A masked, uniformed, gun-toting soldier has the letter Z, a Kremlin-approved image of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, on his shoulder.
Jesus Christ, frail and devoid of aggression, is portrayed proper behind him.
Each are depicted on the billboard that reads “Christ triumphed over hell, and Russia will too”. This picture is a part of an outside artwork exhibition in central Moscow that urges Russian males to enlist.
Moscow Patriarch Kirill, head of the world’s largest Orthodox Christian Church whose clout transcends Russia’s borders to believers in former Soviet republics and diasporas, has defended the Kremlin’s “right” to begin the conflict.
Russia has “the precise to face on the facet of sunshine, on the facet of God’s reality”, he mentioned days after the invasion started in February 2022.
The white-bearded 78-year-old identified for his eloquence and enterprise acumen promised everlasting salvation to Russian servicemen combating in Ukraine towards “corrupting” Western values.
“[The West’s] aim was to take us with naked palms, with none conflict, to idiot us, to make us a part of their world, to inoculate us with their values,” Kirill mentioned final April.
The Russian Orthodox Church (ROC), helmed by Kirill since 2009, has tens of hundreds of parishes in Russia and elsewhere, from California to Kazakhstan to Ukraine’s Kyiv.
Ukraine was the ROC’s second-largest “canonical territory” with some 12,000 church communities – and stays paramount to one of many ideological pillars of Russian statehood.
A millennia in the past, Orthodox monks from Constantinople baptised Prince Vladimir, whose state, Kyivan Rus, turned the progenitor of Ukraine, Belarus and Russia.
As soon as dubbed “the Second Rome”, Constantinople fell to the Turks, and Russian czars proclaimed Moscow “the Third Rome”.
The political and canonical lack of Ukraine, the heartland of Kyivan Rus, nullifies the idea.
At present’s ROC is the biggest of the world’s 16 Orthodox sees that claims 100 million Russians as its flock – though consultants say the actual determine is far decrease.
Additionally it is the world’s richest Orthodox Church that will get multimillion state subsidies, and donations from businessmen and believers, and runs lots of of tax-exempt companies comparable to publishing homes, motels and jewelry shops.
Kirill isn’t any stranger to luxurious. As soon as noticed sporting a $30,000 Breguet wristwatch, he travels by a private jet and a custom-made, bulletproof limousine guarded by Kremlin-paid safety.
The Kremlin eagerly persecutes any “rival” Christian denominations – making the ROC an ethical police of kinds that sanctifies persecution of ideological and political foes.
The Kremlin needs the ROC for ideological backing, mentioned fugitive opposition activist Sergey Biziyukin, and offers it privileges comparable to actual property, state funds and “an opportunity to maintain rivals on a brief leash”.
However Nikolay Mitrokhin, a Russia professional and fellow of Germany’s College of Bremen, informed Al Jazeera that the ROC’s participation within the conflict means it “faces the prospect of dropping its ‘common character’ and clout, and of lowering its borders to these of [Russian President Vladimir] Putin’s political empire”.
In an in depth report, Mitrokhin concluded that the backing of Putin’s conflict “instantly leads to the increase of Kirill’s short-term clout and the defection of most of autonomous church buildings”.
Kirill instructed some 20,000 clerics from the Baltic to the Pacific to ship a prayer “for peace” – and urged their parishioners to complain about any sermon they thought-about pro-Ukrainian.
Father Andrey Kordochkin fell sufferer to 1 such grievance.
The Oxford-educated theologian spent twenty years serving his parish within the Spanish capital, Madrid.
The white-walled, golden-domed Church of St Mary of Magdalene whose building he oversaw was endorsed by the descendants of the Romanov czars who changed Kyivan Prince Vladimir’s descendants.
However Kordochkin’s flock largely consisted of Ukrainian labour migrants who prayed subsequent to believers from Georgia, Moldova and Bulgaria.
Only a few of his parishioners took half in an internet marketing campaign towards him that ended up with a petition to Kirill in November that complained Kordochkin denounced the conflict and mentioned that the Z image stood for “zombies”.
The 46-year-old priest left his parish and the ROC’s jurisdiction for the Istanbul-based Constantinople Patriarchate and moved to Germany to renew theological research.
However he’s nonetheless bitter concerning the destiny of his parish – and Orthodoxy in Russia.
Kordochkin thinks that Kirill and Putin transgressed to the veneration of a “god of conflict” that has little to do with Christianity’s message.
“He’s removed from innocent, this god calls for human sacrifices, and the issue is that he by no means will get sufficient,” Kordochkin informed Al Jazeera.
He was one in every of virtually 300 Russian clerics to signal an antiwar petition in March 2022. Nearly all of them have been persecuted, whereas different antiwar monks are in a precarious place due to massive households and no secular jobs to fall again on.
“I’d be out within the chilly with my complete household with out a job and a spot to stay,” mentioned a dissenting priest, who lives in Russia, however didn’t signal the petition. He withheld his final title and actual location, fearing for his security.
‘Orthodox Taliban’
After the formally atheist USSR collapsed in 1991, tens of thousands and thousands of Russians embraced their forefathers’ Orthodox religion.
“This was the time of an enormous upheaval, of nice expectation. Many individuals have been spiritually reborn at the moment,” Kordochkin recalled.
However after Putin got here to energy in 2000, the resurgent ROC step by step tilted in the direction of his get together line and turned a blind eye to unpopular steps such because the elimination of advantages for the aged, the biggest group of believers.
Its clerics consecrated nuclear missiles calling them Russia’s “guardian angels”, and blessed the persecution of dissidents.
They condemned same-sex marriages, abortions, intercourse training and HIV prevention programmes that saved Russia’s aids epidemic at bay.
“They’ve devolved into the Orthodox Taliban,” Father Gleb Yakunin, who spent 5 years in Soviet jails for documenting the persecution of believers, informed this reporter in 2012.
In 1991, Yakunin led a parliamentary fee that revealed paperwork itemizing future Patriarch Kirill and different hierarchs as KGB informers.
The Church defrocked and excommunicated Yakunin, and unknown assailants beat him up a number of occasions.
Putin “independently interprets non secular issues whereas the Church acts as an interpreter”, he mentioned.
Falling out with the Pope
Nonetheless, consultants say that the subservience and belligerence are already pulling down the ROC’s clout in ex-Soviet republics and amongst Russian diasporas worldwide.
Kirill’s warcry was not accredited by the Holy Synod, the ROC’s nominal ruling physique that consists of Russian hierarchs and the leaders of autonomous however not impartial church buildings in Ukraine, Belarus, Moldova and Central Asia.
Solely Belarusian Metropolitan Veniamin mentioned in August 2022 that the West “endorses a modern-day Nazi regime” in Ukraine.
The Holy Synod fell in need of denouncing Kiriil’s truculence – whereas different Orthodox sees, together with the Constantinople Patriarchate, lambasted it.
Again in 2019, its Patriarch Bartholomew, the “first amongst equals” of Orthodox leaders, accredited the institution of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church impartial of Kirill.
The “older” Ukrainian Church saved most of its parishes however severed ties with the ROC in Could 2022.
The Latvian and Lithuanian Church buildings adopted go well with.
Kirill even fell out with Pope Francis after making an attempt to persuade him the conflict was “justified”.
“I spoke with Kirill for 40 minutes on Zoom. For the primary 20 minutes, he learn from a chunk of paper he was holding in his hand all the explanations that justify the Russian invasion,” Pope Francis informed an Italian newspaper in March 2022.