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Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia

The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (Russian: Ру́сская Правосла́вная Це́рковь Заграни́цей, romanizedRusskaya Pravoslavnaya Tserkov' Zagranitsey, lit.'Russian Orthodox Church Abroad'), also called Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia or ROCOR, or Russian Orthodox Church Abroad (ROCA), is a semi-autonomous part of the Russian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate). Currently, the position of First-Hierarch of the ROCOR is occupied by Metropolitan Nicholas (Olhovsky).[2]

Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia
Ру́сская Правосла́вная Це́рковь Заграни́цей
ROCOR headquarters,
75 E 93rd St, New York.
AbbreviationROCOR
ClassificationEastern Orthodox
PrimatePatriarch of Moscow & All Rus' Kirill
First HierarchMetropolitan Nicholas (Olhovsky)
LanguageChurch Slavonic (worship),
Russian (preaching),
English (USA, Canada, UK, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand),
Spanish (Spain and Latin America),
German (Germany),
French (France, Switzerland, Canada),
Indonesian (Indonesia),
Haitian Creole (Haiti) and others
HeadquartersPatriarchal: Moscow, Russia
Jurisdictional: New York City, NY
TerritoryAmericas
Europe
Australia
New Zealand
FounderAnthony (Khrapovitsky)
Anastassy (Gribanovsky)
others
Independence1920
Reunion2007
RecognitionSemi-autonomous within Russian Orthodox Church
SeparationsRussian Orthodox Autonomous Church (1994, then called the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad)
Members27,700 in the U.S. (9,000 regular church attendees[α])[1][β]
Official websitewww.synod.com
  1. ^ These numbers reflect only the supposed US adherents. They do not take into account ROCOR's numbers in Australia, Germany, and Indonesia.
  2. ^ The number of adherents given in the Atlas of American Orthodox Christian Churches is defined as "individual full members" with the addition of their children. It also includes an estimate of how many are not members but regularly participate in parish life. Regular attendees includes only those who regularly attend church and regularly participate in church life.

The ROCOR was established in the early 1920s as a de facto independent ecclesiastical jurisdiction of Eastern Orthodoxy, initially due to lack of regular liaison between the central church authority in Moscow and some bishops due to their voluntary exile after the Russian Civil War. These bishops migrated with other Russians to Western European cities and nations, including Paris and other parts of France, and to the United States and other western countries. Later these bishops rejected the Moscow Patriarchate′s unconditional political loyalty to the Bolshevik regime in the USSR. This loyalty was formally promulgated by the Declaration of 20 July 1927 of Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky), deputy Patriarchal locum tenens. Metropolitan Antony (Khrapovitsky), of Kiev and Galicia, was the founding First-Hierarch of the ROCOR.[3]

After 80 years of separation followed by the fall of the Soviet Union, on 17 May 2007, the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia officially signed the Act of Canonical Communion with the Moscow Patriarchate, restoring the canonical link between the churches.

The ROCOR jurisdiction has around 400 parishes worldwide and an estimated membership of more than 400,000 people.[4] Of these, 232 parishes and 10 monasteries are in the United States; they have 92,000 declared adherents and over 9,000 regular church attendees.[1][5] The ROCOR has 13 hierarchs, with male and female monasteries in the United States, Canada, and the Americas; Australia, New Zealand, and Western Europe.[6]

History

Precursors and early history

In May 1919, during the Russian Revolution, the White military forces under General Anton Denikin were achieving the apex of their military success. In the Russian city of Stavropol, then controlled by the White Army, a group of Russian bishops organized an ecclesiastical administration body, the Temporary Higher Church Administration in Southeastern Russia (Russian: Временное высшее церковное управление на Юго-Востоке России). On 7 November (20 November) 1920, Tikhon, Patriarch of Moscow, his Synod, and the Supreme Church Council in Moscow issued a joint resolution, No. 362, instructing all Russian Orthodox Christian bishops, should they be unable to maintain liaison with the Supreme Church Administration in Moscow, to seek protection and guidance by organizing among themselves. The resolution was interpreted as effectively legitimizing the Temporary Higher Church Administration, and served as the legal basis for the eventual establishment of a completely independent church body.[7]

In November 1920, after the final defeat of the Russian Army in South Russia, a number of Russian bishops evacuated from Crimea to Constantinople, then occupied by British, French, and Italian forces. After learning that General Pyotr Wrangel intended to keep his army, they likewise decided to keep the Russian ecclesiastical organization as a separate entity abroad. The Temporary Church Authority met on 19 November 1920 aboard the ship Grand Duke Alexader Mikhailovich (Russian: «Великий князь Александр Михайлович»), presided over by Metropolitan Antony (Khrapovitsky). Metropolitan Antony and Bishop Benjamin (Fedchenkov) were appointed to examine the canonicity of the organization. On 2 December 1920, they received permission from Metropolitan Dorotheos of Prousa, Locum Tenens of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople, to establish "for the purpose of the service of the population [...] and to oversee the ecclesiastic life of Russian colonies in Orthodox countries a temporary committee (epitropia) under the authority of the Ecumenical Patriarchate"; the committee was called the Temporary Higher Church Administration Abroad (THCAA).

In Karlovci

On 14 February 1921, Metropolitan Antony (Khrapovitsky) settled in the town of Sremski Karlovci, Serbia (then within the Kingdom of Yugoslavia), where he was given the palace of former Patriarchs of Karlovci (the Patriarchate of Karlovci had been abolished in 1920).[8] In the next months, at the invitation of Patriarch Dimitrije of Serbia, the other eight bishops of the THCAA, including Anastasius (Gribanovsky) and Benjamin (Fedchenkov), as well as numerous priests and monks, relocated to Serbia.[9] On 31 August 1921, the Council of Bishops of the Serbian Church passed a resolution, effective from 3 October, recognizing the THCAA as an administratively independent jurisdiction for exiled Russian clergy outside the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (SHS), as well as for those Russian clergy in the Kingdom who were not in parish or state educational service. The THCAA jurisdiction was subsequently extended to hearing divorce cases of exiled Russians.[8]

 
Sergey Paleolog, General Pyotr Wrangel, Metropolitan Anthony (Khrapovitsky), Archbishop Anastasius (Gribanovsky), Olga Wrangel and Archpriest Peter Belovidov in Topčider, Belgrade. Easter, April 1927

With the agreement of Patriarch Dimitrije of Serbia, between 21 November and 2 December 1921, the "General assembly of representatives of the Russian Church abroad" (Russian: Всезаграничное Русское Церковное Собрание) took place in Sremski Karlovci. It was later renamed as the "First All-Diaspora Council" and was presided over by Metropolitan Anthony.

The Council established the "Supreme Ecclesiastic Administration Abroad" (SEAA), composed of a patriarchal Locum Tenens, a Synod of Bishops, and a Church Council. The Council decided to appoint Metropolitan Anthony as the Locum Tenens, but he declined to accept the position without permission from Moscow, and instead identified as the President of the SEAA. The Council adopted a number of resolutions and appeals (missives), with the two most notable ones being addressed to the flock of the Russian Orthodox Church ″in diaspora and exile″ («Чадам Русской Православной Церкви, в рассеянии и изгнании сущим») and to the 1922 International Conference in Genoa. The former, adopted with a majority of votes (but not unanimously, Metropolitan Eulogius Georgiyevsky being the most prominent critic of such specific political declarations), expressly proclaimed a political goal of restoring monarchy in Russia with a tsar from the House of Romanov.[10] The appeal to the Genoa Conference, which was published in 1922, called on the world powers to intervene and “help banish Bolshevism” from Russia.[11] The majority of the Council members secretly decided to request that Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich head up the Russian monarchist movement in exile. (But, pursuant to the laws of the Russian Empire, the seniormost surviving male member of the Romanovs was Kirill Vladimirovich, and in August 1924 he proclaimed himself as the Russian Emperor in exile.)[12]

Patriarch Tikhon addressed a decree of 5 May 1922 to Metropolitan Eulogius Georgiyevsky, abolishing the SEAA and declaring the political decisions of the Karlovci Council to be against the position of the Russian Church. Tikhon appointed Metropolitan Eulogius as administrator for the “Russian orthodox churches abroad”.[13] Meeting in Sremski Karlovci on 2 September 1922, pursuant to Tikhon's decree, the Council of Bishops abolished the SEAA, in its place forming the Temporary Holy Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia, with Metropolitan Anthony as its head by virtue of seniority. This Synod exercised direct authority over Russian parishes in the Balkans, the Middle East, and the Far East.

In North America, however, a conflict developed among bishops who did not recognize the authority of the Synod, led by Metropolitan Platon (Rozhdestvensky); this group formed the American Metropolia, the predecessor to the OCA. In Western Europe, Metropolitan Eulogius (Georgievsky), based in Paris from late 1922, did likewise, stating that the Synod was a mere "a moral authority." Metropolitan Eulogius later broke off from the ROC, and in February 1931 joined the Ecumenical Patriarchate. This seminal act formed the Patriarchal Exarchate for Orthodox Parishes of Russian Tradition in Western Europe.

On 5 September 1927, the Council of Bishops in Sremski Karlovci, presided over by Metropolitan Anthony, decreed a formal break of liaison with the ″Moscow church authority.″ They rejected a demand by Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky) of Nizhny Novgorod, who was acting on behalf of Locum Tenens (Metropolitan Peter of Krutitsy, imprisoned then in the Soviet Gulag, where he later died), to declare political loyalty to the Soviet authorities. The Council of Bishops said that the church administration in Moscow, headed by Metropolitan Sergius (Stragorodsky), was ″enslaved by the godless Soviet power that has deprived it of freedom in its expression of will and canonical governance of the Church.″[14]

While rejecting both the Bolsheviks and the de facto head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Metropolitan Sergius (who in 1943 would be elected as Patriarch), the ROCOR continued to nominally recognize the authority of the imprisoned Metropolitan Peter of Krutitsy. On September 9, the Council stated: "The part of the Russian Church that finds itself abroad considers itself an inseparable, spiritually united branch of the great Russian Church. It doesn't separate itself from its Mother Church and doesn't consider itself autocephalous."[15] Meanwhile, inside the USSR, Metropolitan Sergius′ Declaration caused a schism among the flock of the Patriarch's Church. Many dissenting believers broke ties with Metropolitan Sergius.[4][16]

On 22 June 1934, Metropolitan Sergius and his Synod in Moscow passed judgment on Metropolitan Anthony and his Synod, declaring them to be suspended.[17] Metropolitan Anthony refused to recognize this decision, claiming that it was made under political pressure from Soviet authorities and that Metropolitan Sergius had illegally usurped the position of Locum Tenens. He was supported in this by the Patriarch Varnava of Serbia, who continued to maintain communion with the ROCOR Synod. However, Patriarch Varnava also attempted to mediate between the Karlovci Synod and Metropolitan Sergius in Moscow, and to find a canonically legitimate way to settle the dispute. In early 1934, he had sent a letter to Sergius proposing that the Karlovci bishops be transferred to the jurisdiction of the Serbian Church; the proposal was rejected by Sergius. Sergius continued to demand that all Russian clergy outside the USSR pledge loyalty to the Soviet authorities.[18] Patriarch Varnava's attempts in the mid-1930s to reconcile the rival exile Russian jurisdictions were likewise unsuccessful.[19]

 
Russian church of Holy Trinity in Belgrade, Serbia,
built in 1924 by Russian émigrés.

