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Posted By: Tomassus Wake up, West! Russia marches to 'holy' war - 07/24/14 02:10 PM
Wake up, West! Russia marches to 'holy' war

Published: 23 July 2014
Marisa Martin
http://www.wnd.com/2014/07/wake-up-west-russia-marches-to-holy-war/

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Patriarch Kirill of Moscow

Something very strange is happening in Russia – stranger than Putin’s fawning female devotees or half nude, Siberian hunting excursions.

Byzantium II is resurrecting – or attempting to – deep in historic Rus.

Drifting ever further into secularism, the West is too busy nailing the doors of the church shut with endless lawsuits and harassments to even notice. Meanwhile back at the Kremlin, Russia looks back longingly to a pre-revolutionary pattern of government … and church.

Evidence abounds in old-world style military expansionism, Russian media, church announcements and even the arts. Not contemporary art, which is still allied closely with European liberalism, but church art, especially icons, which are becoming decidedly martial. What are we to make of it?

Flocks of the faithful venerate even copies of a “miraculous” icon of Tsar Nicholas II. The original in the U.S. is reputed to exude the scent of myrrh. In 1998 the icon was sent by air to circle Russia to call back “the resurgence of Russia” to faith.

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“Miraculous” myrrh-emitting icon of Nicholas II

Nicholas II and his family are now all considered religious martyrs, murdered only for their faith. This has been a quiet belief ever since their deaths in 1918. Historically there is just enough truth in this to make it plausible. The reds who murdered them were devoutly, God-hating atheists, while the Tsar was utterly pious and partisan. Also the Russian Supreme Court legally exonerated the Romanovs in 2008.

Exclusively and devotedly Russian Orthodox, the tsar wasn’t particularly tolerant with Protestants, Roman Catholics or others. Keeping up tradition, he also continued the anti-Semitism of his fathers, pushing a vast number of Jews from Russia.

In spite of Nicholas’ failures, his mythology and grandeur continue to grow long after death. Shrouded in secrecy, the veneration of the tsars never entirely died – even after seven decades of Marxism – and is mushrooming in popularity now.

Nicholas has taken on a beatific glow of sanctity and holiness unmatched by real life, although he wasn’t particularly awful compared to other czars. Some honorifics surrounding him reveal Orthodox spiritual identity with the last tsar, who is seen as a Christ-like sacrifice for Russia.

The tsar was “anointed with Holy Chrism” and “in the eyes of believers and atheists alike, more than a man.” He is “Saint Nicholas the Passion-Bearer,” the Russian Orthodox Church declares.

Since the regent’s death, he and his family were canonized along with a throng of assorted Russian saints and soldiers.

By killing him the “Bolsheviks were consciously striking at the heart of Russia or, more accurately, at its head,” claims writers of “The Mystical Meaning of the Tsar’s Martyrdom.” Another makes the astonishing claim, “The Tsar has taken the guilt of the Russian people upon himself, and the Russian people is forgiven.”

Tsarist believers advance Nicholas as the “Defender of the Church.” His devotees also attribute the curse of Soviet oppression at the feet of the unjust slaughter of the Romanov family alone. Unlike most Westerners, Orthodox see any attacks on the monarchy as attacks on the church.

Some still believe that Nicholas II was the last representative of lawful, Christian authority in this world, that he personally restrained “the mystery of iniquity” (2 Thess. 2:27).

Visions of Nicholas come such as this from a sailor (Silaev, with the cruiser “Almaz”): “The Tsar-Martyr in royal purple and a crown, holding a cup filled to the brim with blood. Beside him on the right was a handsome youth – the Tsarevich – in a dress uniform, also with a cup of blood in his hands. Behind them, on their knees, was the whole martyred Royal Family in white garments, and each of them held a cup of blood in their hands.”

There are several paintings and icons with this theme.

Biblical prophecies, as well as historic events and Bible verses, are reinterpreted in this manner. “Touch Not Mine Anointed One ” warns the Alaska Brotherhood with dire descriptions of the wrath to come. And it did come – too late, of course.

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“The Opening of the Fifth Seal,” (with Nicholas II in intercession)

Some icons even place Nicholas at the Judgment Seat of God or the right hand of Jesus. A modern icon from the Sretensky Monastery in Moscow, “The Opening of the Fifth Seal,” features Nicholas interceding for Christian martyrs in hard times ahead.

