Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 20 – Most people in
Russia and the West accept the Moscow Patriarchate’s own explanation for why so
few Russians attend its churches – the latest figures show only about three
percent of Russians do. According to the church, this is the result of the same
social trends that have driven down attendance at churches in Western
countries.
That explanation is not necessarily
wrong, but it is very much incomplete, Moscow commentator Yevgeny Trifonov
says. In fact, the church itself by its
increasingly outrageous statements about some subjects and its inexplicable
silence about other issues is playing a major role in driving Russians away (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5D32B978C67C9).
Since Ukrainian autocephaly, the
Moscow Patriarchate has made only “rare public statements,” the commentator
says; but what it has said officially in public is ever stranger and offensive,
something that is doing nothing to attract more Russians to its churches and
likely is driving some who have been attending away.
First, there was the
declaration by Metropolitan Ioann of Belgorod that baptized Christians had won
the war against Hitler while those who had died were atheists, implicitly
suggesting they had it coming.
Then, Archpriest Dimitry Smirnov,
the head of the Patriarchal commission on the family and the defense of
motherhood and children, opined that women are weaker and less capable than
men.
And finally, most recently, Vakhtang
Kipshidze, the vice president of the Synod Department for relations between
church and society, declared that electronic passports were a threat to the
freedom and rights of Russians.
This last, Trifonov says, recalls
the church’s opposition to trains and steamships 150 years ago when its leaders
said that the steam these things released came from the devil; and it also
highlights the fact that the Moscow Patriarchate has been anything but vocal in
supporting human rights causes.
The church didn’t say anything about
the Golunov case or about the trash dump controversies. It hasn’t reacted to
denigrating comments by officials about the Russian people or to the decision
of the Moscow authorities to block candidates from opposition groups from
having the chance to be on the ballot.
And it hasn’t talked about torture in Russian prisons.
As everyone is aware, the churches
of the Moscow Patriarchate have been emptying out in recent years with fewer
and fewer Russians choosing to attend services. If the hierarchy continues to
make such declarations or alternatively not speak out when it should, the
denomination’s churches will empty “still more rapidly in the future.”
No comments:
Post a Comment