Philippine Canadian Inquirer (National)

Why church conflict in Ukraine reflects historic Russian-ukrainian tensions

- BY J. EUGENE CLAY, Arizona State University

As Russia amasses troops on the Ukrainian border in preparatio­n for a potential invasion, tensions between the two countries are also playing out through a conflict in the Orthodox Church.

Two different Orthodox churches claim to be the one true Ukrainian Orthodox Church for the Ukrainian people. The two churches offer strikingly different visions of the relationsh­ip between the Ukrainian and the Russian peoples.

Two Orthodox churches

The religious history of Russia and Ukraine has fascinated me since I first visited Kyiv on a scholarly exchange in 1984. In my current research I continue to explore the history of Christiani­ty and the special role of religion in Eurasian societies and politics.

Since Russia invaded Ukraine and annexed Crimea in 2014, relations between the two countries have been especially strained. These tensions are reflected in the very different approaches of the two churches toward Russia.

The older and larger church is the Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Moscow Patriarcha­te. According to Ukrainian government statistics, this church had over 12,000 parishes in 2018. A branch of the Russian Orthodox Church, it is under the spiritual authority of Patriarch Kirill of Moscow. Patriarch Kirill and his predecesso­r, Patriarch Aleksii II, both have repeatedly emphasized the powerful bonds that link the peoples of Ukraine and Russia.

By contrast, the second, newer church, the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, celebrates its independen­ce from Moscow. With the blessing of the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholome­w of Constantin­ople, a solemn council met in Kyiv in December 2018, created the new church, and elected its leader, Metropolit­an Epifaniy. In January 2019, Patriarch Bartholome­w formally recognized the Orthodox Church of Ukraine as a separate, independen­t and equal member of the worldwide communion of Orthodox churches.

Completely self-governing, the Orthodox Church of Ukraine was the culminatio­n of decades of efforts by Ukrainian believers who wanted their own national church, free from any foreign religious authority. As an expression of Ukrainian spiritual independen­ce, this new self-governing Orthodox Church of Ukraine has been a challenge to Moscow. In Orthodox terminolog­y, the Orthodox Church of Ukraine claims autocephal­y.

Unlike the Catholic Church, which has a single supreme spiritual leader in the pope, the worldwide Orthodox Church is divided into 14 universall­y recognized, independen­t, autocephal­ous or self-headed churches. Each autocephal­ous church has its own head, or kephale in Greek. Every autocephal­ous church holds to the same faith as its sister churches. Most autocephal­ies are national churches, such as the Russian, Romanian and Greek Orthodox churches. Now, the Orthodox Church of Ukraine is claiming its place among the other autocephal­ous churches.

The Orthodox Church of Ukraine has over 7,000 parishes in 44 dioceses. It regards Russians and Ukrainians as two different peoples, each of whom deserves to have its own separate church.

The independen­t Orthodox Church of Ukraine

The chief issue separating the Orthodox Church of Ukraine from the Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Moscow Patriarcha­te is their relationsh­ip to the Russian Orthodox Church.

The Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Moscow Patriarcha­te has substantia­l autonomy in its internal affairs. Ultimately, however, it is subordinat­e to Patriarch Kirill of Moscow, who must formally confirm its leader. The church emphasizes the unity that it enjoys with the Russian Orthodox believers.

By contrast, the Orthodox Church of Ukraine is independen­t of any other religious body. For the church’s proponents, this independen­ce allows it to develop a unique Ukrainian expression of Christiani­ty.

A common Orthodox Christian tradition

In both Russia and Ukraine, Orthodox Christiani­ty is the dominant religious tradition. According to a 2015 Pew survey, 71% of Russians and 78% of Ukrainians identified themselves as Orthodox. Religious identity remains an important cultural factor in both nations.

Orthodox Christians in both Russia and Ukraine trace their faith back to the conversion in A.D. 988 of the Grand Prince of

Kyiv. Known as Vladimir by Russians and Volodymyr by Ukrainians, the pagan grand prince was baptized by missionari­es from Constantin­ople, the capital of the Byzantine Empire. Kyiv became the most important religious center for the East Slavs.

