Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 28 – The Moscow Patriarchate
wants to transform Sergiyev Posad into “an Orthodox counterpart” to the Vatican,
Jerusalem and Mecca, a program that would cost the country as much as 140
billion rubles (2.3 billion dollars), increase centralized control over the
church, and supposedly protect its hierarchs from criminal prosecution.
But the idea, which has been floated
before although not in this much detail, is now being attacked both for its
costs, 90 percent of which would be borne by the state and thus the taxpayers
of Russia, many of whom aren’t Orthodox, and for its pretensions given the Patriarchate’s
loss of influence abroad and its flouting of trends affecting religions
elsewhere.
Its backers maintain that the
Kremlin is solidly behind the Patriarchate’ss project even though it would cost
the budget three times as much as Moscow now spends on urban development; and
they are defending it as “a national project” for regional growth rather than support
for any particular religion (tass.ru/obschestvo/6599752
and znak.com/2019-06-27/v_rpc_nazvali_krupneyshim_socproektom_prevrachenie_sergieva_posada_v_pravoslavnyy_vatikan).
But
criticism of the idea is mounting – and may cause the church and its Kremlin
backers even more problems than anyone had suspected. In an article for Nezavisimaya
gazeta, Moscow financial analyst Aleksandr Razduyev asks pointedly “Does
Russia need an Orthodox Vatican?” (ng.ru/blogs/razuvaev/nuzhen-li-rossii-pravoslavnyy-vatikan.php).
His answer is a resounding “no.” The costs are too great, and they would fall
on Russian taxpayers, many of whom are not Orthodox Christians. If the ROC MP does want to build such a
place, it should get funds from those who are its followers rather than seek to
extract money from Muslims, Jews, Buddhists, atheists and others.
Razduyev suggests that one way
forward is for religious denominations, including the Orthodox, to tax their
believers as the CPSU did its members. That would help many of these religions,
including Islam. “In Moscow, there are only four mosques; but in communist
Beijing, there are 18 -- even though there are approximately two million
Muslims in Moscow.”
Meanwhile, Archpriest Vsevolod
Chaplin, a church dissident, says that what the Patriarchate hopes to achieve, greater
control over its hierarchy and extra-territorial legal status for its members, flies
in the face of what is occurring elsewhere, including at the Vatican which the
ROC MP hopes to copy (realtribune.ru/news/authority/2177).
On the one hand, in today’s
electronic world, religions like everything else except totalitarian sects are
increasingly decentralized with those in charge interacting online with their
subordinates over enough distances. And on the other, even the Vatican is no
longer able to protect its officials from being charged with crimes and sitting
in jail for them.
That the Moscow Patriarchate thinks
otherwise shows just how out of step it is with the times and how much Patriarch
Kirill is promoting it not so much to make the ROC MP equivalent to other
faiths but rather to build a cult of personality around himself modelled not on
the papacy but on the one Stalin imposed.
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