Metropolitan Anthony (Khrapovitsky) died in 1936. He was succeeded by Anastasius (Gribanovsky).

After the deaths of Metropolitan Anthony in August 1936 and Metropolitan Peter of Krutitsy in October 1937 (albeit falsely reported a year prior), the Russian bishops in exile held the Second All-Diaspora Council, first in Belgrade, then in Sremski Karlovci, in August 1938.[20] The Council was presided over by Metropolitan Anastasius (Gribanovsky), and was attended by 12 other exiled Russian bishops (at least double the number of Orthodox (Patriarchal) bishops who were allowed to serve within the USSR), 26 priests, and 58 laypersons.[21][22] The Council confirmed the leading role of the Church and its bishops in Russian émigré organizations, and adopted two missives: to Russians in the USSR (Russian: «К Русскому народу в Отечестве страждущему») and to the Russian flock in diaspora (Russian: «К Русской пастве в рассеянии сущей»).[23]

From February 1938, Germany′s authorities demanded that all the Russian clergy in the territories controlled by Germany be under the Karlovci jurisdiction (as opposed to that of Paris-based Eulogius). They insisted that an ethnic German, Seraphim Lade, be put in charge of the Orthodox diocese of Berlin.[24]

World War II and post-war period

 
Timeline of the separations of the ROCOR and some other churches from the ROC

The relationship between members of the ROCOR and the Nazis in the run-up to and during World War II has been an issue addressed by both the Church and its critics. Metropolitan Anastassy wrote a letter to Adolf Hitler in 1938, thanking him for his aid to the Russian Diaspora in allowing them to build a Russian Orthodox Cathedral in Berlin and praising his patriotism.[25] This has been defended as an act that occurred when the Metropolitan and others in the church knew "little …of the inner workings of the Third Reich."[26] At the ROCOR Second Church History Conference in 2002, a paper said that “the attempt of the Nazi leadership to divide the Church into separate and even inimical church formations was met with internal church opposition.”[27]

Meanwhile, the USSR leadership's policies towards religion in general, as well as policy towards the Moscow Patriarchate's jurisdiction in the USSR, changed significantly. In early September 1943, Joseph Stalin met at the Kremlin with a group of three surviving ROC metropolitans headed by Sergius (Stragorodsky). He allowed the Moscow Patriarchate to convene a council and elect a Patriarch, open theological schools, and reopen a few previously closed major monasteries and some churches (said institutions had been reopened in territory occupied by Germany).[28] The Soviet government decisively sided with the Moscow Patriarchate, while the so-called Obnovlentsi ("Renovationists," i.e. the modernist, pro-Soviet current in the ROC), previously favored by the authorities, were sidelined; their proponents were disappeared shortly after. These developments did not change the mutual rejection between the Moscow Patriarchate and the ROCOR leaderships.

Days after the election in September 1943 of Sergius (Stragorodsky) as Patriarch in Moscow, Metropolitan Anastasius (Gribanovsky) made a statement against recognizing his election. Thus, the German authorities allowed the ROCOR Synod to hold a convention in Vienna, which took place on 21—26 October 1943. The Synod adopted a resolution declaring the election of Patriarch in Moscow to be uncanonical and hence invalid, and called on all Russian Orthodox faithful to fight against Communism.[29]

On 8 September 1944, days before Belgrade was taken by the Red Army, on the attack from the East, Metropolitan Anastasius (Gribanovsky), along with his office and the other bishops, left Serbia for Vienna.[30] A few months later, they moved to Munich; finally, in November 1950, they immigrated to the United States, together with numerous other Russian Orthodox refugees in the postwar period.

After the end of World War II, the Moscow Patriarchate was the globally dominant branch of Russian Orthodox Christianity. Countries whose Orthodox bishops had been part of the ROCOR in the interwar period, such as Yugoslavia, China, Bulgaria, and East Germany, were now within the USSR-led bloc, which rendered any activity by the ROCOR politically impossible. A number of ROCOR parishes and clergy, notably Eulogius (Georgiyevsky) (in a jurisdiction under the Ecumenical See since 1931), joined the Moscow Patriarchate, and some repatriated to the USSR.[31]

On the other hand, the ROCOR, by 1950 headquartered in New York, the United States, rejected both the Communist regime in the Soviet Union and the Moscow Patriarchate. Its leaders condemned the Moscow Patriarchate as a Soviet Church run by the secret police.[31]

Until well after World War II, most of the Orthodox Church properties in Palestine were controlled by leaders opposed to both the Soviet rule and the Moscow Patriarchate, i.e. mainly within the ROCOR.[citation needed]

When Israel became a state in 1948, it transferred all of the property under the control of the ROCOR within its borders to the Soviet-dominated Russian Orthodox Church in appreciation for Moscow's support of the Jewish state (this support was short-lived). The ROCOR maintained control over churches and properties in the Jordanian-ruled West Bank until the late 1980s.[citation needed]

In January 1951, the Soviets reopened the Russian Palestine Society under the direction of Communist Party agents from Moscow, and replaced Archimandrite Vladimir with Ignaty Polikarp, who had been trained by Communists. They attracted numerous Christian Arabs to the ROC who had Communist sympathies. The members of other branches of Orthodoxy refused to associate with the Soviet-led ROC in Palestine.[32]

Cold War period

The third First-Hierarch of the ROCOR was Philaret (Voznesensky), who served from 1964 until his death in 1985.

After the declaration of Metropolitan Sergius of 1927, there were a range of opinions regarding the Moscow Patriarchate within ROCOR. There was a general belief in ROCOR that the Soviet government was manipulating the Moscow Patriarchate to one extent or another, and that under such circumstances administrative ties were impossible. There were also official statements made that the elections of the patriarchs of Moscow which occurred after 1927 were invalid because they were not conducted freely (without the interference of the Soviets) or with the participation of the entire Russian Church.[33]

Historically, ROCOR has always affirmed that it was an inseparable part of the Russian Church, and that its autonomous status was only temporary, based upon Ukaz 362, until such time as the domination of the Soviet government over the affairs of the Church should cease:

"The Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia is an indissoluble part of the Russian Orthodox Church, and for the time until the extermination in Russia of the atheist government, is self-governing on conciliar principles in accordance with the resolution of the Patriarch, the Most Holy Synod, and the Highest Church Council [Sobor] of the Russian Church dated 7/20 November 1920, No. 362."[34]

Similarly, Metropolitan Anastassy (Gribanovsky) wrote in his last will and testament:

"As regards the Moscow Patriarchate and its hierarchs, then, so long as they continue in close, active and benevolent cooperation with the Soviet Government, which openly professes its complete godlessness and strives to implant atheism in the entire Russian nation, then the Church Abroad, maintaining Her purity, must not have any canonical, liturgical or even simply external communion with them whatsoever, leaving each one of them at the same time to the final judgment of the Council (Sobor) of the future free Russian Church."[35]

The Catacomb Church had been a significant part of the Russian Church prior to the relaxation of the suppression of the Church on the part of Stalin, in 1943. Most of those in the ROCOR were White émigrés who had left Russia well before World War II. They were unaware of the changes that had occurred immediately after World War II—most significantly that with the election of Patriarch Alexei I in 1945, after which most of the Catacomb Church was reconciled with the Moscow Patriarchate. By the 1970s, due to this reconciliation, as well as to continued persecution by the Soviets, there was very little left of the Catacomb Church. Alexander Solzhenitsyn made this point in a letter to the 1974 All-Diaspora Sobor of the ROCOR, in which he stated that ROCOR should not "show solidarity with a mysterious, sinless, but also bodiless catacomb."[36]

Vitaly (Ustinov) served as the fourth First-Hierarch from 1985 until his retirement in 2001. After the end of the Soviet Union in December 1991, ROCOR continued to maintain its administrative independence from the Russian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate). In May 1990, months prior to the complete disintegration of the USSR, the ROCOR decided to establish new, "Free Russian" parishes [ru] in the USSR, and to consecrate bishops to oversee such parishes.

Post-Soviet period

In 1997 Patriarch of Moscow Alexei II attempted to visit a ROCOR-held monastery in Hebron with Yasser Arafat. "The Moscow-based church has enjoyed a close relationship with Arafat since his guerrilla fighter days."[37] The ROCOR clergy refused to allow Arafat and the patriarch to enter the church, holding that Alexei had no legitimate authority. Two weeks later police officers of the Palestinian Authority arrived; they evicted the ROCOR clergy and turned the property over to the ROC.[citation needed]

Alexei made another visit in early January 2000 to meet with Arafat, asking "for help in recovering church properties"[38] as part of a "worldwide campaign to recover properties lost to churches that split off during the Communist era".[39] Later that month the Palestinian Authority again acted to evict ROCOR clergy, this time from the 3-acre (12,000 m2) Monastery of Abraham's Oak in Hebron.[38]

Metropolitan Vitaly (Ustinov) in 2001 was succeeded by the fifth First-Hierarch of the ROCOR, Metropolitan Laurus (Škurla), who oversaw the reconciliation with the Russian Orthodox Church in 2007. After the death of Laurus in 2008, he was succeeded by the sixth First-Hierarch, Metropolitan Hilarion (Kapral). Metropolitan Hilarion (Kapral) reposed in May 2022.