Taking a look at the tsars’ titles reveals the scope of Russian power or desire, which seems to be rekindled lately. The full name of Nicholas II from the 1906 Constitution is mighty impressive and ambitious. Remember that the Russian Empire was one of the largest in history, surpassed only by the British and Mongol empires. Perhaps the Finns and others should take note.

Here are a few excerpts from Nicholas’ full name:
•“Emperor and Autocrat of All the Russias’”
•“Titular King of Poland”
•“The Grand Principality of Finland (as an inseparable part of the Russian state of course)
•“Prince of Estonia, Livonia, Courland and Semigalia” (likewise for Georgia being played out now)
•“Heir of Norway, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein” etc, etc.

Big hunks o’ earth were claimed subject to Nicholas II and considered part of a divine plan to reinstate the Byzantine Empire in Russia. This is quietly encouraged again in some Russian circles, although not highly publicized for obvious reasons.

Statements flying around in recent years confirm this, such as from a website edited by Bishop Alexander of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad: “[Nicholas] was an earthly symbol of the Heavenly King, the protector and upholder of the Orthodox Church in Russia, and the heir of Byzantium. … And, like his father, he too was the head of Russia’s Eastern Orthodox Church. Under Nicholas II, Moscow was still seen as the new City of Constantine, the ‘Third Rome’ (since the 15th century).”

We hear more about the Byzantine Empire, which may be forgotten by the West but not the East. This is very old stuff. Catherine the Great groomed her grandson (Constantine – what else would he be named?) to become the first emperor of a restored Byzantium. That didn’t happen.

Catherine was also concerned over the fate of Orthodox Christians under Ottoman rule, which was generally not good. Today many of these same lands are in Islamic turmoil. Russians aiding Christians in Syria makes them the “good guys,” and the U.S. is reflected on poorly, as we have not helped.

Western conservative Christians cheer when Putin stands up for Christian rights in Syria and other ex-Ottoman territories – and so do I. But if his motives are altruistic, we’ll have to wait and see. Putin’s interest in religious rights is confined to the Russian empire and those of Orthodox faith. It is not planetary.

But this may become a resurrected war of worldviews from antiquity: Byzantium, led (so far) by Russia, against the Ottomans, which have generally fallen to terrorists. If this is our future, it will be difficult to not cheer for the bear-wrestling one.

Patriarch Kirill and Vladimir Putin are almost attached at the hip, espousing a very strong state/church relationship. The Theotokos (icons of “Our Lady of Kazan”) go on before them.

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“Our Lady of Kazan” icon

Russia’s national icon is making a comeback in popularity after decades in hiding. The Kazan Lady was “found in a garden” in 1597 and after many centuries embodies Russian nationalism and militarism. This Madonna is a Russian girl to the core. Is this a religious revival, a new imperialist crusade or both? Either way the icons have great significance, as they did long ago. They are not merely ornaments.

Christians have always prayed for peace, protection of their nations and troops, sending priests and chaplains out for this office. We understand this. But Russia’s icons have also been portents of war to come as well as promises of peace.

Russia’s palladium, the “Kazan Mother of God” icon, is their most famed religious icon, but it has a secondary mission: She has been borne into battle for centuries by Russian generals and Emperors. The “Kazan” icon is considered imbued with miraculous power to help in military matters – but only for Russia. Her aid is attributed to fending off (generally successfully) Napoleon and the Turks, Persians, Swedes, Poles and Germans.

So precious is the Mother of Kazan (or Black Virgin) to Russians and belief runs so deep that even Stalin appeared to have used the icon for military purposes. Or perhaps that was just propaganda – who knows? From deep banishment, Mother Kazan’s icon was sent to Stalingrad in 1943 by Stalin for divine help against the Germans – apparently a true story.

Russia’s Lady of Kazan is beginning to see duty again.

In February Putin quietly sent the Kazan icon on a trip to the Crimea. At the time it was assumed it was for a blessing over the Winter Olympics – but far from it. The events in Ukraine and annexation of Crimea soon followed. All this is according to ancient custom of bringing in the icons to bless a military venture.

The important icon “She Who Reigns” was also sent on a highly politicized journey across the world by the Orthodox Church and endorsed by Vladimir Putin. The 2007 venture was highly publicized as a call to “celebrate reconciliation among Russians at home and abroad (since the 1917 revolution).”