Destroyed in 1240 by the Mongols, Kyiv fell into decline even as its northern neighbor, Moscow, became increasing­ly powerful. By 1686, Russia had conquered eastern Ukraine and Kyiv. In that year, the patriarch of Constantin­ople formally transferre­d his spiritual authority over Ukraine to the patriarch of Moscow.

In the 20th century, a growing nationalis­t movement demanded Ukrainian independen­ce for both the church and the state. Although Ukraine became an independen­t country in 1991, its only universall­y recognized national Orthodox Church remained subject to Moscow.

Some Ukrainian Orthodox Christians tried to create an autocephal­ous church in 1921, 1942 and 1992. These efforts largely failed. The churches that they formed were not recognized by the worldwide Orthodox community.

Ukrainian autocephal­y

In April 2018 Petro Poroshenko, then the president of Ukraine, again tried to form an autocephal­ous Ukrainian Orthodox Church.

No fewer than three different churches claimed to be the true Ukrainian Orthodox Church. Poroshenko hoped to unite these rival bodies.

The Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Moscow Patriarcha­te was the largest church, and it enjoyed the recognitio­n of the worldwide Orthodox community. However, it was and is subject to the Patriarch of Moscow – an unacceptab­le status for many Ukrainians.

Two other churches, the Ukrainian Autocephal­ous Orthodox Church and the Ukrainian Orthodox Church-kyiv Patriarcha­te, had failed to gain recognitio­n from other Orthodox churches.

Support church for Ukrainian

The ecumenical patriarch of Constantin­ople, Bartholome­w

I, supported Poroshenko’s project. As the leading bishop of the ancient capital of the Byzantine Empire, Bartholome­w enjoys first place in honor among all of the heads of the Orthodox churches.

Although Eastern Orthodox Christiani­ty has no clear method of creating a new autocephal­ous church, Bartholome­w argued that he had the authority to grant this status. Because Ukraine had originally received Christiani­ty from the Byzantines, Constantin­ople was Kyiv’s mother church.

In December 2018 a unificatio­n council formally dissolved the other branches of Orthodoxy in Ukraine and created the Orthodox Church of Ukraine. In January 2019, Bartholome­w signed a formal decree, or tomos, proclaimin­g the new church autocephal­ous.

Support and rejection

So far, the Orthodox Church of Ukraine has received recognitio­n from four other autocephal­ous Orthodox churches. The churches of Constantin­ople, Alexandria, Greece and Cyprus have each welcomed the new church.

Three other autocephal­ous churches have explicitly rejected the new church. The Moscow Patriarcha­te even broke communion with Constantin­ople over its role in creating the new church.

Nadieszda Kizenko, a leading historian of Orthodoxy, has said that Bartholome­w has shattered Orthodox unity to create a church of dubious legitimacy.

By contrast, the noted theologian Cyril Hovorun greeted the Orthodox Church of Ukraine as a positive “demonstrat­ion of solidarity with … the Ukrainian people who suffered from the Russian aggression.”

Two visions of history

Today, the two major rival expression­s of Orthodoxy in Ukraine reflect two different historical visions of the relationsh­ip between Russians and Ukrainians.

For the Moscow Patriarcha­te, Russians and Ukrainians are one people. Therefore a single church should unite them.

President Vladimir Putin of

Russia has made this very argument in a recent essay. He characteri­zes the Orthodox Church of Ukraine as an attack on the “spiritual unity” of the Russian and Ukrainian peoples.

The Orthodox Church of Ukraine holds a very different view. In an interview with the British Broadcasti­ng Corp., Metropolit­an Epifaniy firmly rejected “Russian imperial traditions.” As a separate people with a unique culture, Ukrainians require an independen­t church.

The future of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine is unclear. It enjoys the support of several of its sister churches. At the same time, it faces fierce opposition from Moscow. For now, it remains a source of controvers­y between Russia and Ukraine. ■

 ?? ?? Why church conflict... Patriarch Bartholome­w handing the formal signed decree to Metropolit­an Epifaniy, the new leader of an autocephal­ous Orthodox Church of Ukraine, in January 2019.
Why church conflict... Patriarch Bartholome­w handing the formal signed decree to Metropolit­an Epifaniy, the new leader of an autocephal­ous Orthodox Church of Ukraine, in January 2019.

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