Reconciliation with the Moscow Patriarchate

In 2000 Metropolitan Laurus became the First Hierarch of the ROCOR; he expressed interest in the idea of reunification. At the time ROCOR insisted that the Moscow Patriarchate address the murders of Tsar Nicholas II and his family in 1918 by the Bolsheviks. The ROCOR held that "the Moscow Patriarchy must speak clearly and passionately about the murder of the tsar's family, the defeat of the anti-Bolshevik movement, and the execution and persecution of priests."[6] The ROCOR accused the leadership of the ROC as being submissive to the Russian government and were also alarmed by their ties with other denominations of Christianity, especially Catholicism.[6]

At the jubilee Council of Bishops in 2000, the Russian Orthodox Church canonized Tsar Nicholas and his family, along with more than 1,000 martyrs and confessors. This Council also enacted a document on relations between the Church and the secular authorities, censoring servility and complaisance. They also rejected the idea of any connection between E. Orthodoxy and Catholicism.[6]

ROCOR(V)

The possibility of rapprochement led to a minor schism from the ROCOR in 2001.[40][41]

The fourth First-Hierarch of the ROCOR, Metropolitan Vitaly (Ustinov), retired in 2001, citing health reasons. After the election of his successor, Metropolitan Laurus (Škurla), in October 2001, Vitaly released an epistle denouncing the appointment and asserting his continuing primacy. A number of ROCOR clergy and parishioners who opposed to reunification with the Moscow Patriarchate, including the suspended Bishop Varnava (Prokofieff) of Cannes, formed a new church administration around Metropolitan Vitaly, renaming themselves as the Russian Orthodox Church in Exile (ROCiE) then to "Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia"; in common parlance this church is called ROCOR-Vitaly or ROCOR(V) (Russian: РПЦЗ(В)).

The episcopate of the ROCOR asserted that Metropolitan Vitaly was being held hostage by schismatics who took advantage of his failing health and used his name to produce a schism. They claimed that Metropolitan Vitaly's entourage forged his signature on epistles and documents.[42] One of the churches which splintered from the ROCOR(V) is the Russian True Orthodox Church which was formed in 2002.

Reconciliation talks

In 2003 President Vladimir Putin of Russia met with Metropolitan Laurus in New York. Patriarch Alexy II of the ROC later hailed this event as an important step, saying that it showed the ROCOR that "not a fighter against God, but an Orthodox Christian is at the country's helm."[43]

In May 2004, Metropolitan Laurus, the Primate of the ROCOR, visited Russia participating in several joint services.[44] In June 2004, a contingent of ROCOR clergy met with Patriarch Alexey II. Both parties agreed to set up committees to begin dialogue towards rapprochement. Both sides set up joint commissions, and determined the range of issues to be discussed at the All-Diaspora Council, which met for the first time since 1974.[44]

After a series of six reconciliation meetings,[45] the ROCOR and the Patriarchate of Moscow, on June 21, 2005, simultaneously announced that rapprochement talks were leading toward the resumption of full relations between the ROCOR and the Patriarchate of Moscow. They said that the ROCOR would be given autonomous status.[46][47] In this arrangement, the ROCOR was announced to

"join the Moscow Patriarchate as a self-governed branch, similar to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church. It will retain its autonomy in terms of pastoral, educational, administrative, economic, property and secular issues."[44]

While Patriarchate Alexy said that the ROCOR would keep its property and fiscal independence, and that its autonomy would not change "in the foreseeable future", he added that "Maybe this will change in decades and there will be some new wishes. But today we have enough concerns and will not make guesses.”[48]

On May 12, 2006, the general congress of the ROCOR confirmed its willingness to reunite with the Russian Orthodox Church. The latter hailed this resolution as:

"an important step toward restoring full unity between the Moscow Patriarchate and the part of the Russian emigration that was isolated from it as a result of the revolution, the civil war in Russia, and the ensuing impious persecution against the Orthodox Church."[49]

In September 2006, the ROCOR Synod of Bishops approved the text of the document worked out by the commissions, an Act of Canonical Communion. In October 2006, the commissions met again to propose procedures and a time for signing the document.[50] The Act of Canonical Communion went into effect upon its confirmation by the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church; the Act is based on a previous resolution of the Holy Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church, On the Relationship with the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, held in Moscow on 3–8 October 2004, as well on the Synod of Bishops of the ROCOR's resolution Regarding the Act on Canonical Communion take at the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia held in San Francisco on 15–19 May 2006.[51]

Signing of the Act of Canonical Communion

 
Solemn signing of the Act of Canonical Communion in the Cathedral of Christ the Savior, Moscow. Left to right: Archpriest Alexander Lebedev, First-Hierarch of the ROCOR Metropolitan Laurus, Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Russia, Protopriest Nikolai Balashov. 17 May 2007

On December 28, 2006, the leaders officially announced that the Act of Canonical Communion would be signed. The signing took place on May 17, 2007, followed immediately by a full restoration of communion with the Moscow Patriarchate. It was celebrated by a Divine Liturgy at the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow, at which the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Alexius II and the First-Hierarch of ROCOR concelebrated for the first time in history.

On 17 May 2007, at 9:15 a.m., Metropolitan Laurus was greeted at Christ the Savior Cathedral in Moscow by a special peal of the bells. Shortly thereafter, Patriarch Alexey II entered the Cathedral. After the Patriarch read the prayer for the unity of the Russian Church, the Act of Canonical Communion was read aloud, and two copies were each signed by both Metropolitan Laurus and Patriarch Alexey II. The two hierarchs exchanged the "kiss of peace," after which they and the entire Russian Church sang "God Grant You Many Years." Following this, the Divine Liturgy of the Feast of the Ascension of Our Lord began, culminating with the entirety of the bishops of both ROCOR and MP partaking of the Eucharist.

Present at all of this was Russian President Vladimir Putin, who was thanked by Patriarch Alexey for helping to facilitate the reconciliation. Putin addressed the audience of Orthodox Christians, visitors, clergy, and press, saying,

"The split in the church was caused by an extremely deep political split within Russian society itself. We have realized that national revival and development in Russia are impossible without reliance on the historical and spiritual experience of our people. We understand well, and value, the power of pastoral words which unite the people of Russia. That is why restoring the unity of the church serves our common goals."[4]

The Hierarchs of the Russian Church Abroad served again with the Patriarch on 19 May, in the consecration of the Church of the New Martyrs in Butovo firing range. They had laid the cornerstone of the church in 2004 during their initial visit.[52][53]

President Vladimir Putin gave a reception at the Kremlin to celebrate the reunification. In attendance were Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Russia and members of the Holy Synod for the Russian Orthodox Church; Metropolitan Laurus for the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia; presidential chief of staff Sergei Sobyanin, First Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, and Minister of Culture and Mass Communications Aleksandr Sokolov. Before the reception the participants posed for photographs by the Assumption Cathedral.[54]

ROCA-PSCA

After the signature of the Act in 2007, there was a minor schism in the ROCOR. Critics of the reunification continue to argue that "the hierarchy in Moscow still has not properly addressed the issue of KGB infiltration of the church hierarchy during the Soviet period."[4][55] Bishop Agafangel (Pashkovsky) [ru] of Odessa and Tauria, and with him some of ROCOR's parishes in Ukraine, refused to enter the jurisdiction of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate).[56] Agafangel was suspended for disobedience by an extraordinary session of the ROCOR synod in June 2007.[57]

Despite censure, Agafangel persisted with the support of some ROCOR parishes inside and outside Ukraine which had also refused to submit to the Act of Canonical Communion. Agafangel then finalized the schism from the ROCOR by ordaining two bishops on 7 December 2007, Andronik (Kotrliaroff) as Bishop of Richmond Hill and New York, and Sophronius (Musienko) as Bishop of Saint Petersburg and Northern Russia. The church headed by Agafangel is known as "Russian Orthodox Church Abroad - Provisional Supreme Church Authority" (ROCA-PSCA), or in common parlance ROCOR-Agafangel or ROCOR(A).

Structure

The ROCOR is headed by the First-Hierarch of the ROCOR (Protohierarch), primate of the whole ROCOR, head of the ROCOR Holy Synod, and bishop of the Russian Orthodox Eparchy of Eastern America and New York. The Holy Synod also has a vice-president. The "supreme authority of the ecclesiastical legislative, administrative, judicial and executive organ" of the ROCOR is the Council of Bishops of the ROCOR [ru] which is convened about every two years.[58]

The ROCOR is divided into dioceses, themselves in some cases subdivided into smaller dioceses.

The division into dioceses is as follows:

ROCOR oversees and owns properties of the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission in Jerusalem, which acts as caretaker to three holy sites in East Jerusalem and Israel/Palestine, all of which are monasteries.

Finance

The main source of income for the ROCOR central authority is lease of a part of the building that houses the headquarters of the ROCOR's Synod of Bishops situated at the intersection of East 93rd Street and Park Avenue to a private school, estimated in 2016 to generate about USD 500,000; the ROCOR was said not to make any monetary contributions towards the ROC's budget.[59]

Western Rite in the ROCOR

There is a long history of the Western Rite in the ROCOR, although attitudes toward it have varied, and the number of Western Rite parishes is relatively small. St. Petroc Monastery in Tasmania is now under the oversight of Metropolitan Daniel of the Moscow Metropolitanate.[60] The Benedictine Christ the Savior Monastery, founded in 1993 in Rhode Island and moved to Hamilton, Ontario, in 2008 (see main article for references) has incorporated the Oratory of Our Lady of Glastonbury as its monastery chapel. The oratory had previously been a mission of the Antiochian Western Rite Vicariate in the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America, but since October 2007 has been a part of ROCOR. There are a few other parishes that either use the Western Rite exclusively or in part. An American parish, St Benedict of Nursia, in Oklahoma City, uses both the Western Rite and the Byzantine Rite.

