Dan Everiss
<oregdan@hotmail.com> | Fri, May 6, 2016 at 1:55 PM |
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"The righteous are in everlasting remembrance, their memorial is from age to age!"
Wednesday, August 5, 2015
The Nostalgia of the Church Abroad
A resharing of the now famous warning from Archpriest Pavel Adelheim of Pskov, to not submit to, nor to join with his MP
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(updated statement, on May 6, 2016):
Now, AGAIN a voice from the grave: On his 2 year memorial [of his convenient murder], now August 5, 2015: It is still unheard by the leaders or the blind slavish 'obedient' followers of ROCOR/MP, even
as that MP, their supposed, 'Mother Russian Church', is more and more
obviously to the whole world, not the true historic canonical Russian
Church of Holy Confessor Patriarch Tikhon, [who was the LAST TRUE
Russian Patriarch], but
is merely the corrupt continuing false-front organization, a pretend
church, of the slavish servants of the Stalin founded in 1943, the
so-called, 'Moscow Patriarchy', which today in August, 2015, is clearly
but a religious front propaganda/espionage organization for dictator
power-hungry KGB/FSB power-mad Vladimir Putin's evil domestic and
foreign policies, in his hopes for world domination, [ his neo-soviet
twisted insane vision of 'Restoring the Glories of the Russian/ actually-SOVIET Empire'-!]
, no matter how many more must die in the process. His captive MP
'church' , and its KGB actor, 'Patriarch Kyrill' Gundyaev, blesses
everything he says or does, and so does Hilarion-Kapral's ROCOR/MP!
MEMORY ETERNAL To righteous and martyric Fr. Pavel Adelheim, who tried to warn us.
Few of us listened to him then.
Perhaps some may now?
God grant this!
Rd. Daniel
| Версия для печати Опубликовано на сайте Портал-Credo.Ru 30-11-2007 15:39 |
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Protopriest Pavel Adelheim (Pskov Diocese MP-ROC). The Nostalgia of the Church Abroad
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Nostalgia
and the promise of reuniting with the "Church in Russia" after its
liberation from the Soviet regime torment the Church Abroad. Reasons
have accumulated that hasten one to believe that the time has already
come. The Soviet regime has played with the feelings of the Russian
émigrés many times and each time has won. And they lost brutally and
paid dearly for their trustfulness, because their feelings were sincere.
The MP ROC [Moscow Patriarchy, Russian Orthodox Church] has always
played on the side of the Soviet regime. Not because it loved the Soviet
regime, but because it loved power as such, and was flesh of its flesh,
as was the whole Soviet nomenclatura.
The naïve
West understands the "Soviet regime" as an ideological construct, which
will end when they rename it. The "Soviet regime" constantly changes its
skin—its own and that of its punitive institutions. The West believes
that the punitive "Cheka" changed when they called it the "GPU"; that it
was reborn when they called it the "NKVD"; that on becoming the "MGB",
it became kinder; that when it was called the "KGB", it became humane;
and as the "FSB", that it has become completely democratic. Now it is
engaged in the work of defending human rights and with philanthropy, and
it loves kiddies.
In the twinkling of an eye, the CPSU
[Communist Party of the Soviet Union] disappeared in the country, as if
it never was. Where did the multi-million-member party suddenly go?
There never was a CPSU. The CPSU was a myth. The nomenclatura really existed, which never went anywhere: It was, is and will be, changing its skin, preserving its people and its essence.
The term "Soviet regime" expresses the content of social consciousness,
which changes slowly—may God grant it—over centuries, under the
influence of objective reality. This internal process goes on in our
days too; but in it an ethical imperative is absent. It is oriented on
the collective, and not on the individual, who is always indebted to the
former. We use to sing, "where a man breathes so freely," while half of
the country was perishing in the camps. The West was enraptured by our
humanism. In Tula, they make samovars. The workers take parts away on
the sly. When they assemble them, a machine-gun inevitably results. To
us, it is understandable why; but the West does not understand.
