News: Russian Patriarch Alexiy II has passed away

edited December 1969 in Random Issues
May we all remember him and all our fellow Orthodox brothers and sisters in Russia in our prayers. This patriarch has brought Orthodoxy back to a country that had long forgotten it under communist rule.


MOSCOW: Aleksy II, the Russian Orthodox patriarch who led a revival of the church after the fall of Communism and built close ties to the Kremlin under Vladimir Putin, died Friday at his residence in Moscow, news agencies reported.

The patriarch was 79, and the church did not disclose the cause of death. He had long suffered from heart problems.

Aleksy II was named patriarch in 1990, just before the end of the Soviet Union, ascending to the leadership of a church that had often suffered brutal discrimination under the officially atheistic Communists. Under Stalin, many priests were killed or sent to labor camps, and cathedrals were destroyed.

First under President Boris Yeltsin and then under Putin, Yeltsin's successor, Aleksy II significantly deepened the role of the church in everyday life -- erecting and restoring cathedrals, introducing Orthodox religious education in public schools and becoming a prominent voice on moral issues. While church attendance has remained low, growing numbers of Russians identify themselves as Russian Orthodox.


Read more:
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/12/05/europe/05obit-russia.php
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7767015.stm

Comments

  • Yes indeed, lets pray for him and the strengthening of the church in challenging times.

    On another note, while the Patriarch has been instrumental in reviving Orthodox spirituality in Russia, the actual numbers of church goers have been reducing significantly, likewise in Europe. Does this speak of the invasion of modernist secular influences taking priority over traditions?

    Does anyone have an update on the Joint Commission working towards the unity of the Eastern & Oriental Orthodox families?
  • [quote author=rpm link=topic=7407.msg97975#msg97975 date=1228551957]
    Yes indeed, lets pray for him and the strengthening of the church in challenging times.

    On another note, while the Patriarch has been instrumental in reviving Orthodox spirituality in Russia, the actual numbers of church goers have been reducing significantly, likewise in Europe. Does this speak of the invasion of modernist secular influences taking priority over traditions?

    Does anyone have an update on the Joint Commission working towards the unity of the Eastern & Oriental Orthodox families?


    Hi Paulos,

    There are some who are venerating an icon of Stalin.They call themsleves orthodox christians. Check the icon of Saint Josef Stalin..weird world..

    image


    Vienna, November 27 – An Orthodox priest in a town near St. Petersburg has sparked controversy by putting up an icon showing the figure of Soviet dictator Joseph Stalin, with some believers and Communists viewing this as simple justice and others as an indication that many Russians have lost any sense of proportion or truth.

    One of the most widely covered stories in the Russian Federation this week concerns not the actions of President Dmitry Medvedev and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin or even the impact of the economic crisis but rather the decision of a priest to put up an icon portraying Stalin and the efforts of some to canonize him.

    The priest of St. Olga’s Church in Strel’na, Father Yevstafiy, recently put up an icon there to the Blessed Matrona of Moscow, on which Stalin was portrayed, without any of the attributes of sainthood but simply standing next to her. Thus, technically, it was not an icon of Stalin at all.

    But that distinction was quickly lost. Yevstafiy’s own parishioners demanded he put the icon with Stalin in a less prominent place and stop referring to the late Soviet dictator in prayers – even though the Strel’na priest has a long history of provocative actions, including putting up another icon portraying a Russian soldier who died in Chechnya as a “new martyr.”

    His superiors in the Russian Orthodox Church denounced this action as “inappropriate.” And story after story on Russian television, the print media and the Russian blogosphere played up the debate.

    In comments to “Novyye izvestiya,” Father Yevstafiy stood his ground. “The feeling that Stalin is the father of the peoples, that he is thus in part my high father has never left me in the course of my life. I thus have two fathers, besides the Heavenly Father: one is my father in the flesh and the other is the father of the peoples who was strict” and may “have made mistakes.”

    Any attacks on him are wrong and inappropriate the dissident priest continued, and he said that he “remembers Iosif Vissarionovich in all services where this is appropriate, especially on those days when he died, was born and when he celebrated the common Victory of our people.” And he insisted that Stalin was “a believer.”

    But at the same time, Yevstafiy was careful to specify that “this is not an icon glorifying Stalin. This is an image of. Matrona of Moscow. And Iosif Vissarionovich is one of those people whom she blessed. She blessed many people,” the priest said, including “a well-known architect and a well- known composer of those times. And Stalin too.”

    Spokesmen for the Moscow Patriarchate denounced this action but have taken no action against it, at least so far. The sharpest criticism of Yevstafiy’s pretentions came from the pastor of Moscow’s Church of the Tsar Martyr Nicholas, who said that the appearance of icons showing Stalin was “a terrible sign, an indication that people have completely lost a sense of truth.”

    The appearance of the icon showing the late Soviet dictator comes as some Russians are seeking his canonization by the Church. Among them are believers who agree with Yevstafiy and also some communists, who although themselves atheists, believe that the Soviet leader deserves this mark of respect.

    Sergey Malinkovich, the leader of the Communists of Petersburg and Leningrad Oblast, said that he would not deny that “the majority of the members of our organization are atheists, but there are believers and Orthodox too, [and] we try to respect their attitudes” in the work of the party.

    “Those priests with whom we have spoken say that the figure of Stalin enjoys great respect among their parishioners. Therefore we too have begun now to speak about his canonization and about the creation of icons on which he is portrayed.” He added that in short order, 10,000 of them would be printed to give to those who already see Stalin as “holy.”

    “For the Church, Lenin was a communist,” he continued, “but Stalin was a genuine national leader.” And “for us, he is approximately the same as Napoleon is for France.” Thus, he has already for a long time been “canonized in the popular consciousness.” Now all that needs to be done is to take care of “the formalities.”

    Source: Georgian Daily



  • Wow, truly some people seem to have completely lost it..

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