Russia’s joint church/state venture receives little fanfare from the Western press, who have no concept of the depth of religious feeling of the mass of humanity. Still, in the U.S., the solid unity, almost theocracy, Putin and Kirill seek for Russia makes both left and right cringe. It is very politically aligned and conveniently supportive of Putin. One wonders, will they need a new Emperor to do this?

Not all Russian Christians are dancing with joy either. After Putin declared a Day of National Unity between the Orthodox Church and the state, many felt alienated. Complaints ranged from the Russian Union of Evangelical Baptists to the leaders of the Communist Party, who called it a “provocation” that would only lead to division. Tatar nationalists detest the Kazan icon, labeling it as symbolic of “the colonial yoke.”

Russian Orthodox consider icons “an entire world that unite our peoples … a consolidating principle.” There are not many important, original icons, and they really aren’t very interesting to look at – especially after you’ve seen them 1,000 times. The art is formulaic and plain, faces unlikely or cadaverous. But their antiquity, purported powers, history and often secret meaning to millions of Orthodox make these little, gilded plaques perhaps the most powerful pieces of art on earth.

Sources: http://www.interfax-religion.com/ R. Monk Zachariah (Liebmann) / The East-West Church & Ministry Report / www.fatheralexander.org [fatheralexander.org] / www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org [jewishvirtuallibrary.org] / www.aawsat.net [aawsat.net] / “The Miracles of the Royal Martyr” / “Eastern America and New York First Hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad” / www.eastwestreport.org [eastwestreport.org]

Interesting
If you find commonplaces reported with breathless neocon naivete interesting.
Some of the facts are quite wrong. Protestants and Catholics had it well under the last Tsar, in fact Catholics had more rights in the Russian Empire than in France at that time.
Byzantium? Far from it. From Peter I on the Russian State aped the once absolutist Western powers, pushing the Church into a department of the State...quite different from the East Roman or Old Russian diarchy.
Yes, there is tsarist kitsch. The article fails to mention that Nicholas forgave his persecutors. Any of us should do so well.
There are so many falsehoods in this article pertaining to Tsar St Nicholas II . . .

He was actually very forward-looking - and genuinely very holy as was his entire family.

He cannot be blamed for actions undertaken by the Russian government at the time, actions that were often undertaken without even his knowledge.

As for Catholics et al., he was on excellent terms with his Anglican, Lutheran and RC royal relatives. When Bl. Leonid Fyodorov sent the Tsar a letter informing him that he and his Old Rite EC Community were praying for his son - the Tsar was so moved that he sent him a hand-written note personally thanking him.

Tsar St Nicholas also protected the Old Believers and was perhaps the first Tsar to do everything possible to guarantee their security. Under the Tsar, the Edinoverie parishes not only prospered, but multiplied.

Again, the Russian government did things in his name of which he was not aware or else could not stop - he was not the first sovereign in history to have found himself in such a predicament.

Also, Tsar Nicholas told the press that the Russian empire was destined to dismantle as its constituent peoples sought independence etc.

The article is completely wrong-headed in comparing the current Russian regime with that of Tsar St Nicholas. it should have compared the current regime with that of the former Soviet Union.

The former Soviet Union, not Tsarist Russia, is the model that the current Kremlin seeks to pattern itself after.

Alex
Interesting doesn't mean I agreed with the article.
Originally Posted by Orthodox Catholic
There are so many falsehoods in this article pertaining to Tsar St Nicholas II . . .

He was actually very forward-looking - and genuinely very holy as was his entire family.

Alex

Thank you, Alex.
The author is extremely illiterate. The Tsar was really very holy with his deeply unhappy family. Russians will pray to him not because of their desire to restore the Byzantine Empire (many of the Russians don't even know about this ancient Empire), but because the history of the 20th century is a tremendous pain and tragedy for the whole Russian people, and the Tsar is a symbol of humility and repentance.
Restoration of Byzantine Empire is impossible in Russia, because the Byzantine Empire was a deep religious society in the Middle Ages. Russia is a secular country without any understanding of truly religious way of life. Only 3% of population is really church-going and taking part in the Divine Liturgy. The rest of baptized people has a dim idea what a real Church is.
We can compare the modern Russia with a totalitarian state, returning back to the USSR. This is true. But why does this lady, the author of the article, touch the holiness, the most dearest symbols of the long-suffering country and the Tsar, who was named Long-Suffering Job during his lifetime? Let her look into the faces of the St. Martyrs http://www.pravmir.com/article_101.html and read about the tragedy of the country, which still remains one of the unhappiest countries in the world with it's governments and rulers.
Dear Nataly,

Many Americans are also feel that way about our own government and leaders.

