Church in Russia
At the death of Patriarch
Tikhon, the Church in Russia entered its darkest hour. Metropolitan
Sergius Stragorodskii served as "deputy locum tenens" of the
patriarchate from 1927 to 1943. This was the time of Stalin's purges
when literally millions of people, including thousands of clergy,
were imprisoned, exiled and killed. The Stalin constitution of 1936
officially called for "freedom of religion and freedom of
anti-religious propaganda." Hundreds of churches, monasteries and
schools were closed. What little church life remained was limited
exclusively to liturgical services. The persecution of the church by
the state was fierce and relentless.
Relative Freedom
A period of relative
freedom came to the Russian Church during the Second World War. The
government needed church support for the war effort. In return for
rallying the people to fight for the fatherland, the Russian Church
received concessions from the state. Many churches, monasteries and
schools were reopened. In 1943, a church council officially elected
Sergius as patriarch. Until his death in 1945, Metropolitan Alexei
Simanskii was elected to replace him at a second council solemnly
conducted in the presence of a host of foreign church dignitaries.
Russian Emigre Disunity
In 1926, Metropolitan
Platon of the American Metropolia met with members of the Russian
Synod in Exile to discuss the problems of caring for the Russian
Orthodox Christians in diaspora. At this time, many Russian
immigrants had come to America and joined the American Metropolia
and, due to the circumstances, the feelings of Russian nationalism
in the American archdiocese were high. When the Synod in Exile
attempted to extend its jurisdiction over the American Metropolia,
however, Metropolitan Platon objected. Thus, he and his church were
"suspended" by the Synod in Exile, which by now had developed the
position of considering itself to be the one true Russian Orthodox
Church, the successor of the Church of Patriarch Tikhon. At this
same time, Metropolitan Eulogius also met with the bishops of the
Synod and likewise was "suspended" by them for refusing to recognize
their assumed jurisdiction over all Russian Orthodox outside of
Russia.
Moscow Pressure
In the nineteen-thirties,
pressure was also applied to the American Metropolia and the Western
European Exarchate by Moscow. Archbishop Benjamin Fedchenkoff came
to America from the USSR demanding the Metropolia's allegiance to
the Moscow Patriarchate. The fact that a pledge of allegiance to the
Soviet state was also demanded showed that the Russian church was
not free and that the American Metropolia could in no way enter into
normal relations with it. Thus, in 1934, the Russian Church
officially declared the Metropolia to be illegal and opened the
Exarchate of the Moscow Patriarchate in America. In the same year,
Metropolitan Platon died and Archbishop Theophilus Pashkovsky was
elected primate at the fifth council of the American church in
Pittsburgh.
American Destiny
In 1937, the sixth council
of the American Metropolia in New York affirmed a "moral" relation
with the Russian Synod in Exile, but when the Synod once more
demanded to govern the American church, the "moral" relationship was
broken. This sobor also blessed the establishment of St. Vladimir's
Seminary in New York City as a graduate school of Orthodox theology,
and St. Tikhon's Seminary as a pastoral school at St. Tikhon's
Monastery in South Canaan, Pennsylvania. Both schools opened in
1938.
In 1945, the seventh
council of the American Metropolia in Cleveland decided upon close
"spiritual" relations with the Moscow Patriarchate, but when, once
again, demands were made from Moscow for loyalty to the Soviet
government, the "spiritual" relationship was not realized.
In 1950, upon the death of
Metropolitan Theophilus, the eighth council of the American
Metropolia in New York elected as primate Archbishop Leonty
Turkevich, one of the original leaders of the American missionary
diocese. By this time, the Synod in Exile had set up its center in
America, and the Moscow Patriarchate was applying its strongest
pressures for the reestablishment of jurisdiction over the
Russian-American church which it continued to call "illegal." Thus,
at this eighth council, before his election as metropolitan,
Archbishop Leonty made a speech reaffirming the specifically
American destiny of the church which had been planted in the new
world by the Church of Russia more than a century and a half
earlier: "We will follow our line," the archbishop declared, "the
foundation of an administratively self-governing Orthodox Church in
America."
Western Europe
During this same period,
the Moscow Patriarchate also demanded a pledge of loyalty to the
soviet regime from the Russian Church in Western Europe.
Metropolitan Eulogius refused to comply, and appealed to
Constantinople. Thus, in 1931, the Russian Church in Western Europe
became an exarchate of the Patriarchate of Constantinople. Many
famous Russian churchmen and theologians were in the exarchate of
Metropolitan Eulogius who, in 1925, founded the Orthodox Theological
Institute in Paris, called by the name of St. Sergius. The
theological institute became the center of Orthodox learning in the
West where such men were gathered as Fr. S. Bulgakov (d. 1944), Fr.
