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Joel J Miller's avatar

Reading history is an exercise is balancing pessimism and optimism. The long history of the Orthodox Church is full of depressing chapters in which every turn of the page induces sighing and cringing. Yet all these centuries later, here we are. I think there are parallels in any tradition. So, I’d say Kirill is our generation’s regrettable episode, but God is greater than Kirill and the Faith has been through worse.

The larger conversations about nationalism, Modernity, and so on are all necessary—and underway. The outcome remains to be determined, but nothing in Orthodoxy moves swiftly.

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Graham's avatar

I'm not 100% sure what the right take is here, but I'm cautious to point the finger at orthodoxy. Church attendence in russia is around 5-8% compared to nearly 30% in Ukraine meaning Ukraine is a much better picture of orthodoxy then russia on that count alone. Additionally, the soviets committed a widespread genocide against russian orthodox and people that worked for the kgb (the organization performing the genocide) seemed to control who went up the roc ranks, the last patriach was basically confirmed kgb. It feels cruel in that context to point the finger at orthodoxy

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