Alexander Mazyrin
The Russian Factor in the Failure of the Pan-Orthodox Council in the 1920-1930s
Alexander Mazyrin - St. Tikhon's Orthodox University (Moscow, Russia). am@pstbi.ru
The article explores the failed attempt of the all-Orthodox (Ecumenical) Council in the 1920-1930s through the prism of relations between the Constantinople Patriarchate, the Russian Church, and the Soviet government. In the situation of a strong Church discord in Russia, provoked by anti-religious policy of the Bolsheviks, the Patriarchate of Constantinople claimed the role of mediator between the Russian Church ("Tikhonovskaia") and the Pro-Soviet Renovationist schism. The Ecumenical Patriarchate tried to collaborate with Soviet authorities in attempts to unify "Tikhonites" and renovators so that they could participate at the prospected Ecumenical Council. However, the transition of Russian Western European parishes to Constantinople in 1931 caused strong negative reaction from both the Russian Church and Soviet authorities. Finally, the Soviet leadership did not authorize a united delegation to take part at the Inter-Orthodox PreCouncil meeting (Prosynod). The absence of the Russian Church made both Prosynod and the Ecumenical Council impossible.
Keywords: Pan-Orthodox (Ecumenical) Council, the Russian Orthodox Church, the Patriarchate of Constantinople, renovationist schism, Russian Western parishes, Commission on Cults in the Central Executive Committee, Stalin.
ТЕМА Всеправославного собора за последние сто лет неоднократно приобретала повышенную актуальность, привлекая к себе интерес религиоведов и историков. В отечественной историографии наибольшее внимание уделено периоду оживления межправославных контактов в 1960-е гг., когда подготовку
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к проведению Всеправославного собора со стороны Русской церкви возглавлял митрополит Никодим (Ротов)1. Между тем межправославная предсоборная активность была не менее значительной в 1920-1930-е гг., но Русская церковь тогда не мо ...
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