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Window on Eurasia | 12Aug2013 | Paul Goble
http://windowoneurasia2.blogspot.ca/2013/08/window-on-eurasia-moscow-patriarchate.html
Moscow Patriarchate Shifts from Inclusive to
Exclusive on Baptism of Rus
Staunton, August 12, 2013 -- Moscow Patriarch Kirill has sought to
present himself as a spokesman for conservative Christians not only in
the former Soviet space but across Europe, but the way in which he and
his subordinates chose to mark the 1025th anniversary of the Baptism of
Kievan Rus undercuts that message.
Twenty-five years ago, when the Moscow Patriarchate of the Russian
Orthodox Church under orders from the Soviet state marked the
millennium of the Baptism of Kievan Rus, its leaders stressed that that
even was a holiday for representatives of all religions and not just
the Russian Orthodox, but this year, it has portrayed that event as
something more exclusive.
That may help Patriarch Kirill pursue his alliance with Russian
President Vladimir Putin and will certainly win him support from those
Russian nationalists who want a harsher line against Old Believers,
Catholics, and Protestants as well as non-Christian religions like
Muslims, Buddhists and Jews. But it will certainly limit the
Patriarchate’s influence elsewhere.
In an article in the current issue of “NG-Religii,” Moscow commentator
Vladislav Maltsev underlines the shift by a discussion of the way in
which the Soviet authorities at that time worked with the Moscow
Patriarchate to make that event far more broadly inclusive
(ng.ru/ng_religii/2013-08-07/1_edict.html).
Maltsev’s article, significantly entitled “The Edict of Milan of the
Soviet State,” consists of an interview with Konstantin Kharchev, who
headed the Soviet Council on Religious Affairs between 1984 and 1989
and is often described, as in this case, as “the architect of the
perestroika of the church.”
According to Kharchev, Patriarch Pimen in early 1982 officially asked
the Soviet leadership for permission to mark the 1000th anniversary of
the Baptism of Rus. For its own foreign and domestic policy reasons,
the Soviet leaders agreed and provided additional funds for the church
to spruce up various facilities for the occasion.
On the one hand, he says, the Soviet state was interested at that time
in presenting itself as being something very different than “the evil
empire” US President Ronald Reagan described it as being. And on the
other -- and somewhat later -- the Gorbachev leadership saw government
support for the Church as a way of gaining support for perestroika at
home.
The former Soviet official points out that “from the moment of its
revival in 1943, the Russian Orthodox Church had provided active
assistance to the Soviet state in the international arena, especially
from the mid-1960s on.” The state in turn “subsidized” it to
the tune of two million dollars a year for foreign activities.
Indeed, Kharchev recalls, he was chosen to head of the Council on
Religious Affairs precisely because senior Central Committee officials
wanted someone with a diplomatic background. Kharchev had been Soviet
ambassador to Guyana and earlier had served in various CPSU posts.
Kharchev says that he and the Council promoted the idea that the 1000th
anniversary of the Baptism of Rus should be marked as government and
not just “narrowly church” event. For that reason and for
other acts of support, he continues, opponents within the party were
able to force him out of that post in 1989.
“It is important to remember,” he stresses, “that the celebration … was
thought up by us not as a holiday of the Russian Orthodox Church. We
wanted to show everyone both outside and within our country the
fundamental shift in the relations of the Soviet state and the Church.”
And events immediately following showed that as well.
After 1988, “we opened not only 2,000 Orthodox churches but we opened
Uniate and Baptist ones and synagogues across the Union … if one seeks
an analogy in history, this was our Edict of Milan, which … permitted
the free confession of Christianity and all other religions in the
Roman Empire.”
Therefore, “when people say now that namely the Russian Orthodox Church
conducted the celebration of the celebration of the 1000th anniversary
of the Baptism of Rus, this is not so. Everything, beginning
with the elaboration of plans and ending with their practical
realization, was conducted by the Council for Religious Affairs
together with the KGB which supervised the Moscow Patriarchate from the
moment of its founding in 1943, the Central Committee of the CPSU, the
ministry of culture, and other government agencies.”
[W.Z.
Despite the "official" 04Sep1943 date cited above, the German
occupation forces in Ukraine allowed the "Moscow Autonomous
Church" to compete with the "Ukrainian Autocephalous Church" as
early as May 1942. On page 119 of her book on Nazi Empire-Building in Ukraine,
Wendy Lower states: "In May 1942 Koch’s deputies in Rivne announced
that in addition to the Autocephalous Church under Polikarp that the
Autonomous Church was allowed to exist under the leadership of Bishop
Aleksii." Thus, the battle between the pro-Russian Moscow Patriarchate
and the pro-Ukraine-independence Autocephalous/Kyiv Patriarchate raged
even in the darkest moments of WWII.
A Wikipedia entry for Alexy I of Moscow states: "On September 4, 1943, Metropolitan Alexius together with Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky) and Metropolitan Nicholas (Yarushevich) met wit
hJoseph Stalin in the Kremlin where a historic decision was made
regarding the fate of the Church in the state ruled by the militantly
atheist Communist party. In the midst of the second world war
Stalin decided to allow the Russian Orthodox Church to legally function
again after two decades of severe persecution." ]
Asked to compare the celebrations in 1988 and 2013, Kharchev said that
the former was “a genuinely popular celebration n Moscow, Kyiv, and
Minsk, where the main celebrations took place as well as in other
cities and throughout the entire country.” But the latter was very
different.
In 2013, the former Soviet official says, what occurred was “a holiday
of the Church itself, or more precisely its leadership and the
leadership of he state. The presence of the latter also
distinguished 2013 from 1988.” Indeed, this year’s celebrations were
“above all created as PR for the authorities.”
What we have seen in recent months, he continues, is “an elite holiday”
which at least as marked in Kyiv excluded ordinary people.
Twenty-five years ago, the people were the main celebrants, they came
to church because they had “ceased to be afraid.” Now, the hierarchies,
religious and political, have taken it back; and many young priests are
concerned “only about money.”
Kharchev concludes by suggesting that the state should get out of the
business of regulating religious life. The current law on freedom of
conscience is “outdated” and should be scrapped or replaced. Instead,
the country should rely on the direct application of Article 14 of the
Constitution.
That as will be remembered calls for the separation of church and
state, although, as Kharchev notes, “now it is obvious that
the state is fusing itself together with the Russian Orthodox Church”
in violation of the country’s basic law and to the detriment of the
interests of both.