In 2011, the ROCOR declared all of its Western Rite parishes to be a "vicariate", parallel to the Antiochian Western Rite Vicariate, and established a website.[61]

On 10 July 2013, an extraordinary session of the Synod of Bishops of ROCOR removed Bishop Jerome of Manhattan and Fr Anthony Bondi from their positions in the vicariate; ordered a halt to all ordinations and a review of those recently conferred by Bishop Jerome; and decreed preparations be made for the assimilation of existing Western Rite communities to mainstream ROCOR liturgical practice.[62]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Krindatch, A. (2011). Atlas of American Orthodox Christian Churches. (p. 80). Brookline, MA: Holy Cross Orthodox Press
  2. ^ "His Grace Bishop Nicholas is elected First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia".
  3. ^ Burlacioiu, Ciprian (April 2018). "Russian Orthodox Diaspora as a Global Religion after 1918". Studies in World Christianity. 24 (1): 4–24. doi:10.3366/swc.2018.0202. ISSN 1354-9901.
  4. ^ a b c d David Holley (May 17, 2007). . Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 2007-05-20.
  5. ^ "Parishes". Assembly of Canonical Orthodox Bishops of the United States of America. Retrieved 2021-10-23.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ a b c d "Russian Orthodox Church reunited: Why only now?". 2007-05-17. Retrieved 2009-08-06.
  7. ^ Положение о Русской Православной Церкви Заграницей: ″Пр. 1. Русская Православная Церковь заграницей есть неразрывная часть поместной Российской Православной Церкви, временно самоуправляющаяся на соборных началах до упразднения в России безбожной власти, в соответствии с Постановлением Св. Патриарха, Св. Синода и Высшего Церковного Совета Российской Церкви от 7/20 ноября 1920 г. за № 362. [...] Пр. 4. Русская Православная Церковь заграницей в своей внутренней жизни и управлении руководствуется: Священным Писанием и Священным Преданием, священными канонами и церковными законами, правилами и благочестивыми обычаями Поместной Российской Православной Церкви и, в частности, — Постановлением Святейшего Патриарха, Свящ. Синода и Высшего Церковного Совета Православной Российской Церкви от 7/20 ноября 1920 года № 362, [...]″
  8. ^ a b ″Загранична црква у Сремским Карловцима: Из тајних архива УДБЕ: РУСКА ЕМИГРАЦИЈА У ЈУГОСЛАВИЈИ 1918–1941.″ // Politika, 23 December 2017, p. 22.
  9. ^ ″Прихваћен позив патријарха Димитрија: Из тајних архива УДБЕ: РУСКА ЕМИГРАЦИЈА У ЈУГОСЛАВИЈИ 1918–1941.″ // Politika, 21 December 2017, p. 25.
  10. ^ “[...] И ныне пусть неусыпно пламенеет молитва наша – да укажет Господь пути спасения и строительства родной земли; да даст защиту Вере и Церкви и всей земле русской и да осенит он сердце народное; да вернет на всероссийский Престол Помазанника, сильного любовью народа, законного православного Царя из Дома Романовых. [...]” (Протоиерей Аркадий Маковецкий. Белая Церковь: Вдали от атеистического террора: Питер, 2009, ISBN 978-5-49807-400-9 , pp. 31–32).
  11. ^ Протоиерей Аркадий Маковецкий. Белая Церковь: Вдали от атеистического террора: Питер, 2009, ISBN 978-5-49807-400-9 , p. 35.
  12. ^ ″У вртлогу политичке борбе: Из тајних архива УДБЕ: РУСКА ЕМИГРАЦИЈА У ЈУГОСЛАВИЈИ 1918–1941.″ // Politika, 15 January 2018, p. 22.
  13. ^ Протоиерей Аркадий Маковецкий. Белая Церковь: Вдали от атеистического террора: Питер, 2009, ISBN 978-5-49807-400-9 , p. 38.
  14. ^ Митрополит Антоний (Храповицкий). Избранные труды. Письма. Материалы. Moscow: ПСТГУ, 2007, р. 786: ″«Заграничная часть Всероссийской Церкви должна прекратить сношения с Московской церковной властью ввиду невозможности нормальных сношений с нею и ввиду порабощения её безбожной советской властью, лишающей её свободы в своих волеизъявлениях и каноническом управлении Церковью»″.
  15. ^ РПЦЗ: КРАТКАЯ ИСТОРИЧЕСКАЯ СПРАВКА: «Заграничная часть Русской Церкви почитает себя неразрывною, духовно-единою ветвью великой Русской Церкви. Она не отделяет себя от своей Матери-Церкви и не считает себя автокефальною».
  16. ^ Karen Dawisha (1994). Russia and the New States of Eurasia: The Politics of Upheaval. New York, NY: Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge.
  17. ^ Постановления Заместителя Патриаршего Местоблюстителя и при нем Патриаршего Священного Синода: О Карловацкой группе (от 22 июня 1934 года, № 50) (ЖМП, 1934 г.)
  18. ^ ″Домети мисије патријарха Варнаве: Из тајних архива УДБЕ: РУСКА ЕМИГРАЦИЈА У ЈУГОСЛАВИЈИ 1918–1941.″ // Politika, 4 January 2018, p. 25.
  19. ^ ″Нови покушај патријарха Варнаве: Из тајних архива УДБЕ: РУСКА ЕМИГРАЦИЈА У ЈУГОСЛАВИЈИ 1918–1941.″ // Politika, 5 January 2018, p. 18.
  20. ^ ″Нема Русије без православне монархије: Из тајних архива УДБЕ: РУСКА ЕМИГРАЦИЈА У ЈУГОСЛАВИЈИ 1918–1941.″ // Politika, 6 January 2018, p. 30.
  21. ^ II Всезарубежный Собор (1938)
  22. ^ И. М. Андреев. Второй Всезарубежный Собор Русской православной церкви заграницей
  23. ^ Деяния Второго Всезарубежного Собора Русской Православной Церкви заграницей. Белград, 1939, pp. 18-19.
  24. ^ прот. Владислав Цыпин. ГЛАВА XI. Церковная диаспора // История Русской Церкви (1917–1997), 1997. Издательство. Издательство Спасо-Преображенского Валаамского монастыря.
  25. ^ Dimitry Pospielovsky, The Russian Church Under the Soviet Regime 1917–1982, Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir Seminary Press, 1984, p.223
  26. ^ Archbishop Chrysostomos. "Book Review: The Price of Prophecy". Retrieved 2009-08-06.
  27. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-06-25.
  28. ^ Pospielovsky, Dimitry (1998). The Orthodox Church in the History of Russia. Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir’s Seminary Press.
  29. ^ Михаил Шкаровский. Политика Третьего рейха по отношению к Русской Православной Церкви в свете архивных материалов 1935—1945 годов / Сборник документов. 2003, стр. 172
  30. ^ Prof Mikhail Skarovsky. РУССКАЯ ЦЕРКОВНАЯ ЭМИГРАЦИЯ В ЮГОСЛАВИИ В ГОДЫ ВТОРОЙ МИРОВОЙ ВОЙНЫ
  31. ^ a b Михаил Шкаровский. Сталинская религиозная политика и Русская Православная Церковь в 1943–1953 годах
  32. ^ . Time Magazine. September 15, 1952. Archived from the original on January 12, 2008. Retrieved 2009-08-06.
  33. ^ See, for example, Resolution of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia Concerning the Election of Pimen (Isvekov) as Patriarch of Moscow, September 1/14) 1971 2009-03-29 at the Wayback Machine, December 27th, 2007
  34. ^ Regulations Of The Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia, Confirmed by the Council of Bishops in 1956 and by a decision of the Council dated 5/18 June, 1964 2009-03-30 at the Wayback Machine, first paragraph, December 28, 2007
  35. ^ The last will and testament of Metropolitan Anastassy, 1957, December 28, 2007
  36. ^ The Catacomb Tikhonite Church 1974, The Orthodox Word, Nov.-Dec., 1974 (59), 235-246, December 28, 2007.
  37. ^ Abigail Beshkin and Rob Mank (March 24, 2000). . Salon. Archived from the original on February 18, 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-06.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  38. ^ a b Jerrold Kessel (July 9, 1997). "Russian Orthodox strife brings change in Hebron". CNN.
  39. ^ "Palestinians Take Sides In Russian Orthodox Dispute". Catholic World News. July 9, 1997. Retrieved 2009-08-14.
  40. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-04-01.
  41. ^ [1] February 13, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  42. ^ The Independent, Obituary: Metropolitan Vitaly Ustinov, 28 September 2006
  43. ^ "Russian church leader opens Synod's reunification session". 2007-05-16. Retrieved May 20, 2007.
  44. ^ a b c "Russian Church abroad ruling body approves reunion with Moscow". 2006-05-20. Retrieved 2009-08-06.
  45. ^ "The Sixth Meeting of the Commissions of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia and the Moscow Patriarchate is Held" 2006-09-08 at the Wayback Machine: ROCOR website, downloaded August 25, 2006
  46. ^ http://www.mospat.ru/text/e_news/id/9553.html. Retrieved July 29, 2005. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[dead link]
  47. ^ . Russianorthodoxchurch.ws. Archived from the original on 1 January 2015. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  48. ^ . Associated Press. May 16, 2007. Archived from the original on 2007-10-30. "Russian Orthodox Church to keep ROCOR traditions – Alexy II". ITAR-TASS. May 14, 2007. Retrieved 2009-08-14.[]
  49. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-12-24. RFE/RL website, May 12, 2006
  50. ^ "The Eighth Meeting of the Church Commissions Concludes": ROCOR website, downloaded November 3, 2006
  51. ^ "Act of Canonical Communion". Synod.com. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  52. ^ "Union of Moscow Patriarchate and Russian Church Abroad 17 May 2007":Interfax website, downloaded December 28, 2006
  53. ^ http://www.orthodoxnews.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=WorldNews.one&content_id=16097&CFID=31445921&CFTOKEN=42692498. Retrieved May 18, 2007. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)[dead link]
  54. ^ . 2007-05-19. Archived from the original on 2009-02-14. Retrieved 2009-08-06.
  55. ^ Santana, Rebecca (September 11, 2007). "U.S. Worshipers Refuse to Join Moscow Church". The Associated Press. Associated Press. Retrieved 2009-10-13.
  56. ^ Agafangel (Pashkovsky) of Odessa (orthodoxwiki.org)
  57. ^ . Russianorthodoxchurch.ws. Archived from the original on 16 October 2014. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  58. ^ "BISHOPS". The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia - Official Website. Retrieved 2021-07-01.
  59. ^ Расследование РБК: на что живет церковь RBK, 24 February 2017.
  60. ^ "Saint Petroc Monastery". Orthodoxwesternrite.wordpress.com. 27 January 2011. Retrieved 2013-09-19.
  61. ^ "ROCOR Western-Rite - Home". Rwrv.org. Retrieved 12 October 2014.
  62. ^ "The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia - Official Website". www.russianorthodoxchurch.ws. Retrieved 2022-03-18.

