J
josie_L
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Please refer to post #199. God bless!What supposed restrictions are Catholics facing in Russia? I have Protestant friends there are worshipping freely.
Please refer to post #199. God bless!What supposed restrictions are Catholics facing in Russia? I have Protestant friends there are worshipping freely.
Wow I could still get married one more time. Before I hear an explosion, my first is deceased, the 2nd was annulled but hey, looking for the next ex (just kidding)3-marriages?![]()
Why not 4 or 5. (depending on the circumstance’s) Is that an infallible number 3? Three for the Trinity? How did you arrive at 3? Why isn’t 4-or 5 keeping in mind with the salvation of the people?
“While the Church stands opposed to divorce, the Church, in its concern for the salvation of its people, does permit divorced individuals to marry a second and even a third time.”
Keeping in mind the “salvation of the people”.
“Doctrine regarding the indissolubility of marriage is based on its holiness. The holiness and indissolubility of marriage exalt monogamy. References are often made to the Old Testament in this regard (Mal. 2, 14).”
Third time is a charm?![]()
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On the verge of turning into a second “little” America? Haven’t heard that one.The book The American Mission and the ‘Evil Empire’: The Crusade for a ‘Free Russia’ since 1881 goes into this in great detail. There has been a tendency since Czarist times to portray Russia as a heartless autocracy just on the verge of a social transformation which could turn it into a second little America, a type of propaganda which unfortunately seems to have caught on in the West.
… To speak of a religious revival in contemporary Russia has become a commonplace. But people vary in their understanding of what this revival entails. Certainly there is an external revival: many churches, monasteries and theological schools are being reopened, the buildings are being restored. But it is too early to speak of the restoration of the Russian soul. There is no improvement in morality in contemporary Russia. On the contrary, one must admit that moral standards have become much lower than they used to be under the Soviets. Is this not an indication that there is no inward revival of Christian life, that people do not assume Christianity as a norm of living? Is it not striking evidence of the fact that the long-waited repentance, metanoia, as a change in mentality for the better, has not yet taken place in Russia?
Some ascribe this sudden, lowering of moral standards to Western influence: it is from the degenerate West that pornography, prostitution and all sorts of immorality come. This is our way out: to blame everybody except ourselves. But the reality is that, as Berdyaev put it in 1918, ‘however bitter it is… the Russian people is now less religious than many peoples of the West… the religious culture of the soul in it is weaker.’ This is true if religious culture is understood not as membership in some right-wing Orthodox organisation, but as first of all living according to the norms of Christian morality.
When ‘perestroika’ started, the Church was challenged by the very high expectations on the part of the society. Many believed the Church would be able to assume the leading role in the spiritual revival of the nation. One has to admit that this did not happen. The Church started to revive itself by rebuilding monastery walls (which is indeed an important and difficult task) but it did not respond adequately to the need for religious and moral enlightenment of the people. The Church’s leaders gained access to the civil authorities, but thus far they have been unable (with some exceptions) to gain direct access to ordinary people, especially to those outside the Church. The Orthodox Church is still closed in upon itself; it is still more occupied with its own internal problems than with spiritual demands of modern society. It turned out that the Western Protestant sects took up the initiative of enlightenment of former atheists, and it is not surprising that, with their direct and somewhat insistent behavior, they are gaining the sympathy of more and more ordinary people.
Russian atheism may well one day die, but this will happen when the country has not only been baptized, but has been enlightened and born again.
The Orthodox Church should play a key role in this spiritual rebirth. But this can happen only after it has become a truly national Church: not the Church of the State (whatever the State is), but the Church, of the nation, of the people. To become such, the Church must come out of its shell, must learn to speak the language that the people speak, must face the demands of society and answer them adequately.
At the present time our Church is struggling to find its new identity in post-Communist and post-atheist Russia. There are, it seems to me, two main dangers. The first is that of a return to the pre-revolutionary situation, when there was a State Church which became less and less the Church of the nation. If, at some stage in the development of society, such a role would be offered to the Church by the State, it would be a huge mistake to accept it. In this case the Church will be again rejected by the majority of the nation, as it was rejected in 1917. The seventy years of Soviet persecution were an experience of fiery purgatory for the Russian Church, from which it should have come out entirely renewed. The most dangerous error would be not to learn from what happened and to return to the pre-revolutionary situation, as some members of the clergy wish to do nowadays.
