Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 28 – Moscow specialists
on religious affairs say that the Orthodox church in Belarus is unlikely to demand
autocephaly as has happened in Ukraine but may face a situation in which the
Universal Patriarch will recognize an autocephalous church alongside the Moscow
one as Constantinople has done in Estonia.
Vladislav Petrushko, a professor at
St. Tikhon’s Orthodox Humanities University, says that a Ukrainian scenario in
Belarus is “scarcely possible” because there are so few supporters of “the
so-called Belarusian Autocephalous Orthodox Church” and most of them are in émigré
centers (m.sputnik.by/religion/20200828/1045561561/Smena-ekzarkha-Chto-zhdet-pravoslavnuyu-Belarus.html).
But that doesn’t mean there aren’t
problems and won’t be changes, he continues. “One must not exclude the
possibility that Constantinople Patriarch Bartholemew will give Belarus
so-called autocephaly as in Ukraine even without any desire by the Belarusians
themselves.” That would be consist with his fight against the Moscow church.
Bartholemew has a certain legal
basis for doing so: “Until the 17th century, Belarus was really part
of the Kyiv metropolitanate.” As a result, the Ecumenical patriarch could argue
that Orthodoxy in Belarus must be separate from Moscow even if Orthodox in
Belarus don’t feel that way. He is clearly prepared to “go for broke” against the
ROC MP.
Roman Lunkin, a specialist on
Orthodoxy at the Moscow Institute of Europe, agrees. According to him, there is
no serious basis for a division among believers in Belarus and “nothing serious”
will happen even if Bartholemew allows Belarusians from New York to come and operate
a small autocephalous church of their own.
One reason for this is that priests
from the Moscow church in Belarus have shown themselves sympathetic to the
Belarusian protesters, and so if the latter come to power, they will hardly be
likely to want to punish the Moscow church in their country. And of course, if Lukashenka
remains, he will have little interest in doing so either.
What may happen, Lunkin suggests, is
that “a Belarusian Autocephalous Orthodox Church may be established on the
territory of Belarus” and some of the clergy of the Moscow church will change their
affiliation and declare their loyalty to Constantinople. But the numbers won’t
be large, and this won’t represent autocephaly for Belarusian Orthodoxy.
Such a scenario, he says, recalls
what happened in Estonia not what has occurred in Ukraine. “In Estonia, there
is also an Estonian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate; and in the
1990s, as a result of the division between Constantinople and Moscow, the
Constantinople Patriarchate established its own parallel structures in Estonia.”
After that happened, everything
quieted down and has remained so, Lunkin says. There is the “large” Estonian
Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate and the “not very large number of
parishes under the jurisdiction of the Constantinople Patriarchate.” Something
very similar could occur in Belarus.
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