External links

  • synod.com Official website of the Synod of bishops of the ROCOR
  • fundforassistance.org Official website of the Fund of assistance of the ROCOR
  • Synodal Secretariat for Inter-Orthodox Relations, of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia
  • ROCOR Studies Website dedicated to the history of the ROCOR
  • eadiocese.org Official website of the Eastern American diocese
  • mcdiocese.com Official website of the diocese of Montreal and Canada
  • rocor.org.au Official website of the diocese of Australia and new Zealand
  • orthodox-europe.org Official website of Diocese of Great Britain and Western Europe
  • chicagodiocese.org Official site of Chicago and Mid-American eprahim
  • wadiocese.org Official website of the Western American diocese
  • rocor.de Official website of The German diocese
  • hts.edu Official website of Holy Trinity Seminary in Jordanville
  • rocor-wr.org Western Rite of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia official page
  • iglesiarusa.info Official website of The South American diocese

russian, orthodox, church, outside, russia, russian, Ру, сская, Правосла, вная, Це, рковь, Заграни, цей, romanized, russkaya, pravoslavnaya, tserkov, zagranitsey, russian, orthodox, church, abroad, also, called, russian, orthodox, church, outside, russia, roco. The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia Russian Ru sskaya Pravosla vnaya Ce rkov Zagrani cej romanized Russkaya Pravoslavnaya Tserkov Zagranitsey lit Russian Orthodox Church Abroad also called Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia or ROCOR or Russian Orthodox Church Abroad ROCA is a semi autonomous part of the Russian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate Currently the position of First Hierarch of the ROCOR is occupied by Metropolitan Nicholas Olhovsky 2 Russian Orthodox Church Outside of RussiaRu sskaya Pravosla vnaya Ce rkov Zagrani cejROCOR headquarters 75 E 93rd St New York AbbreviationROCORClassificationEastern OrthodoxPrimatePatriarch of Moscow amp All Rus KirillFirst HierarchMetropolitan Nicholas Olhovsky LanguageChurch Slavonic worship Russian preaching English USA Canada UK Ireland Australia New Zealand Spanish Spain and Latin America German Germany French France Switzerland Canada Indonesian Indonesia Haitian Creole Haiti and othersHeadquartersPatriarchal Moscow Russia Jurisdictional New York City NYTerritoryAmericasEuropeAustraliaNew ZealandFounderAnthony Khrapovitsky Anastassy Gribanovsky othersIndependence1920Reunion2007RecognitionSemi autonomous within Russian Orthodox ChurchSeparationsRussian Orthodox Autonomous Church 1994 then called the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad Members27 700 in the U S 9 000 regular church attendees a 1 b Official websitewww synod com These numbers reflect only the supposed US adherents They do not take into account ROCOR s numbers in Australia Germany and Indonesia The number of adherents given in the Atlas of American Orthodox Christian Churches is defined as individual full members with the addition of their children It also includes an estimate of how many are not members but regularly participate in parish life Regular attendees includes only those who regularly attend church and regularly participate in church life The ROCOR was established in the early 1920s as a de facto independent ecclesiastical jurisdiction of Eastern Orthodoxy initially due to lack of regular liaison between the central church authority in Moscow and some bishops due to their voluntary exile after the Russian Civil War These bishops migrated with other Russians to Western European cities and nations including Paris and other parts of France and to the United States and other western countries Later these bishops rejected the Moscow Patriarchate s unconditional political loyalty to the Bolshevik regime in the USSR This loyalty was formally promulgated by the Declaration of 20 July 1927 of Metropolitan Sergius Stragorodsky deputy Patriarchal locum tenens Metropolitan Antony Khrapovitsky of Kiev and Galicia was the founding First Hierarch of the ROCOR 3 After 80 years of separation followed by the fall of the Soviet Union on 17 May 2007 the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia officially signed the Act of Canonical Communion with the Moscow Patriarchate restoring the canonical link between the churches The ROCOR jurisdiction has around 400 parishes worldwide and an estimated membership of more than 400 000 people 4 Of these 232 parishes and 10 monasteries are in the United States they have 92 000 declared adherents and over 9 000 regular church attendees 1 5 The ROCOR has 13 hierarchs with male and female monasteries in the United States Canada and the Americas Australia New Zealand and Western Europe 6 Contents 1 History 1 1 Precursors and early history 1 2 In Karlovci 1 3 World War II and post war period 1 4 Cold War period 1 5 Post Soviet period 2 Reconciliation with the Moscow Patriarchate 2 1 ROCOR V 2 2 Reconciliation talks 2 3 Signing of the Act of Canonical Communion 2 3 1 ROCA PSCA 3 Structure 4 Finance 5 Western Rite in the ROCOR 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditPrecursors and early history Edit See also Russian Civil War Patriarch Tikhon of Moscow Russia Serbia relations and Persecution of Christians in the Soviet Union In May 1919 during the Russian Revolution the White military forces under General Anton Denikin were achieving the apex of their military success In the Russian city of Stavropol then controlled by the White Army a group of Russian bishops organized an ecclesiastical administration body the Temporary Higher Church Administration in Southeastern Russia Russian Vremennoe vysshee cerkovnoe upravlenie na Yugo Vostoke Rossii On 7 November 20 November 1920 Tikhon Patriarch of Moscow his Synod and the Supreme Church Council in Moscow issued a joint resolution No 362 instructing all Russian Orthodox Christian bishops should they be unable to maintain liaison with the Supreme Church Administration in Moscow to seek protection and guidance by organizing among themselves The resolution was interpreted as effectively legitimizing the Temporary Higher Church Administration and served as the legal basis for the eventual establishment of a completely independent church body 7 In November 1920 after the final defeat of the Russian Army in South Russia a number of Russian bishops evacuated from Crimea to Constantinople then occupied by British French and Italian forces After learning that General Pyotr Wrangel intended to keep his army they likewise decided to keep the Russian ecclesiastical organization as a separate entity abroad The Temporary Church Authority met on 19 November 1920 aboard the ship Grand Duke Alexader Mikhailovich Russian Velikij knyaz Aleksandr Mihajlovich presided over by Metropolitan Antony Khrapovitsky Metropolitan Antony and Bishop Benjamin Fedchenkov were appointed to examine the canonicity of the organization On 2 December 1920 they received permission from Metropolitan Dorotheos of Prousa Locum Tenens of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople to establish for the purpose of the service of the population and to oversee the ecclesiastic life of Russian colonies in Orthodox countries a temporary committee epitropia under the authority of the Ecumenical Patriarchate the committee was called the Temporary Higher Church Administration Abroad THCAA In Karlovci Edit On 14 February 1921 Metropolitan Antony Khrapovitsky settled in the town of Sremski Karlovci Serbia then within the Kingdom of Yugoslavia where he was given the palace of former Patriarchs of Karlovci the Patriarchate of Karlovci had been abolished in 1920 8 In the next months at the invitation of Patriarch Dimitrije of Serbia the other eight bishops of the THCAA including Anastasius Gribanovsky and Benjamin Fedchenkov as well as numerous priests and monks relocated to Serbia 9 On 31 August 1921 the Council of Bishops of the Serbian Church passed a resolution effective from 3 October recognizing the THCAA as an administratively independent jurisdiction for exiled Russian clergy outside the Kingdom of Yugoslavia SHS as well as for those Russian clergy in the Kingdom who were not in parish or state educational service The THCAA jurisdiction was subsequently extended to hearing divorce cases of exiled Russians 8 Sergey Paleolog General Pyotr Wrangel Metropolitan Anthony Khrapovitsky Archbishop Anastasius Gribanovsky Olga Wrangel and Archpriest Peter Belovidov in Topcider Belgrade Easter April 1927 With the agreement of Patriarch Dimitrije of Serbia between 21 November and 2 December 1921 the General assembly of representatives of the Russian Church abroad Russian Vsezagranichnoe Russkoe Cerkovnoe Sobranie took place in Sremski Karlovci It was later renamed as the First All Diaspora Council and was presided over by Metropolitan Anthony The Council established the Supreme Ecclesiastic Administration Abroad SEAA composed of a patriarchal Locum Tenens a Synod of Bishops and a Church Council The Council decided to appoint Metropolitan Anthony as the Locum Tenens but he declined to accept the position without permission from Moscow and instead identified as the President of the SEAA The Council adopted a number of resolutions and appeals missives with the two most notable ones being addressed to the flock of the Russian Orthodox Church in diaspora and exile Chadam Russkoj Pravoslavnoj Cerkvi v rasseyanii i izgnanii sushim and to the 1922 International Conference in Genoa The former adopted with a majority of votes but not unanimously Metropolitan Eulogius Georgiyevsky being the most prominent critic of such specific political declarations expressly proclaimed a political goal of restoring monarchy in Russia with a tsar from the House of Romanov 10 The appeal to the Genoa Conference which was published in 1922 called on the world powers to intervene and help banish Bolshevism from Russia 11 The majority of the Council members secretly decided to request that Grand Duke Nicholas Nikolaevich head up the Russian monarchist movement in exile But pursuant to the laws of the Russian Empire the seniormost surviving male member of the Romanovs was Kirill Vladimirovich and in August 1924 he proclaimed himself as the Russian Emperor in exile 12 Patriarch Tikhon addressed a decree of 5 May 1922 to Metropolitan Eulogius Georgiyevsky abolishing the SEAA and declaring the political decisions of the Karlovci Council to be against the position of the Russian Church Tikhon appointed Metropolitan Eulogius as administrator for the Russian orthodox churches abroad 13 Meeting in Sremski Karlovci on 2 September 1922 pursuant to Tikhon s decree the Council of Bishops abolished the SEAA in its place forming the Temporary Holy Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia with Metropolitan Anthony as its head by virtue of seniority This Synod exercised direct authority over Russian parishes in the Balkans the Middle East and the Far East In North America however a conflict developed among bishops who did not recognize the authority of the Synod led by Metropolitan Platon Rozhdestvensky this group formed the American Metropolia the predecessor to the OCA In Western Europe Metropolitan Eulogius Georgievsky based in Paris from late 1922 did likewise stating that the Synod was a mere a moral authority Metropolitan Eulogius later broke off from the ROC and in February 1931 joined the Ecumenical Patriarchate This seminal act formed the Patriarchal Exarchate for Orthodox Parishes of Russian Tradition in Western Europe On 5 September 1927 the Council of Bishops in Sremski Karlovci presided over by Metropolitan Anthony decreed a formal break of liaison with the Moscow church