perhaps, he continues, it will lead us to give up our “earthly
ambitions and remember Christ.” Our size
puts us at a level with the Roman Catholics of Austria. That is something we
must accept because it is the result of what we have done.
“We will be the Church of the Russian
Federation. The rest do not want us. We ourselves are guilty that they don’t.
Let’s leave the rest in peace. Let’s give up our protection from the government.
Let’s sell our mitres …Let’s reduce the taxes on the bishoprics … Let’s make
the texts of divine service more accessible.”
That is a worthy program for “the
next candidate for Patriarch” in a church of our size and status, he concludes.
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