M
Miserissima
Guest
Dear friends,
Would you help me to understand something? I was reading a bio of Blessed Paul Gojdich and came across the following (emphasis mine):
So, I ask, why would the Communists offer him anything in/of the Orthodox? Weren’t there also Orthodox martyrs in the gulags, like Kolyma? I thought that the Communists were against any system of religion or metaphysics/faith.
Would you help me to understand something? I was reading a bio of Blessed Paul Gojdich and came across the following (emphasis mine):
They even promised to make him a patriarch …” And he concludes: “There is no doubt in my mind that Bishop Gojdich was a martyr for his Faith!”During Bishop Gojdich’s rehabilitation in 1958, it was proven beyond any doubt that all the accusations against him at the trial were nothing more than lies made up by his prosecutors in order to keep him in prison and isolated from his faithful. A certain Ferdo Ondrushka, who attended Bishop Gojdich in the prison hospital before his death, writes: “Bishop Gojdich cherished an immense love for his clergy and people. He often spoke of Greek Catholic customs and ceremonies, and with great enthusiasm used to explain why his people must remain united with the Apostolic See. He told us how, during his long interrogations, they used to torture him and how they tried, with all kinds of promises to sway him to accept Orthodoxy.
So, I ask, why would the Communists offer him anything in/of the Orthodox? Weren’t there also Orthodox martyrs in the gulags, like Kolyma? I thought that the Communists were against any system of religion or metaphysics/faith.