authority They rejected a demand by Metropolitan Sergius Stragorodsky of Nizhny Novgorod who was acting on behalf of Locum Tenens Metropolitan Peter of Krutitsy imprisoned then in the Soviet Gulag where he later died to declare political loyalty to the Soviet authorities The Council of Bishops said that the church administration in Moscow headed by Metropolitan Sergius Stragorodsky was enslaved by the godless Soviet power that has deprived it of freedom in its expression of will and canonical governance of the Church 14 While rejecting both the Bolsheviks and the de facto head of the Russian Orthodox Church Metropolitan Sergius who in 1943 would be elected as Patriarch the ROCOR continued to nominally recognize the authority of the imprisoned Metropolitan Peter of Krutitsy On September 9 the Council stated The part of the Russian Church that finds itself abroad considers itself an inseparable spiritually united branch of the great Russian Church It doesn t separate itself from its Mother Church and doesn t consider itself autocephalous 15 Meanwhile inside the USSR Metropolitan Sergius Declaration caused a schism among the flock of the Patriarch s Church Many dissenting believers broke ties with Metropolitan Sergius 4 16 On 22 June 1934 Metropolitan Sergius and his Synod in Moscow passed judgment on Metropolitan Anthony and his Synod declaring them to be suspended 17 Metropolitan Anthony refused to recognize this decision claiming that it was made under political pressure from Soviet authorities and that Metropolitan Sergius had illegally usurped the position of Locum Tenens He was supported in this by the Patriarch Varnava of Serbia who continued to maintain communion with the ROCOR Synod However Patriarch Varnava also attempted to mediate between the Karlovci Synod and Metropolitan Sergius in Moscow and to find a canonically legitimate way to settle the dispute In early 1934 he had sent a letter to Sergius proposing that the Karlovci bishops be transferred to the jurisdiction of the Serbian Church the proposal was rejected by Sergius Sergius continued to demand that all Russian clergy outside the USSR pledge loyalty to the Soviet authorities 18 Patriarch Varnava s attempts in the mid 1930s to reconcile the rival exile Russian jurisdictions were likewise unsuccessful 19 Russian church of Holy Trinity in Belgrade Serbia built in 1924 by Russian emigres Metropolitan Anthony Khrapovitsky died in 1936 He was succeeded by Anastasius Gribanovsky After the deaths of Metropolitan Anthony in August 1936 and Metropolitan Peter of Krutitsy in October 1937 albeit falsely reported a year prior the Russian bishops in exile held the Second All Diaspora Council first in Belgrade then in Sremski Karlovci in August 1938 20 The Council was presided over by Metropolitan Anastasius Gribanovsky and was attended by 12 other exiled Russian bishops at least double the number of Orthodox Patriarchal bishops who were allowed to serve within the USSR 26 priests and 58 laypersons 21 22 The Council confirmed the leading role of the Church and its bishops in Russian emigre organizations and adopted two missives to Russians in the USSR Russian K Russkomu narodu v Otechestve strazhdushemu and to the Russian flock in diaspora Russian K Russkoj pastve v rasseyanii sushej 23 From February 1938 Germany s authorities demanded that all the Russian clergy in the territories controlled by Germany be under the Karlovci jurisdiction as opposed to that of Paris based Eulogius They insisted that an ethnic German Seraphim Lade be put in charge of the Orthodox diocese of Berlin 24 World War II and post war period Edit See also Eastern Front World War II Timeline of the separations of the ROCOR and some other churches from the ROC The relationship between members of the ROCOR and the Nazis in the run up to and during World War II has been an issue addressed by both the Church and its critics Metropolitan Anastassy wrote a letter to Adolf Hitler in 1938 thanking him for his aid to the Russian Diaspora in allowing them to build a Russian Orthodox Cathedral in Berlin and praising his patriotism 25 This has been defended as an act that occurred when the Metropolitan and others in the church knew little of the inner workings of the Third Reich 26 At the ROCOR Second Church History Conference in 2002 a paper said that the attempt of the Nazi leadership to divide the Church into separate and even inimical church formations was met with internal church opposition 27 Meanwhile the USSR leadership s policies towards religion in general as well as policy towards the Moscow Patriarchate s jurisdiction in the USSR changed significantly In early September 1943 Joseph Stalin met at the Kremlin with a group of three surviving ROC metropolitans headed by Sergius Stragorodsky He allowed the Moscow Patriarchate to convene a council and elect a Patriarch open theological schools and reopen a few previously closed major monasteries and some churches said institutions had been reopened in territory occupied by Germany 28 The Soviet government decisively sided with the Moscow Patriarchate while the so called Obnovlentsi Renovationists i e the modernist pro Soviet current in the ROC previously favored by the authorities were sidelined their proponents were disappeared shortly after These developments did not change the mutual rejection between the Moscow Patriarchate and the ROCOR leaderships Days after the election in September 1943 of Sergius Stragorodsky as Patriarch in Moscow Metropolitan Anastasius Gribanovsky made a statement against recognizing his election Thus the German authorities allowed the ROCOR Synod to hold a convention in Vienna which took place on 21 26 October 1943 The Synod adopted a resolution declaring the election of Patriarch in Moscow to be uncanonical and hence invalid and called on all Russian Orthodox faithful to fight against Communism 29 On 8 September 1944 days before Belgrade was taken by the Red Army on the attack from the East Metropolitan Anastasius Gribanovsky along with his office and the other bishops left Serbia for Vienna 30 A few months later they moved to Munich finally in November 1950 they immigrated to the United States together with numerous other Russian Orthodox refugees in the postwar period After the end of World War II the Moscow Patriarchate was the globally dominant branch of Russian Orthodox Christianity Countries whose Orthodox bishops had been part of the ROCOR in the interwar period such as Yugoslavia China Bulgaria and East Germany were now within the USSR led bloc which rendered any activity by the ROCOR politically impossible A number of ROCOR parishes and clergy notably Eulogius Georgiyevsky in a jurisdiction under the Ecumenical See since 1931 joined the Moscow Patriarchate and some repatriated to the USSR 31 On the other hand the ROCOR by 1950 headquartered in New York the United States rejected both the Communist regime in the Soviet Union and the Moscow Patriarchate Its leaders condemned the Moscow Patriarchate as a Soviet Church run by the secret police 31 Further information Russian Orthodox Properties in Palestine Until well after World War II most of the Orthodox Church properties in Palestine were controlled by leaders opposed to both the Soviet rule and the Moscow Patriarchate i e mainly within the ROCOR citation needed When Israel became a state in 1948 it transferred all of the property under the control of the ROCOR within its borders to the Soviet dominated Russian Orthodox Church in appreciation for Moscow s support of the Jewish state this support was short lived The ROCOR maintained control over churches and properties in the Jordanian ruled West Bank until the late 1980s citation needed In January 1951 the Soviets reopened the Russian Palestine Society under the direction of Communist Party agents from Moscow and replaced Archimandrite Vladimir with Ignaty Polikarp who had been trained by Communists They attracted numerous Christian Arabs to the ROC who had Communist sympathies The members of other branches of Orthodoxy refused to associate with the Soviet led ROC in Palestine 32 Cold War period Edit The third First Hierarch of the ROCOR was Philaret Voznesensky who served from 1964 until his death in 1985 After the declaration of Metropolitan Sergius of 1927 there were a range of opinions regarding the Moscow Patriarchate within ROCOR There was a general belief in ROCOR that the Soviet government was manipulating the Moscow Patriarchate to one extent or another and that under such circumstances administrative ties were impossible There were also official statements made that the elections of the patriarchs of Moscow which occurred after 1927 were invalid because they were not conducted freely without the interference of the Soviets or with the participation of the entire Russian Church 33 Historically ROCOR has always affirmed that it was an inseparable part of the Russian Church and that its autonomous status was only temporary based upon Ukaz 362 until such time as the domination of the Soviet government over the affairs of the Church should cease The Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia is an indissoluble part of the Russian Orthodox Church and for the time until the extermination in Russia of the atheist government is self governing on conciliar principles in accordance with the resolution of the Patriarch the Most Holy Synod and the Highest Church Council Sobor of the Russian Church dated 7 20 November 1920 No 362 34 Similarly Metropolitan Anastassy Gribanovsky wrote in his last will and testament As regards the Moscow Patriarchate and its hierarchs then so long as they continue in close active and benevolent cooperation with the Soviet Government which openly professes its complete godlessness and strives to implant atheism in the entire Russian nation then the Church Abroad maintaining Her purity must not have any canonical liturgical or even simply external communion with them whatsoever leaving each one of them at the same time to the final judgment of the Council Sobor of the future free Russian Church 35 The Catacomb Church had been a significant part of the Russian Church prior to the relaxation of the suppression of the Church on the part of Stalin in 1943 Most of those in the ROCOR were White emigres who had left Russia well before World War II They were unaware of the changes that had occurred immediately after World War II most significantly that with the election of Patriarch Alexei I in 1945 after which most of the Catacomb Church was reconciled with the Moscow Patriarchate By the 1970s due to this reconciliation as well as to continued persecution by the Soviets there was very little left of the Catacomb Church Alexander Solzhenitsyn made this point in a letter to the 1974 All Diaspora Sobor of the ROCOR in which he stated that ROCOR should not show solidarity with a mysterious sinless but also bodiless catacomb 36 Vitaly Ustinov served as the fourth First Hierarch from 1985 until his retirement in 2001 After the end of the Soviet Union in December 1991 ROCOR continued to maintain its administrative independence from the Russian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate In May 1990 months prior to the complete disintegration of the USSR the ROCOR decided to establish new Free Russian parishes ru in the USSR and to consecrate bishops to oversee such parishes Post Soviet period Edit In 1997 Patriarch of Moscow Alexei II attempted to visit a ROCOR held monastery in Hebron with Yasser Arafat The Moscow based church has enjoyed a close relationship with Arafat since his guerrilla fighter days 37 The ROCOR clergy refused to allow Arafat and the patriarch to enter the church holding that Alexei had no legitimate authority Two weeks later police officers of