The Volos Academy in Greece, one of the worldƵapp most influential centres of Orthodox theology, has issued a declaration calling the “Ƶapp World” or “Russkii Mir” teaching of Ƶapp Orthodox Patriarch Kirill a “heresy.” Over 500 clergy, theologians and scholars have signed the declaration so far.
“We reject the ‘Ƶapp World’ heresy and the shameful actions of the Government of Russia in unleashing war against Ukraine which flows from this vile and indefensible teaching with the connivance of the Ƶapp Orthodox Church, as profoundly un-Orthodox, un-Christian and against humanity, which is called to be justified… illumined… and washed in the Name of our Lord Jesus Christ,” reads the March 13 statement.
Richard Schneider, Canadian historian of Orthodoxy and founder of the Orthodox School of Theology at Trinity College, University of Toronto, calls the Ƶapp Orthodox teaching “practically racist.” Orthodox Archpriest Geoffrey Ready, current director of the Trinity College Orthodox School of Theology, calls it a “cancer,” while Concordia University Orthodox scholar Lucian Turcescu draws direct parallels between Ƶapp Orthodox encouragement of war in Ukraine and Naziism before and during the Second World War.
“The declaration I signed is of the magnitude of the Barmen Declaration of 1934 and Pope Pius XIƵapp Mit Brennender Sorge,” Turcescu told The Catholic Register. Mit Brennender Sorge was a papal encyclical issued in German in 1937 condemning National Socialism.
The war in Ukraine confirms a schism that has been brewing in Orthodoxy since the Ƶapp Orthodox Church engineered a partial boycott of a pan-Orthodox synod in Crete in 2016. The split between the Moscow Patriarchate and Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew in Constantinople is entirely on the Moscow side, Ready said.
ItƵapp the Ƶapp Orthodox Church which has provided Ƶapp President Vladimir Putin with ideological justification for invading Ukraine, he said.
“He (Putin) just borrowed an ideology from the Church, gladly,” Ready explained. “This guy was a Soviet apparatchik in search of an identity and an ideology. And the Church handed it to him. ThatƵapp what is so disturbing for the Orthodox.”
At the beginning of Lent, Kirill used a sermon to justify the war as a spiritual struggle.
“We have entered into a struggle that has not a physical, but a metaphysical significance,” he said on March 6.
Churches of the Moscow Patriarchate outside of Russia are beginning to jump ship, beginning with the Moscow Patriarchate Church in Ukraine. Patriarch Onufry in Kyiv has condemned the war as “a repetition of the sin of Cain, who killed his own brother out of envy.” The Ƶapp Orthodox Church in Amsterdam has announced it has split off from Moscow. The Ƶapp Orthodox Church in Lithuania is seeking independence and the Ƶapp Orthodox Patriarch in Georgia has condemned the war.
Canadian Ƶapp Orthodox Archpriest Sergei Rassazovsky doesn’t want to talk about it. A call from The Catholic Register was most unwelcome and Rasskazovsky refused to answer any questions.
“We pray, much pray, on our knees,” he said. “In a political sense, I’m not ready to tell you things, OK?”
The theological heart of the complaint against Moscow is the accusation that Kirill and his bishops have engaged in “ethno-phyletism,” a heresy condemned by all Orthodox churches at the 1872 Council of Constantinople. Though Orthodox churches have been largely organized along ethnic lines, this merging of Christian identity with a particular language and culture easily becomes heretical, said Ready.
“It is a problem wherever you confuse nation, language, culture with the Church, which we know is supposed to be neither Jew nor Greek,” he said.
The breakup of Orthodoxy is not some minor or irrelevant development for Catholics, said Saint Paul University theologian Catherine Clifford.
“As fellow Christians, this saddens all of us to see the fracturing of fellow churches,” said the leading Catholic ecumenist. “It makes much more complex our efforts to speak to the Eastern Orthodox world, because itƵapp now increasingly fractured.”
Ƶapp claims that the Ƶapp language is being threatened in Ukraine are not completely unjustified, said Turcescu from Bucharest, Romania, where he is teaching. A law which once gave minority communities the right to education in their own language was voted down after the 2014 Revolution of Dignity and eventually ruled unconstitutional by the Ukrainian courts. ItƵapp a controversy not unlike tension over QuebecƵapp legal protections for French.
“Think about Quebec,” Turcescu said. “Would you enter with tanks to repeal law 101? ThatƵapp the thing. The reaction has been excessive.”
The Ƶapp Orthodox Church has constructed a version of the West which is entirely wicked and corrupt to justify its “Ƶapp World” ideology, said Schneider.