V. Zenkovsky (d. 1962), Bishop Kassian Bezobrazov (d. 1965),
Archimandrite Cyprian Kern (d. 1960), Fr. N. Afanasiev (d. 1966),
Fr. G. Florovsky, who later became dean of St. Vladimir's Seminary
in New York and taught at Holy Cross Theological School in
Brookline, and Prof. A. Katashev (d. 1960), the last procurator of
the Holy Synod of the Russian Church and the first Minister of
Religion of the Provisional Government who served as secretary of
the Russian Church Council of 1917-1918.
Mention also must be made
of the pastors Fr. A. El-chaninoff (d. 1934) and Fr. S. Chetverikoff
(d. 1947) who, together with many of the professors of St. Sergius,
worked closely with the Russian Student Christian Movement, which
did a great work among Russian emigre's during this period.
American Jurisdictions
The second quarter of this
century was a time of increasing Orthodox ecclesiastical
jurisdictions in America. The controversy over the Greek Orthodox in
America between the Church of Greece and the Ecumenical Patriarchate
was finally solved, with the American archdiocese being, according
to its by-laws of 1930, a Greek Church for Greek-speaking Orthodox
Christians under the jurisdiction of Constantinople. In 1937,
Archbishop Athenagoras Spyrou, the future ecumenical patriarch, came
from the old world to head the American archdiocese. In the same
year, the Holy Cross Greek Orthodox Theological School, which later
moved to Brookline, Massachusetts, was opened in Pomfret,
Connecticut. Athenagoras served in America until his installation as
patriarch of Constantinople in 1949. He was replaced by Archbishop
Michael Konstantinides.
In 1933, the Antiochene
diocese, which had been led by Bishop Aftimios, split into two
groups. In 1936, Metropolitan Antony Bashir became the leader of the
larger group, while Archbishop Samuel David led the smaller group.
Both dioceses were in the jurisdiction of the Antiochene
partriarchate. Metropolitan Antony was one of the outstanding
hierarchs in American church history. He was ordained a priest in
1922 and served as a missionary among Syrian Orthodox Christians for
fourteen years until he was made the Metropolitan of the Antiochene
Orthodox Archdiocese which, since 1925, was officially separated
from the Russian mission. He was a pioneer in encouraging the use of
English in liturgical worship and was an outspoken supporter of
jurisdictional unity among all Orthodox in the new world. He was a
founder and leading member of the Standing Conference of Canonical
Orthodox Bishops in the Americas and was also a leader in Orthodox
ecumenical activity.
A Roumanian diocese was
formed in America in 1929 headed by Bishop Polycarp. After 1935,
there was no bishop in America for this group. After the war, a
great period of disorder reigned, during which time one group of
Roumanian Orthodox in America was led by Bishop Valerian Trifa,
whose episcopal consecration was judged irregular, and another group
was formed under the jurisdiction of Bucharest. During the same
period, a Serbian diocese was formed in America led by Bishop
Dionisiye under the jurisdiction of the Belgrade patriarchate, and a
Bulgarian diocese was also established led by Metropoion Andrey in
connection with the national Orthodox church in Bulgaria which was
officially established n 1945.
An Albanian Orthodox
diocese in America by Bishop Fan Noli, who was consecrated by
bishops of the Russian-American Metropolia, while another small
group of Albanians was formed under the jurisdiction of
Constantinople. During this time, the Albanian Church in the
homeland, which was declared autocephalous in 1937, underwent grave
persecutions.
In 1939, the patriarchate
of Constantinople consecrated Bishop Orestes Chornock as head of the
American Carpatho-Russian diocese composed of former uniate priests
and people. At this same time, Constantinople also established a
Ukrainian Orthodox jurisdiction in America led by Bishop Bohdan
Shpilka. Another Ukrainian jurisdiction found its place in America
also at this time, led by Archbishop Palladios, formerly of the
Church of Poland. During this time, the Ukrainian "self-consecrated"
church also established jurisdiction in the new world. Its leader in
the United States was Metropolitan John Theodorovich. It was being
argued by this group, during this period, that its situation had
been "regularized" in various ways, but it continued to be denied
recognition by the Orthodox churches.
Ecumenical Movement
In 1948, the World Council
of Churches was formed in Amsterdam from the Faith and Order and
Life and Work movements which had been meeting in the twenties and
thirties. By the time of its second assembly in Evanstan, Illinois,
in 1954, the partriarchates of Constantinople, Alexandria and
Antioch, the Church of Greece, the Russian American-Metropolia and
the Roumanian Episcopate in America had become official members of
the WCC. During this period, the leaders of the Russian Exarchate in
Western Europe, as well as certain Russians who remained faithful to
Moscow, such as Vladimir Lossky (d. 1958) and Nicholas Zernov, also
played a major role in ecumenical activity.
From: Bible and Church History by
Fr. Thomas Hopko,
Dept. of Religous Education - Orthodox Church in America, Crestwood,
New York