the Palestinian Authority arrived they evicted the ROCOR clergy and turned the property over to the ROC citation needed Alexei made another visit in early January 2000 to meet with Arafat asking for help in recovering church properties 38 as part of a worldwide campaign to recover properties lost to churches that split off during the Communist era 39 Later that month the Palestinian Authority again acted to evict ROCOR clergy this time from the 3 acre 12 000 m2 Monastery of Abraham s Oak in Hebron 38 Metropolitan Vitaly Ustinov in 2001 was succeeded by the fifth First Hierarch of the ROCOR Metropolitan Laurus Skurla who oversaw the reconciliation with the Russian Orthodox Church in 2007 After the death of Laurus in 2008 he was succeeded by the sixth First Hierarch Metropolitan Hilarion Kapral Metropolitan Hilarion Kapral reposed in May 2022 Reconciliation with the Moscow Patriarchate EditIn 2000 Metropolitan Laurus became the First Hierarch of the ROCOR he expressed interest in the idea of reunification At the time ROCOR insisted that the Moscow Patriarchate address the murders of Tsar Nicholas II and his family in 1918 by the Bolsheviks The ROCOR held that the Moscow Patriarchy must speak clearly and passionately about the murder of the tsar s family the defeat of the anti Bolshevik movement and the execution and persecution of priests 6 The ROCOR accused the leadership of the ROC as being submissive to the Russian government and were also alarmed by their ties with other denominations of Christianity especially Catholicism 6 At the jubilee Council of Bishops in 2000 the Russian Orthodox Church canonized Tsar Nicholas and his family along with more than 1 000 martyrs and confessors This Council also enacted a document on relations between the Church and the secular authorities censoring servility and complaisance They also rejected the idea of any connection between E Orthodoxy and Catholicism 6 ROCOR V Edit The possibility of rapprochement led to a minor schism from the ROCOR in 2001 40 41 The fourth First Hierarch of the ROCOR Metropolitan Vitaly Ustinov retired in 2001 citing health reasons After the election of his successor Metropolitan Laurus Skurla in October 2001 Vitaly released an epistle denouncing the appointment and asserting his continuing primacy A number of ROCOR clergy and parishioners who opposed to reunification with the Moscow Patriarchate including the suspended Bishop Varnava Prokofieff of Cannes formed a new church administration around Metropolitan Vitaly renaming themselves as the Russian Orthodox Church in Exile ROCiE then to Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia in common parlance this church is called ROCOR Vitaly or ROCOR V Russian RPCZ V The episcopate of the ROCOR asserted that Metropolitan Vitaly was being held hostage by schismatics who took advantage of his failing health and used his name to produce a schism They claimed that Metropolitan Vitaly s entourage forged his signature on epistles and documents 42 One of the churches which splintered from the ROCOR V is the Russian True Orthodox Church which was formed in 2002 Reconciliation talks Edit In 2003 President Vladimir Putin of Russia met with Metropolitan Laurus in New York Patriarch Alexy II of the ROC later hailed this event as an important step saying that it showed the ROCOR that not a fighter against God but an Orthodox Christian is at the country s helm 43 In May 2004 Metropolitan Laurus the Primate of the ROCOR visited Russia participating in several joint services 44 In June 2004 a contingent of ROCOR clergy met with Patriarch Alexey II Both parties agreed to set up committees to begin dialogue towards rapprochement Both sides set up joint commissions and determined the range of issues to be discussed at the All Diaspora Council which met for the first time since 1974 44 After a series of six reconciliation meetings 45 the ROCOR and the Patriarchate of Moscow on June 21 2005 simultaneously announced that rapprochement talks were leading toward the resumption of full relations between the ROCOR and the Patriarchate of Moscow They said that the ROCOR would be given autonomous status 46 47 In this arrangement the ROCOR was announced to join the Moscow Patriarchate as a self governed branch similar to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church It will retain its autonomy in terms of pastoral educational administrative economic property and secular issues 44 While Patriarchate Alexy said that the ROCOR would keep its property and fiscal independence and that its autonomy would not change in the foreseeable future he added that Maybe this will change in decades and there will be some new wishes But today we have enough concerns and will not make guesses 48 On May 12 2006 the general congress of the ROCOR confirmed its willingness to reunite with the Russian Orthodox Church The latter hailed this resolution as an important step toward restoring full unity between the Moscow Patriarchate and the part of the Russian emigration that was isolated from it as a result of the revolution the civil war in Russia and the ensuing impious persecution against the Orthodox Church 49 In September 2006 the ROCOR Synod of Bishops approved the text of the document worked out by the commissions an Act of Canonical Communion In October 2006 the commissions met again to propose procedures and a time for signing the document 50 The Act of Canonical Communion went into effect upon its confirmation by the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church the Act is based on a previous resolution of the Holy Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church On the Relationship with the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia held in Moscow on 3 8 October 2004 as well on the Synod of Bishops of the ROCOR s resolution Regarding the Act on Canonical Communion take at the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia held in San Francisco on 15 19 May 2006 51 Signing of the Act of Canonical Communion Edit Main article Act of Canonical Communion with the Moscow Patriarchate Solemn signing of the Act of Canonical Communion in the Cathedral of Christ the Savior Moscow Left to right Archpriest Alexander Lebedev First Hierarch of the ROCOR Metropolitan Laurus Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Russia Protopriest Nikolai Balashov 17 May 2007 On December 28 2006 the leaders officially announced that the Act of Canonical Communion would be signed The signing took place on May 17 2007 followed immediately by a full restoration of communion with the Moscow Patriarchate It was celebrated by a Divine Liturgy at the Cathedral of Christ the Savior in Moscow at which the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Alexius II and the First Hierarch of ROCOR concelebrated for the first time in history On 17 May 2007 at 9 15 a m Metropolitan Laurus was greeted at Christ the Savior Cathedral in Moscow by a special peal of the bells Shortly thereafter Patriarch Alexey II entered the Cathedral After the Patriarch read the prayer for the unity of the Russian Church the Act of Canonical Communion was read aloud and two copies were each signed by both Metropolitan Laurus and Patriarch Alexey II The two hierarchs exchanged the kiss of peace after which they and the entire Russian Church sang God Grant You Many Years Following this the Divine Liturgy of the Feast of the Ascension of Our Lord began culminating with the entirety of the bishops of both ROCOR and MP partaking of the Eucharist Present at all of this was Russian President Vladimir Putin who was thanked by Patriarch Alexey for helping to facilitate the reconciliation Putin addressed the audience of Orthodox Christians visitors clergy and press saying The split in the church was caused by an extremely deep political split within Russian society itself We have realized that national revival and development in Russia are impossible without reliance on the historical and spiritual experience of our people We understand well and value the power of pastoral words which unite the people of Russia That is why restoring the unity of the church serves our common goals 4 The Hierarchs of the Russian Church Abroad served again with the Patriarch on 19 May in the consecration of the Church of the New Martyrs in Butovo firing range They had laid the cornerstone of the church in 2004 during their initial visit 52 53 President Vladimir Putin gave a reception at the Kremlin to celebrate the reunification In attendance were Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Russia and members of the Holy Synod for the Russian Orthodox Church Metropolitan Laurus for the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia presidential chief of staff Sergei Sobyanin First Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev and Minister of Culture and Mass Communications Aleksandr Sokolov Before the reception the participants posed for photographs by the Assumption Cathedral 54 ROCA PSCA Edit After the signature of the Act in 2007 there was a minor schism in the ROCOR Critics of the reunification continue to argue that the hierarchy in Moscow still has not properly addressed the issue of KGB infiltration of the church hierarchy during the Soviet period 4 55 Bishop Agafangel Pashkovsky ru of Odessa and Tauria and with him some of ROCOR s parishes in Ukraine refused to enter the jurisdiction of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate 56 Agafangel was suspended for disobedience by an extraordinary session of the ROCOR synod in June 2007 57 Despite censure Agafangel persisted with the support of some ROCOR parishes inside and outside Ukraine which had also refused to submit to the Act of Canonical Communion Agafangel then finalized the schism from the ROCOR by ordaining two bishops on 7 December 2007 Andronik Kotrliaroff as Bishop of Richmond Hill and New York and Sophronius Musienko as Bishop of Saint Petersburg and Northern Russia The church headed by Agafangel is known as Russian Orthodox Church Abroad Provisional Supreme Church Authority ROCA PSCA or in common parlance ROCOR Agafangel or ROCOR A Structure EditThe ROCOR is headed by the First Hierarch of the ROCOR Protohierarch primate of the whole ROCOR head of the ROCOR Holy Synod and bishop of the Russian Orthodox Eparchy of Eastern America and New York The Holy Synod also has a vice president The supreme authority of the ecclesiastical legislative administrative judicial and executive organ of the ROCOR is the Council of Bishops of the ROCOR ru which is convened about every two years 58 The ROCOR is divided into dioceses themselves in some cases subdivided into smaller dioceses The division into dioceses is as follows United States Russian Orthodox Eparchy of Eastern America and New York Diocese of San Francisco and Western America Diocese of Chicago and Middle America Diocese of Montreal and Canada Diocese of Caracas and South America Russian Orthodox Diocese of Great Britain and Western Europe Diocese of Berlin and Germany Russian Orthodox Diocese of Sydney Australia and New ZealandROCOR oversees and owns properties of the Russian Ecclesiastical Mission in Jerusalem which acts as caretaker to three holy sites in East Jerusalem and Israel Palestine all of which are monasteries Finance EditThe main source of income for the ROCOR central authority is lease of a part of the building that houses the headquarters of the ROCOR s Synod of Bishops situated at the intersection of East 93rd Street and Park Avenue to a private school estimated in 2016 to generate about USD 500 000 the ROCOR was said not to make any monetary contributions towards the ROC s budget 59 Western Rite in the ROCOR EditThere is a long history of the Western Rite in the ROCOR although attitudes