Chattanooga Times Free Press

PUTIN’S PATRIARCH FOR ALL SEASONS

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WASHNGTON — If Russia’s assault on Ukraine sometimes seems to have the intractabl­e intensity of a religious war, that’s partly because it is entwined with one — a bitter battle for control within the Orthodox community that has been raging for years.

Russian President Vladimir Putin invoked this religious rivalry in a now-famous July 2021 essay that laid the emotional foundation for Russia’s invasion. Asserting that Ukraine and Russia were “bound together” by their shared Russian Orthodox faith, he denounced independen­t-minded Ukrainians who he said had “blatantly interfered in church life and brought things to a split.”

Putin’s version is backed by Patriarch Kirill, the primate of the Russian Orthodox Church in Moscow. But it is bitterly disputed by the leaders of other Orthodox communitie­s — and by the most senior Eastern Orthodox prelate, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholome­w of Constantin­ople, who from his seat in what’s now Istanbul oversees the roughly 1,500-year legacy of Byzantium.

Pope Francis waded into this inter-communal battle Tuesday, tartly admonishin­g Kirill that he shouldn’t be “Putin’s altar boy.” The Roman and Orthodox churches trace their roots to two brother apostles, Peter and Andrew. In the Great Schism of 1054, Rome split from Byzantium.

We think of Putin as a secular, autocratic leader. But he is also an Orthodox believer, who wears the cross his mother secretly gave him as a baby in Soviet times. Kirill has been his ally in rallying the Russian people to invade and conquer a neighborin­g Slavic country. But to Putin and his patriarch, it seems, this is about reestablis­hing order among the rebellious faithful.

Moscow’s push for control has taken on aspects of a religious Cold War. The Russian and Eastern Orthodox prelates have battled for dominion over churches in Africa, Korea, Singapore and elsewhere. Kirill created an “exarchate” in Africa to replace the patriarch of Alexandria, who is loyal to the Eastern Church. An article in Religion News Service described it as an effort to “woo priests and parishione­rs … weakening the ancient institutio­n and expanding the Russian Church’s sway.”

Patriarch Theodore II of Alexandria in a January letter derided the Russian church’s interventi­on in Africa, calling its evangelist­s “savage wolves that come in among you and will not spare the flock,” according to Religion News Service. One activist in the Eastern church estimates that the Russian Orthodox organizers, with plentiful cash to distribute, have converted more than 200 churches in Africa.

“Instead of supporting the local faithful, the Moscow Patriarcha­te is dividing them,” protested the Rev. Perry Hamalis about Russian disruption of “God-pleasing unity” among the Orthodox in South Korea.

Anthony J. Limberakis, who heads the order in America, told me that the Russian Orthodox Church is trying to replace the ancient primacy of Constantin­ople. Russia’s goal is “to use the Orthodox Church as a political tool for Russian nationalis­m and expansion,” he said.

“When Kirill goes into other jurisdicti­ons, like Africa or Korea, that’s a religious invasion,” Father Alexander Karloutsos, a spiritual adviser to the Order of St. Andrew, told me in an interview. “That’s why there is a schism.”

From Putin’s standpoint, Kirill is a patriarch for all seasons. He blessed the invasion before it happened and now he is ignoring the terrible human cost. “Russia has never attacked anyone,” Kirill said in a sermon on Tuesday, according to Orthodox Times. He spoke on a day when shells and rockets were bombarding the birthplace of Russian Orthodoxy.

 ?? ?? David Ignatius
David Ignatius

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