Alice
Dear Alice,

With the exception, of course, that North America does not have (as yet?) a tradition of New Martyrdom and suffering for Christ.

I would like to ask Nataly, however, how she understands His Holiness the Patriarch of Moscow writing a letter of congratulation to the leader of the Soviet Communist Party.

I just have difficulty understanding myself why His Holiness would show that kind of respect toward the leader of the "servants of Satan" who committed such atrocities against the Church of God.

Alex
Dear Alex,

I am not Nataly, but seeing how the EP and Pope often act in a similar fashion to groups that persecute them and/or Christians, I would say that it is an action of Church Oikonomia and Christian charity--for the good of the (often embattled) Church in society...covering one's bases, as it were.

In Greece, there is a Communist (atheist) party in Parliament. They are also treated respectfully despite their often antagonistic attitude, by the Church.

Alice



Quote
With the exception, of course, that North America does not have (as yet?) a tradition of New Martyrdom and suffering for Christ.

Actually, ask some people and you may see that a 'white' martyrdom is going on.

Dare oppose or object to the official Western stance on 'social issues' as many do, and ask them if there is not suffering for one's beliefs.

There are examples in Christian (and mainstream) news outlets of this all the time.

Originally Posted by Orthodox Catholic
I would like to ask Nataly, however, how she understands His Holiness the Patriarch of Moscow writing a letter of congratulation to the leader of the Soviet Communist Party.
Alex

Dear Alex,
I would like to add, that Patriarch Kirill congratulated the leader of Communist party Zyuganov on his 70th birthday not only with the letter, but also he presented him with the church’s highest order, saying, “As one of the most prominent politicians of modern Russia, you strive to look after the welfare of the people and protect traditional moral values. I hope that in future your fruitful activity will help to promote socially significant initiatives and the moral transformation of society”...
I don't really understand what for it was done?!! It has been a chaos and misunderstanding of fundamental basis of moral life in our society. Since the Perestroika I've been waiting that the Communist party and the government of the USSR should repent for all the victims of bolshevism, stalinism and communism, for killed tens of thousands of Russian Orthodox priests and believers, for all of the murdered saints, imprisoned and tortured, for whom we pray now... But they still haven't done that! I've been waiting for such relations between the official church and the government. Unfortunately it is impossible in the modern political situation. Therefore we watch news about the highest church order for the party that did the lowest thing to the whole nation of Russia...Odd, delirium, bacchanalia.

Dear Alice, I think we don't have to be delicate and tolerant in this question and don't try to find any ways to justify modern church's official ceremonies. Many of them are being dictated by the comprehensive politics and ideology of a new Russian state, which is being born on our eyes.

It is enough just to look at the list of New Martyrdom to anathematize the Communist party till the end of time.
Perhaps Russia is off the hook to de-sovietize because the West allows it?
If I may explain, so much of what constitutes the class of cultural arbitors in the West has been extremely lenient on Communism. This is so pervasive that even on a popular level there is stlll such a thing as Soviet chic, wheras if there were ever any manifestation of Nazi chic its admirers would be considered mentally ill at best. This situation held untill the recent Olympiad, in which Putin & Co. attacked (to the West's eyes) homosexuality, which for all intents and purposes is the big Western Sacred Cow. But where does the West lay the blame, not on Sovietized culture but on Orthodoxy. Perhaps in its Frankfurt School inspired iteration, our cultural arbitors' subconscious can only now entertain the thought of sexual taboo connection to traditiobal religion.One wonders if Western political correctness -- a phrase a bit worn out I'll admit-- will be what makes Soviet chic and leftish empathy unfasionable. Ironic, no?
Originally Posted by Nataly
Originally Posted by Orthodox Catholic
I would like to ask Nataly, however, how she understands His Holiness the Patriarch of Moscow writing a letter of congratulation to the leader of the Soviet Communist Party.
Alex

Dear Alex,
I would like to add, that Patriarch Kirill congratulated the leader of Communist party Zyuganov on his 70th birthday not only with the letter, but also he presented him with the church’s highest order, saying, “As one of the most prominent politicians of modern Russia, you strive to look after the welfare of the people and protect traditional moral values. I hope that in future your fruitful activity will help to promote socially significant initiatives and the moral transformation of society”...
I don't really understand what for it was done?!! It has been a chaos and misunderstanding of fundamental basis of moral life in our society. Since the Perestroika I've been waiting that the Communist party and the government of the USSR should repent for all the victims of bolshevism, stalinism and communism, for killed tens of thousands of Russian Orthodox priests and believers, for all of the murdered saints, imprisoned and tortured, for whom we pray now... But they still haven't done that! I've been waiting for such relations between the official church and the government. Unfortunately it is impossible in the modern political situation. Therefore we watch news about the highest church order for the party that did the lowest thing to the whole nation of Russia...Odd, delirium, bacchanalia.