The second danger is that of militant Orthodoxy, which would be a post-atheist counterpart of militant atheism. I mean an Orthodoxy that fights against Jews, against masons, against democracy, against Western culture, against enlightenment. This type of Orthodoxy is being preached even by some key members of the hierarchy, and it has many supporters within the Church. This kind of Orthodoxy, especially if it gains the support of the State, may force Russian atheism to withdraw temporarily to the catacombs. But Russian atheism, will not be vanquished until the transfiguration of the soul and the need to live according to the Gospel have become the
only message of the Russian Orthodox Church…
I don’t know what you’re talking about. :hypno:The book The American Mission and the ‘Evil Empire’: The Crusade for a ‘Free Russia’ since 1881 goes into this in great detail. There has been a tendency since Czarist times to portray Russia as a heartless autocracy (to make America look completely virtuous by contrast), just on the verge of a social transformation which could turn it into a second little America, a type of propaganda which unfortunately seems to have caught on in the West.
I’ve read this article it’s very good, thank you for posting it. By the way, I think you will like this article I found on the Eastern Catholic forums posted by DCointin:As troubling as this discrimination is for those on the receiving end, it is actually bad for the ROC as well. From Atheism and Orthodoxy in Modern Russia, by Metropolitan Hilarion Alfeyev:
I don’t view Russia as by any means a totalitarian state. Discrimination is wrong but it is based in a particular history which puts it into context. If anyone wants to continue these topics on a new thread I think we should open a new one as we are wandering way off topic now.
I have lived in Russia and used a latin rite parish there for Mass, no-one cared less about me going or coming from it. You are buying into propagandist versions of Russia.
Discrimination is discrimination, i.e., don’t contextualize it to the point that you miss the forest for the trees, i.e., I think it’s understandable that Russia wants to protect Orthodoxy but it should do so in a manner that doesn’t infringe on other peoples’ faiths.I’ve lived in Russia Josie, you have not, I am married to a Russian and interect with Russians regularly and what you are presenting is a view rooted in US popular media regarding Russia which is often rather lacking in nuances.
Now, who’s building the strawman, Pope John Paul II apologized for the misdeeds of Catholics in the past not as some sort of panacea but as a means to breech the rift between our two communions so we can begin healing (because that is the purpose of forgiveness). Moreover, there was no, I repeat, no, attempts on the part of the Eastern Patriarch to apologize for the misdeeds of Orthodox (are we going to believe that they have nothing to ask forgiveness for).We have made some small headway in gaining trust because of our standing side by side with the Orthodox on certain issues but to expect Pope John Paul II to make an apology to one Patriach and for that to cure all is not realistic. Also, complaining that Catholicism is not seen as a traditional religion in Russia is odd, it is NOT a traditional religion in Russia, that simply is a fact.
Jose, I want to tell you, “Oh, but you can.”Now imagine being raised Catholic and reverting. To understand and have the spiritual conviction of what the Eucharist is. And no matter how many times you do Reconciliation, you will not be able to partake because your present marriage is considered to put you in a state of mortal sin… That the body and blood of Christ is there at the Mass and that no matter your suffering,** you can’t receive it**.
The purpose of the tale was to illustrate the Russian perception, nothing more.One can make up all sorts of historical tales but the reality is Catholics have been present on Russian lands as long as there has been something that, with centuries of retrospection, would be called Russia. The Catholic people living there were as “Russian” as the Jews, and were probably always just as welcome. The current law discriminating against the Catholic church and dismissing its historical presence in those lands is disgraceful and absurd, however much it makes sense within the context of some Russian “history”.
The point of the quotes around Russia is that reach back as you are doing with others, into Rus’. Catholics have the same antiquity as others.You are correct that there have been Catholics there almost as long as there has been a “Russia”, however even that is not all that long, relatively speaking. Orthodox, Buddhists, Muslims, and Jews all predate the existence of Russia.
I think that there have been and still are some Polish and German catholic communities, not to mention Lithuanian and Ukrainian (GC) communities of Rus’.Beyond that, one thing they all have in common is that they have all had their own communities in Russia. Catholics have never, as far as I’ve ever been aware, created their own settlements. On this score even Protestants have a better claim to being a “traditional religion”.
Thanks for taking a stand against religious discrimination in Russia. I agree that it is sufficient to leave the matter there.If you want to argue freedom of religion, and the idea that having specific constitutionally protected religions isn’t right, I’m with you. But to argue that Catholicism should get those “traditional religion” protections while other religions which are just as prominent (such as Hinduism) shouldn’t is just plain wrong.