Paul Goble
Staunton,
September 27 – Archbishop Svatoslav Login, head of the émigré Belarusian Autocephalous
Church, says that his denomination supports autocephaly for Ukrainian Orthodox
and hopes to achieve the same recognition for itself in its homeland from the
Universal Patriarchate.
“If the Ukrainian Church is recognized,” the Belarusian
religious leader says, “then the next steps should be with the Belarusian
church. This gives us an example and shows that the situation is developing
according to canon law. That law, as is well-known, requires for each Orthodox
people a separate Church (radiosvoboda.org/a/29492718.html
and spzh.news/ru/news/55982-v-belarusi-raskolyniki-zajavili-o-namerenijah-poluchity-avtokefaliju).
Specifically,
the New York-based archbishop says, “this is the 34th apostolic
rule. And canon laws are not subject to discussion but rather must be
fulfilled. The fact that Belarus as an Orthodox state does not have its own
independent first hierarch is a violation of canon law and a violation of the
historical status of our Belarusian Church.”
The
pursuit of such status, however, requires the expression of a desire for that
status by both believers and the authorities, Archbishop Svatoslav says; and
under the current authorities, the processes of the legalization of the
Belarusian Church in Belarus, its further growth and its receipt of autocephaly
are hardly possible.”
“The
current power there is economically, politically and spiritually subordinate to
Moscow,” he continues. (For a detailed but highly tendentious and somewhat
distorted discussion of the history of the archbishop’s church and its
leadership, see minds.by/news/126#.W63mLPYpDIV.)
If Belarusian Orthodox are only
dreaming about autocephaly for themselves, some Russian commentators are
suggesting that after Ukraine receives the tomos
of autocephaly, the situation will change and Belarusian Orthodox will be the next
to demand that status, along with the Orthodox in Moldova.
In a comment to Echo Moskvy, Russian
publicist Aleksandr Nevzorov says that Ukraine is days away from receiving recognition
as an autocephalous church and will then be “hierarchically higher” than the
Russian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate because it will have a tomos as the ROC MP does not (echo.msk.ru/programs/nevsredy/2284506-echo/).
Once
that happens, the commentator continues, Orthodox in Belarus and Moldova will
follow the same course, gain autocephaly and thus become independent of Moscow
in religious terms, steps that will complete their separation from the
Moscow-centric reality they have been part only as a result of state actions,
not religious ones.
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