Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 22 – Two close
observers of the Russian religious scene, Sergey Chaplin and Konstantin von
Eggert, say that Patriarch Kirill has suffered such a loss of reputation and
control during the pandemic that his future as head of the Russian Orthodox
Church is in doubt. Even if he survives in office, he will be increasingly
irrelevant to the rest of the church.
Chaplin devotes his attention to the
coronavirus deniers who are found among the Orthodox fundamentalists who have always
viewed Kirill as a dangerous liberal. They have challenged the head of the church
by holding services even after the patriarch told them not to lest the virus
spread (theins.ru/opinions/215270).
According
to the specialist on religions, “the spontaneous movement of the coronavirus
dissidents has become the embodiment of the deep internal crisis in the Russian
Orthodox Church,” a crisis that touches on all the most sensitive aspects of
church administration and church-state relations.
“In
fact,” Chaplin, these dissidents “have come out of their subordination to
Patriarch Kirill who more than once albeit with delays, called on parishioners
to remain at home and not visit churches during the period of the harsh
restrictions connected with the pandemic.” The dissidents “completely ignored”
him and held well-attended services.
“The
life of the ROC under Patriarch Kirill has become so ideologized that all
scenarios of the resistance to the Moscow Patriarchate must bear a clearly
expressed political and ideological character,” as was the case in the dispute
about autocephaly for the Orthodox in Ukraine.
“But
the uniqueness of the current situation is that resistance to the patriarch
does not bear in pure form an ideological character and thus it is unclear how anyone
can fight against it.” Moreover, it arose spontaneously and unexpectedly. And
worst of all, it came from the right, the direction Kirill has always feared
the most.
That
has always been true, “but judging from everything, the main problems of the
patriarch in his relations with the fundamentalists are still ahead.” The
conservatives can’t forgive Kirill for his deference to the state on closing
churches and his violation of what they see as the sacred traditions of church
life.
A
source of strength of the conservatives is that many of their attitudes reflect
“not a Christian but a factually magical approach” to church practices,
something that attracts many parishioners as well. Kirill has only one resource
he might use – the power of the state – but that could be dangerous to him and
the church.
If
he asked the state to help purge the church dissidents, the state might do so;
but would it stop where he wanted it to? And even if it didn’t, would any
church leader who made that choice be able to maintain his legitimacy and
authority? And at present, there are many bishops who aren’t on his side but behave
as rulers of their own domains.
To
put it bluntly, Chaplin says, “Kirill is in an extremely weak position.” Whether
someone in the church will challenge him for his job is uncertain. The Kremlin,
however, might be looking for someone to replace Kirill because it views him as
a weak manager who has lost control of those he is supposed to rule.
Konstantin
von Eggert, a journalist who covers social and religious issues, is even more
direct. He says that during the pandemic, Kirill has lost his authority “forever.”
Putin may face challenges, but Kirill has few defenses to the challenges that
are already confronting him (dw.com/ru/комментарий-эпоха-патриарха-кирилла-подходит-к-концу/a-53207402).
According to von Eggert, “the
Patriarch has turned out to be alien for all: for the powers who see in him a
weak and incompetent manager, for active believers in whose eyes he has
betrayed ‘true Orthodoxy,’ and for a significant portion of the urban middle
class, for whom the churchman is a rich member of the corrupt ruling elite and the
enemy of science and progress.”
“Patriarch Kirill has suffered a
defeat, as an administrator, as a de facto politician, and as a public figure.
If the current regime possibly survives the pandemic, there are great doubts
about the head of the ROC” after the coronavirus passes.” There are simply too
many enemies who have too many reasons to oppose him to have confidence that he
will survive.
“But even if purely formally, he
keeps the patriarchal throne, the authority of the present ruler has taken such a shock over the last
spring weeks that he will hardly be able to rule” as the occupant of that
position is supposed to, von Eggert concludes.
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