Russia's rivalry with Constantinople and fundamentalist "Russian World" ideology
The Ecumenical Patriarch reminded that Ukraine, as well as Russia, were born out of the Byzantine Empire and Patriarchate of Constantinople, referring to the baptism of Kyivan Rus in 988. However, soon Moscow turned on its mother church, and the idea that Moscow could succeed Constantinople as the spiritual leader of the Orthodox world emerged after the fall of Constantinople to the Ottomans in 1453. Successive Russian Tsars imposed their will on the Church, using it as a tool for their strategic objectives. While some monasteries have maintained the authentic religious faith, religion has often been instrumentalized in Russia. Putin's Russia has continued and intensified this trend, Bartholomew said. In doing this, it exploits the fundamentalist ideology of Russkii mir, or "Russian world":"This expression describes a supposed sphere of civilization including Russia, Ukraine, Belarus as well as ethnic Russians all around the world, politically and religiously led and directed by the Moscow center. The 'Russian World' is presented as the answer to the 'corrupt West.' This ideology is the main instrument for a 'spiritual' legitimation of the invasion in Ukraine," he explained.It is a type of pseudo-religion that emerged with the end of the Soviet Union and the bankruptcy of the communist ideology when old imperial strategies were combined with the cynical techniques and mechanisms developed and inherited from the Soviet Union.
Russian World: the heresy driving Putin’s warIn its antagonism towards the Ecumenical Patriarchate, the Russian Orthodox Church continues to play a divisive role in world Orthodoxy, Bartholomew says. This includes Russia's "uncanonical infiltration" in Africa, which challenges the jurisdiction of the Orthodox Patriarchate of Alexandria on this territory. However, the Ukrainians' quest for ecclesiastical independence from Moscow, which was granted by Bartholomew in 2019, deprives Moscow substance to its claim of an attempted leading role, the patriarch stressed. After the war's end, apart from the reconstruction of Ukraine, the question of a "spiritual regeneration" not only in Ukraine but also in Russia must be raised, the Patriarch said, implying that the Russians must abandon their pseudo-religious ideology of the "Russian world" and return to the "springs of Orthodox faith." But even now, the inter-religious dialogue must focus not only on resisting the Moscow Patriarchate's incitement of division and theological legitimization of criminal behavior; the "common Christian duty" includes bringing back Russian Christians to "our community of shared values," Bartholomew said.
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- Russian World: the heresy driving Putin’s war
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