Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 27 – It is easy to
make fun of Patriarch Kirill, his pursuit of wealth and his attacks on his
opponents. It is especially easy to make fun of him now that he is celebrating what
he claims is his record of building three new churches every day, a figure that
is almost certainly false and is clearly offensive at a time when hospitals and
schools are being shut down.
But attention to these things
distracts attention from something more fundamental: Patriarch Kirill had no
choice but to build more parish churches in order to support his radical
increase in the number of bishoprics, a strategy he adopted a decade ago but
has only expanded upon since his church’s losses in Ukraine.
As the Orthodox but anti-patriarch Ahilla
portal notes, Kirill justified this approach by saying that more but smaller
bishoprics would be closer to the people. Bishops would oversee fewer churches
and thus would interact more regularly with them (ahilla.ru/rezultaty-razukrupneniya-eparhij-zasedaniya-vmesto-blizosti-k-narodu/).
Even if that had been Kirill’s
actual goal – and there is good reason to think it wasn’t – the plan has
backfired on him, the portal continues. With fewer parishes in each of the
smaller bishoprics, the financial burden on individual parishes has increased
because they must still support the typically elaborate church establishment.
In some cases, that has driven
people out of the church. If one has to pay even more because of the hierarchy’s
decisions, it is better to keep one’s distance. And so Kirill has been driven
to try to open more churches so that the burden will be more fully divided and
fall less heavily on any one parish.
There is little evidence that this fallback
strategy is working, but what is more important is that such concerns were
clearly far from Patriarch Kirill’s calculation. Instead, he has expanded the
number of bishoprics in order to ensure that those churchmen who have a vote on
key issues are his people and no one else’s.
That has become especially important
as the loss of the numerous bishoprics he created in Ukraine looms. And this
could have immediate consequences: If the Kremlin decides that for its own
reasons, Kirill has to be helped to do less, as Putin suggested, and that the only
way for that to happen is for the current patriarch to be ousted, controlling
the bishoprics is critical.
Opening new parishes is thus not
just a special case of the giantism that has long characterized Russian leaders,
let alone a desire to promote religion, but rather a sensible, from Kirill’s
point of view, defense mechanism against the possibility that he will be
challenged. It probably won’t save him if Putin wants him gone, but it may
delay that eventuality.
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