The Russian people as a whole has performed great sins that
are the cause of the present misfortunes: the specific sins are oath-breaking
and regicide. The public and military leaders renounced their obedience and
loyalty to the Tsar even before his abdication, forcing him from the throne.
The Tsar did not desire bloodshed within the country. The people affirmed this
deed openly and noisily and nowhere did they express loudly their disagreement
of the forced abdication. At the same time, there was a violation of the oath
given to the Sovereign and his lawful heirs. Besides this, the curse of their
ancestors fell upon the heads of those who performed this crime-the Zemsky
Sobor of 1613, whose decrees it sealed with the curse of those who would
violate them.
Those guilty of the sin of regicide are not only
those who physically performed it, but all the people who rejoiced the
overthrow of the Tsar and allowed his abasement, arrest and exile, leaving him
defenseless in the hands of the criminals, which in fact already predetermined
the end.
Thus, the catastrophe that has come upon Russia is the direct consequence of terrible sins, and the
rebirth of Russia is possible only after cleansing their sins. However, up
to this time there has been no genuine repentance, the crimes that have been
performed have clearly not been condemned, and many active participants in the
Revolution continue even now to reaffirm that at that time, it was not possible
to act in any other way.
In not expressing a direct condemnation of the
February Revolution, the uprising against the Anointed of God, the Russian
people continue to participate in the sin, especially when they defend the
fruits of the Revolution, for, in the words of the Apostle Paul, especially
sinful are those who, knowing that they which commit such things, are worthy of
death, not only do the same, but consent with them that do them (Rom. 1:32).
However, in chastising, the Lord at the same time
also shows the Russian people the way to salvation by making it a preacher of
Orthodoxy in the whole world. The Russian Diaspora has made all the ends of the
world familiar with Orthodoxy, for the mass of Russia, exiles for the most part, is unconsciously a preacher of
Orthodox). Everywhere that Russians live there are built small exile churches,
or even magnificent churches and often there are services in buildings which
have been adapted for this purpose.
A consequence of the fall of the Russian State, was the arising of file Russian Diaspora. More than a
million people were forced to leave their homeland and be scattered about the
whole face of the earth.
A significant part of the Russians who went abroad
belonged to that intellectual class which in recent times has lived by the
ideas of the West. While belonging to the Orthodox Church and confessing
themselves to be Orthodox, the people of this class in their world outlook
significantly departed from Orthodoxy. The chief sin of people of this class
was that they did not build their convictions and way of life on the teaching
of the Orthodox faith, but rather strove to make the rules and teaching of the
Orthodox Church conform to their own habits and desires. Therefore, on the one
hand they were but very little interested in the essence of Orthodox teaching,
often even considering the dogmatic teaching of the Church as being completely
unimportant; and on the other hand, they fulfilled the demands and rites of the
Orthodox Church, but only in so far as this did not interfere with their more
European than Russian way of life. From this comes their disdainful attitude
towards fasting, their visiting of churches only for a short time, and this
rather more for the satisfaction of esthetic than religious feeling, and their
complete lack of understanding of religion, as the chief foundation of the
spiritual life of man.
In the public realm, this class likewise lived by
the ideas of the West. Without giving any place at all for the influence of the
Church, it strove to reconstruct the whole life, of Russia, especially in the realm of State government, according to
Western models. For this reason, in recent times an especially fierce battle
was waged against State authority, and at the same time the necessity for
liberal reforms and a democratic organization of Russia became a new faith, not to confess which signified that
one was behind the times. Making use in their battle with the monarchy of a
slander against the Imperial Family which was widely spread throughout Russia,
and likewise being possessed by a thirst for power, the intellectual class led
Imperial Russia to its fall and prepared the way for the Communist power.
After the coming to power of Communism, the
intellectual class was partially annihilated, and partially it fled abroad,
saving its life. At the same time, the Communists showed their true face, and
besides the intellectual class a multitude of Russians of other classes was
forced to leave Russia, in part in order to save their lives, and in part for
ideological reasons, as they did not desire to serve the Communists. Finding
themselves abroad, the Russian people suffered great spiritual shocks. In the
souls of a majority, a significant crisis was marked by a mass return of the
intellectual class to the Church.