toward it have varied and the number of Western Rite parishes is relatively small St Petroc Monastery in Tasmania is now under the oversight of Metropolitan Daniel of the Moscow Metropolitanate 60 The Benedictine Christ the Savior Monastery founded in 1993 in Rhode Island and moved to Hamilton Ontario in 2008 see main article for references has incorporated the Oratory of Our Lady of Glastonbury as its monastery chapel The oratory had previously been a mission of the Antiochian Western Rite Vicariate in the Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America but since October 2007 has been a part of ROCOR There are a few other parishes that either use the Western Rite exclusively or in part An American parish St Benedict of Nursia in Oklahoma City uses both the Western Rite and the Byzantine Rite In 2011 the ROCOR declared all of its Western Rite parishes to be a vicariate parallel to the Antiochian Western Rite Vicariate and established a website 61 On 10 July 2013 an extraordinary session of the Synod of Bishops of ROCOR removed Bishop Jerome of Manhattan and Fr Anthony Bondi from their positions in the vicariate ordered a halt to all ordinations and a review of those recently conferred by Bishop Jerome and decreed preparations be made for the assimilation of existing Western Rite communities to mainstream ROCOR liturgical practice 62 See also Edit Christianity portalList of bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia Eastern Orthodox Church White emigre Theodore Jurewicz Ivan Ilyin Orthodox Church in AmericaReferences Edit a b Krindatch A 2011 Atlas of American Orthodox Christian Churches p 80 Brookline MA Holy Cross Orthodox Press His Grace Bishop Nicholas is elected First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia Burlacioiu Ciprian April 2018 Russian Orthodox Diaspora as a Global Religion after 1918 Studies in World Christianity 24 1 4 24 doi 10 3366 swc 2018 0202 ISSN 1354 9901 a b c d David Holley May 17 2007 Russian Orthodox Church ends 80 year split Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on 2007 05 20 Parishes Assembly of Canonical Orthodox Bishops of the United States of America Retrieved 2021 10 23 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b c d Russian Orthodox Church reunited Why only now 2007 05 17 Retrieved 2009 08 06 Polozhenie o Russkoj Pravoslavnoj Cerkvi Zagranicej Pr 1 Russkaya Pravoslavnaya Cerkov zagranicej est nerazryvnaya chast pomestnoj Rossijskoj Pravoslavnoj Cerkvi vremenno samoupravlyayushayasya na sobornyh nachalah do uprazdneniya v Rossii bezbozhnoj vlasti v sootvetstvii s Postanovleniem Sv Patriarha Sv Sinoda i Vysshego Cerkovnogo Soveta Rossijskoj Cerkvi ot 7 20 noyabrya 1920 g za 362 Pr 4 Russkaya Pravoslavnaya Cerkov zagranicej v svoej vnutrennej zhizni i upravlenii rukovodstvuetsya Svyashennym Pisaniem i Svyashennym Predaniem svyashennymi kanonami i cerkovnymi zakonami pravilami i blagochestivymi obychayami Pomestnoj Rossijskoj Pravoslavnoj Cerkvi i v chastnosti Postanovleniem Svyatejshego Patriarha Svyash Sinoda i Vysshego Cerkovnogo Soveta Pravoslavnoj Rossijskoj Cerkvi ot 7 20 noyabrya 1920 goda 362 a b Zagranichna crkva u Sremskim Karlovcima Iz taјnih arhiva UDBE RUSKA EMIGRACIЈA U ЈUGOSLAVIЈI 1918 1941 Politika 23 December 2017 p 22 Prihvaћen poziv patriјarha Dimitriјa Iz taјnih arhiva UDBE RUSKA EMIGRACIЈA U ЈUGOSLAVIЈI 1918 1941 Politika 21 December 2017 p 25 I nyne pust neusypno plameneet molitva nasha da ukazhet Gospod puti spaseniya i stroitelstva rodnoj zemli da dast zashitu Vere i Cerkvi i vsej zemle russkoj i da osenit on serdce narodnoe da vernet na vserossijskij Prestol Pomazannika silnogo lyubovyu naroda zakonnogo pravoslavnogo Carya iz Doma Romanovyh Protoierej Arkadij Makoveckij Belaya Cerkov Vdali ot ateisticheskogo terrora Piter 2009 ISBN 978 5 49807 400 9 pp 31 32 Protoierej Arkadij Makoveckij Belaya Cerkov Vdali ot ateisticheskogo terrora Piter 2009 ISBN 978 5 49807 400 9 p 35 U vrtlogu politichke borbe Iz taјnih arhiva UDBE RUSKA EMIGRACIЈA U ЈUGOSLAVIЈI 1918 1941 Politika 15 January 2018 p 22 Protoierej Arkadij Makoveckij Belaya Cerkov Vdali ot ateisticheskogo terrora Piter 2009 ISBN 978 5 49807 400 9 p 38 Mitropolit Antonij Hrapovickij Izbrannye trudy Pisma Materialy Moscow PSTGU 2007 r 786 Zagranichnaya chast Vserossijskoj Cerkvi dolzhna prekratit snosheniya s Moskovskoj cerkovnoj vlastyu vvidu nevozmozhnosti normalnyh snoshenij s neyu i vvidu porabosheniya eyo bezbozhnoj sovetskoj vlastyu lishayushej eyo svobody v svoih voleizyavleniyah i kanonicheskom upravlenii Cerkovyu RPCZ KRATKAYa ISTORIChESKAYa SPRAVKA Zagranichnaya chast Russkoj Cerkvi pochitaet sebya nerazryvnoyu duhovno edinoyu vetvyu velikoj Russkoj Cerkvi Ona ne otdelyaet sebya ot svoej Materi Cerkvi i ne schitaet sebya avtokefalnoyu Karen Dawisha 1994 Russia and the New States of Eurasia The Politics of Upheaval New York NY Press Syndicate of the University of Cambridge Postanovleniya Zamestitelya Patriarshego Mestoblyustitelya i pri nem Patriarshego Svyashennogo Sinoda O Karlovackoj gruppe ot 22 iyunya 1934 goda 50 ZhMP 1934 g Dometi misiјe patriјarha Varnave Iz taјnih arhiva UDBE RUSKA EMIGRACIЈA U ЈUGOSLAVIЈI 1918 1941 Politika 4 January 2018 p 25 Novi pokushaј patriјarha Varnave Iz taјnih arhiva UDBE RUSKA EMIGRACIЈA U ЈUGOSLAVIЈI 1918 1941 Politika 5 January 2018 p 18 Nema Rusiјe bez pravoslavne monarhiјe Iz taјnih arhiva UDBE RUSKA EMIGRACIЈA U ЈUGOSLAVIЈI 1918 1941 Politika 6 January 2018 p 30 II Vsezarubezhnyj Sobor 1938 I M Andreev Vtoroj Vsezarubezhnyj Sobor Russkoj pravoslavnoj cerkvi zagranicej Deyaniya Vtorogo Vsezarubezhnogo Sobora Russkoj Pravoslavnoj Cerkvi zagranicej Belgrad 1939 pp 18 19 prot Vladislav Cypin GLAVA XI Cerkovnaya diaspora Istoriya Russkoj Cerkvi 1917 1997 1997 Izdatelstvo Izdatelstvo Spaso Preobrazhenskogo Valaamskogo monastyrya Dimitry Pospielovsky The Russian Church Under the Soviet Regime 1917 1982 Crestwood NY St Vladimir Seminary Press 1984 p 223 Archbishop Chrysostomos Book Review The Price of Prophecy Retrieved 2009 08 06 The Second Ecclesio Historical Conference The History of the Russian Orthodox Church of the 20th c 1930 1948 Archived from the original on 2007 06 25 Pospielovsky Dimitry 1998 The Orthodox Church in the History of Russia Crestwood NY St Vladimir s Seminary Press Mihail Shkarovskij Politika Tretego rejha po otnosheniyu k Russkoj Pravoslavnoj Cerkvi v svete arhivnyh materialov 1935 1945 godov Sbornik dokumentov 2003 str 172 Prof Mikhail Skarovsky RUSSKAYa CERKOVNAYa EMIGRACIYa V YuGOSLAVII V GODY VTOROJ MIROVOJ VOJNY a b Mihail Shkarovskij Stalinskaya religioznaya politika i Russkaya Pravoslavnaya Cerkov v 1943 1953 godah Plot in Progress Time Magazine September 15 1952 Archived from the original on January 12 2008 Retrieved 2009 08 06 See for example Resolution of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia Concerning the Election of Pimen Isvekov as Patriarch of Moscow September 1 14 1971 Archived 2009 03 29 at the Wayback Machine December 27th 2007 Regulations Of The Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia Confirmed by the Council of Bishops in 1956 and by a decision of the Council dated 5 18 June 1964 Archived 2009 03 30 at the Wayback Machine first paragraph December 28 2007 The last will and testament of Metropolitan Anastassy 1957 December 28 2007 The Catacomb Tikhonite Church 1974 The Orthodox Word Nov Dec 1974 59 235 246 December 28 2007 Abigail Beshkin and Rob Mank March 24 2000 Hunger strike in Jericho Salon Archived from the original on February 18 2009 Retrieved 2009 08 06 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link a b Jerrold Kessel July 9 1997 Russian Orthodox strife brings change in Hebron CNN Palestinians Take Sides In Russian Orthodox Dispute Catholic World News July 9 1997 Retrieved 2009 08 14 Epistle of First Hierarch Metropolitan Vitaly Of ROCOR to All The Faithful Clergy And Flock Of The Church Abroad Archived from the original on 2008 04 01 1 Archived February 13 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Independent Obituary Metropolitan Vitaly Ustinov 28 September 2006 Russian church leader opens Synod s reunification session 2007 05 16 Retrieved May 20 2007 a b c Russian Church abroad ruling body approves reunion with Moscow 2006 05 20 Retrieved 2009 08 06 The Sixth Meeting of the Commissions of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia and the Moscow Patriarchate is Held Archived 2006 09 08 at the Wayback Machine ROCOR website downloaded August 25 2006 http www mospat ru text e news id 9553 html Retrieved July 29 2005 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help dead link ROCOR website Joint declarations April May 2005 Russianorthodoxchurch ws Archived from the original on 1 January 2015 Retrieved 12 October 2014 Russian Church To End Schism Associated Press May 16 2007 Archived from the original on 2007 10 30 Russian Orthodox Church to keep ROCOR traditions Alexy II ITAR TASS May 14 2007 Retrieved 2009 08 14 dead link Russian Church abroad to unite with Moscow Archived from the original on 2007 12 24 RFE RL website May 12 2006 The Eighth Meeting of the Church Commissions Concludes ROCOR website downloaded November 3 2006 Act of Canonical Communion Synod com Retrieved 12 October 2014 Union of Moscow Patriarchate and Russian Church Abroad 17 May 2007 Interfax website downloaded December 28 2006 http www orthodoxnews com index cfm fuseaction WorldNews one amp content id 16097 amp CFID 31445921 amp CFTOKEN 42692498 Retrieved May 18 2007 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a Missing or empty title help dead link Putin gives reception for Russian Orthodox Church reunification 2007 05 19 Archived from the original on 2009 02 14 Retrieved 2009 08 06 Santana Rebecca September 11 2007 U S Worshipers Refuse to Join Moscow Church The Associated Press Associated Press Retrieved 2009 10 13 Agafangel Pashkovsky of Odessa orthodoxwiki org The Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia Official Website Russianorthodoxchurch ws Archived from the original on 16 October 2014 Retrieved 12 October 2014 BISHOPS The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia Official Website Retrieved 2021 07 01 Rassledovanie RBK na chto zhivet cerkov RBK 24 February 2017 Saint Petroc Monastery Orthodoxwesternrite wordpress com 27 January 2011 Retrieved 2013 09 19 ROCOR Western Rite Home Rwrv org Retrieved 12 October 2014 The Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia Official Website www russianorthodoxchurch ws Retrieved 2022 03 18 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia synod com Official website of the Synod of bishops of the ROCOR fundforassistance org Official website of the Fund of assistance of the ROCOR Synodal Secretariat for Inter Orthodox Relations of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia ROCOR Studies Website dedicated to the history of the ROCOR eadiocese org Official website of the Eastern American diocese mcdiocese com Official website of the diocese of Montreal and Canada rocor org au Official website of the diocese of Australia and new Zealand orthodox europe org Official website of Diocese of Great Britain and Western Europe chicagodiocese org Official site of Chicago and Mid American eprahim wadiocese org Official website of the Western American diocese rocor de Official website of The German diocese hts edu Official website of Holy Trinity Seminary in Jordanville rocor wr org Western Rite of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia official page iglesiarusa info Official website of The South American diocese Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia amp oldid 1124536144, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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