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Moscow Patriarchate losing parishes to Kyiv church and its dominance of Ukraine’s religious life

War changes things: Priest Serhiy Dmytriyev served as a military chaplain and moved his parish from the Moscow Patriarchate to the Kyiev one specifically because of the war and how these churches view it (Image: NV.ua)
War changes things: Priest Serhiy Dmytriyev served as a military chaplain and moved his parish from the Moscow Patriarchate to the Kyiev one specifically because of the war and how these churches view it (Image: NV.ua)
Edited by: A. N.

The Moscow Patriarchate may have succeeded in intimidating the Universal Patriarch of Constantinople not to grant autocephaly to its rival in Ukraine, the Kyiv Patriarchate; but as a result of the war and the attitude of the two churches to it, an increasing number of parishes are shifting their allegiance from Moscow to Kyiv.

The Moscow Patriarchate still has far more parishes in Ukraine than does the Ukrainian Patriarchate, 12,515 to 4,877 respectively, but the shift of some 60 parishes on their own volition from the first to the last is “unprecedented,” according to Ukrainian analyst Ivan Verstyuk.

Never before have so many parishes transferred allegiance in this way; and this shift, while still relatively small calls attention to two important developments: the growing strength of Ukrainian identity and opposition to Moscow, and the fact that in Ukraine, Moscow parishes are now vastly outnumbered by those of the Kyiv Patriarchate and other Christian denominations.

According to Ukraine’s culture ministry, there are now approximately 16,000 Christian church parishes in that country not subordinate to Moscow, compared to only 12,500 that are. As a result, Moscow Patriarch Kirill’s talk about Ukraine as “the canonical territory” of the Russian Orthodox Church has ever less of a foundation in reality.

Most of the shifts in subordination have taken place in Western Ukraine, although intriguingly some have occurred near the front lines. And more are in prospect given a shift in popular attitudes. In 2011, 31.1% of Ukrainians said they supported the Kyiv Patriarchate while 25.9% said they supported the Moscow one.

Now, those figures have shifted, with 44.2% of Ukrainians declaring that they support the Kyiv Patriarchate and only 20.8% supporting the Moscow church. If Constantinople recognizes the Kyiv Patriarchate as independent, the number of churches which will change size will rise dramatically.

Given that, Moscow, both the church and the state, is doing everything it can to block such a move. At present, the Moscow Patriarchate’s 12,500 parishes in Ukraine constitute more than a third of all its parishes in the world. If it loses them to Kyiv, the Moscow Patriarchate will be marginalized not only internationally but at home as well.

Orthodox Churches switching from the Moscow Patriarchate to the Kyiv Patriarchate: The numbers in solid green circles represent the number of parishes that switched completely. The numbers in semi-transparent circles represent churches that switched partially. (Data: The Religious-Informational Service of Ukraine; Image: NV.ua)
Orthodox Churches switching from the Moscow Patriarchate to the Kyiv Patriarchate: The numbers in solid green circles represent the number of parishes that switched completely. The numbers in semi-transparent circles represent churches that switched partially. (Data: The Religious-Informational Service of Ukraine; Image: NV.ua)
Edited by: A. N.
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