Dear Alice, I think we don't have to be delicate and tolerant in this question and don't try to find any ways to justify modern church's official ceremonies. Many of them are being dictated by the comprehensive politics and ideology of a new Russian state, which is being born on our eyes.

It is enough just to look at the list of New Martyrdom to anathematize the Communist party till the end of time.

Dear Nataly,

I pray you have a husband who is worthy of such a great Orthodox Christian person as yourself!!

Alex
Originally Posted by Alice
Quote
With the exception, of course, that North America does not have (as yet?) a tradition of New Martyrdom and suffering for Christ.

Actually, ask some people and you may see that a 'white' martyrdom is going on.

Dare oppose or object to the official Western stance on 'social issues' as many do, and ask them if there is not suffering for one's beliefs.

There are examples in Christian (and mainstream) news outlets of this all the time.

Agreed. But I don't think such a white martyrdom will qualify one for the calendar . . . wink

They're not yet nailing us to the doors of iconostases, making us stay out on frozen lakes without our clothes on or otherwise slowly torturing us to death.

And no matter what country one lives in, the Church has NO business congratulating militant atheists/communists on anything.

I don't believe any pope has yet to do something similar to the leader of a communist party or of an atheist movement.

I stand to be corrected if someone can find something to the contrary.

Pax Et Bonum!

Alex
Dear Mark,

I can only speak for myself to say that I'm really unworthy of such a incisive, brilliant mind!

Thank you for allowing me to bask in the light of your ruminations!!

Alex
Posted By: DMD Re: Wake up, West! Russia marches to 'holy' war - 07/31/14 10:25 AM
I rather agree with Alex and Nataly here on most points in this discussion.

We can not equate the Church's true conservatism with the popular 'conservatism' of the moment - be it in America or the Putinist version of the same in Russia. But I really do not wish to debate 'synergy', 'symphonia' or politics here or, frankly at all anymore, as it is always a rabbit hole to the same dark place.

Call me a cynic...
Quote
But I really do not wish to debate 'synergy', 'symphonia' or politics here or, frankly at all anymore, as it is always a rabbit hole to the same dark place.

Call me a cynic...

I call you a realist!
Thank you, Alex!
It is a pleasure to be on this forum (still to be) and have an opportunity to discuss things like these. But there is a dark and awful atmosphere in Russia now. I have no words to explain what is going on. The most sensitive people feel that we are on the face of a new tragedy... I can still be on the international forum, still have a chance to express my attitude although to such things as politics and the official church. But everything can change in a day. We will wake up once in the morning and will not be able to join forums, Facebook, Youtube and so on. Putin banned food and agricultural imports from countries that have imposed sanctions against Russia. European and American products are forbidden in our home market from today. It is frighten, because it can be beginning of the end, the end of our last hopes for democratic and free Russia.
You can't really understand what is to live in isolation and in a nondemocratic society... I lived my childhood in the USSR and remember how it had been. Dear Alice, DMD and some others, please, don't compare your governments with our, don't compare the situation in America or Canada with Russian. We have a memory of the darkest past and we perceive very painful and cautious every action of our government, because it can lead the country to a new area of totalitarism. Your countries don't face such threat. You are free to express your political views, you can be open minded and you have no cencorship in mass media. I don't know from today what we will be tommorrow: no world wide web, no last democratic radio and newspaper, even no private rights to property (who knows?) and so on.
So, I'm still here. But if you, freinds, find out, that I was not on the forum for a long time, know something is wrong with us here. Then intensify your prayers for us, please!
And for my future husband too wink
Dearest Nataly,

Prayers for you, prayers for you and our love and concern for you that we feel in our hearts in a very painful way!!

Prayers!

Alex
Prayers for you Nataly. You and your people deserve much better.
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