Many times our emissaries persuaded the émigrés to return. Always
successfully. Metropolitan Nikolai (Yarushevich), a sincere patriot and a
remarkable preacher, took an active part in these actions. When he was
asked, "Vladyka, why do you lie, saying that we have freedom of
conscience in our country?", he would reply, "If your mother were a
drunkard, would you shout this to the whole world?"
The
consequences of the repatriation have been described in the West.
Remember the fate of Marina Tsvetayeva, who returned before the war
[World War II]. Remember the Cossacks, who were [forcibly] returned
after the war. Can you enumerate them all? What else do you need? Facts
are not pleasing; people want to have hope. To each his own.
Why has the ROCA [Russian Orthodox Church Abroad or ROCOR—"Outside
Russia"] not analyzed the experience of the Orthodox Church’s
"non-commemorators" to the MP ROC? These were confessors, who had
returned from the camps and from exile, whole generations thrown
overboard from Soviet reality. Many of them have now been glorified as
new-martyrs. What was their fate? Some did not live to our days, others
joined in, others could not. The schism was formally overcome. The
confrontation between "Soviet" and "anti-Soviet" consciousness outlived
the Soviet regime. Politics has nothing to do with it. The "anti-Soviet"
consciousness meant conformism, it justified falsehood and offered up
man as a sacrifice. The two vital positions were reflected in worldview,
religion, art and science.
By 1927, two tendencies in church
consciousness had appeared, which defined the interrelation of the
church with the state in different ways. The bishops confined in the
Solovki Concentration Camp expressed one position in the "Solovki
Epistle". The contrary position was set forth in the "Declaration" of
Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky). The opposition of the positions was
principled, and it pre-determined the split of the Church into
"Sergianists" and "non-commemorators".
After returning, the
"non-commemorators" remained second-class people in secondary roles.
Archbishop Hermogen (Golubev) gave his heart and all his strength to the
MP ROC. He finished his life in confinement, deprived of the divine
services and freedom. People had deceived him, locked him up until the
end of his days in the Zhirovitsky Monastery and did not respond to his
appeals.
The West also did not understand what happened in
London. The 1988 Charter of the MP ROC allowed Metropolitan Anthony
(Bloom) to amend the Charter of Surozh (British) Diocese on condition
that it be confirmed by Moscow. The Charter was never confirmed. Bishop
Basil (Osborne) became convinced that Metropolitan Anthony’s hopes would
not be realized, and he departed to Constantinople.
The "Act
of Canonical Communion" has been constructed on the principle of the
Russian expression "yes and at the same time—no"—"I allow it, but I
forbid it." One point contradicts another and requires additional
explanations; for example, the third contradicts the ninth. The eleventh
and twelfth points annul the sense of the tenth. This is a direct
repetition of the London history. Moscow confirms the election of the
First Hierarch and of each hierarch and the establishment of dioceses.
And what happens if Moscow does not confirm? A coordination or grievance
procedure has not been stipulated, so Moscow will make the final
decision concerning the appointments.
Can an abbreviated
outline, where nothing is agreed upon, possibly become the legal basis
for the existence the ROCA under new conditions? These are completely
uncharted areas that provoke arbitrariness. The declaration concerning
independence is not defended by any mechanism and remains an empty
pretense. What a kindergarten!
Could they not find a competent
legal expert? Have the professors of cannon law died out? The law always
defends the weak. Everything that is not written in the law, the
powerful will interpret to their advantage when the time comes.
It is useless to explain to the émigrés the truisms of Soviet
psychology. Experience teaches them nothing: "Experience has not yet
saved anyone from calamity." The descendants of the émigrés believe that
Russia is, as before, that country from which their grandfathers
departed. We live in another Russia, which is ill from the loss of moral
fundamentals. They have been destroyed both in the state and the
Church, and in society. When the conscience has been lost, even the law
cannot help. If repentance does not waken the
conscience, the outcome will be fatal. The age-old call for repentance,
which ROCA had directed toward Russia has now fallen silent…
http://revniteli.livejournal. |
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