However, this positive manifestation also had its
negative side. By no means, all of those who returned to faith accepted it in
all the fullness of Orthodox teaching. The proud mind could not agree that up
to now it had stood on a false path. There arose strivings to make Christian
teaching agree with the previous views and ideas of the converts. Therefore,
there was a whole series of new religious-philosophical currents, often
completely foreign to Church teaching. Of these currents, especially widespread
was Sophiology, which is founded on the recognition of the value of man in
himself and expresses the psychology of the intellectual class.
Sophiology as a doctrine is known to a
comparatively small group of people and very few actually subscribe to it openly.
But a significant part of the intellectual class of the emigration is
spiritually akin to it, for the psychology of Sophiology is the worship of man,
who is no longer the humble slave of God, but is himself a small god, who has
no need to be blindly submissive to the Lord God. A feeling of refined pride
together with faith in the possibility for a man to live by his own wisdom, is
very characteristic of many people who are "cultural" in the modern
sense, who place above everything else the conclusions of their own minds and
do not desire to be in everything submissive to the teaching of the Church,
looking upon it favorably in a condescending way. Thanks to this the Russian
Church Abroad has been struck by a series of schisms which have caused it harm up
until now and have drawn away into themselves even a part of the hierarchy.
In the future life the judgment will be most
severe for those Russians who, being educated in superb colleges, become the
fiercest enemies of Russia. One is forced to foresee already that in the future
the Diaspora will give many conscious workers against Orthodox Russia, who will
strive to make it Catholic or spread various sects. Likewise, those remaining
outwardly Orthodox and Russian, will secretly work against Russia.
However, Russia was founded on and grew through Orthodoxy, and only
Orthodoxy will save Russia.
To the Russians abroad, it has been granted to
shine in the whole world with the light of Orthodoxy, so that other peoples,
seeing their good deeds, might glorify our Father Who is in heaven, and thus
obtain salvation for themselves. But if it does not perform this purpose and
even abases Orthodoxy by its life, the Diaspora will have before itself two
paths: either to be converted to the path of repentance, having acquired
forgiveness through prayer to God and being reborn spiritually and to being
capable of giving rebirth to our suffering homeland; or else being rejected by
God and remaining in banishment, persecuted by everyone, until gradually it
will degenerate and disappear from the face of the earth.
Moreover, what of the Russian fatherland? Blessed
are you, O Russian land, being purified by the fire of suffering. You have gone
through the water of baptism, now you are going through the fire of suffering,
and you will yet enter your repose. At one time, Christians gathered sand that
was drenched with the blood of martyrs, with reverence from the Colosseum. The
place of the sufferings and death of the martyrs became sacred and especially
revered. Now the whole of Russia is an arena of passion-bearers. Her earth has been
sanctified by their blood, her air by the ascent of their souls to heaven. Yea,
sacred are you, O Russia. The ancient writer who said that you are the Third
Rome and there will be no fourth, was correct. You have surpassed the ancient Rome by the multitude of exploits of your martyrs, you have also surpassed
the Rome that baptized you [Constantinople]
by your standing in Orthodoxy and you will remain unsurpassed to the end of the
world. Only the land that was sanctified by the sufferings and the earthly life
of the God-man is holier than you are, in the eyes of Orthodox Christians.
Shake away the sleep of despondency and sloth, O
sons of Russia! Behold the glory of her sufferings and be purified; wash
yourselves from your sins! Be strengthened in the Orthodox faith; to be worthy
to dwell in the dwelling of the Lord and to settle in His holy mountain! Leap
up, leap up, arise, O Russia, you who from the Lord's hands have drunk the cup
of His wrath! When your sufferings shall have ended, your righteousness shall
go with you and the glory of the Lord shall accompany you. The peoples shall
come to your light, and kings to the shining which shall rise upon you. Then
Lift up your eyes and see: behold, your children come to you from the West and
the North and the Sea and the East, blessing in you Christ forever. Amen.
Shanghai,
1938, and
Report to
the All-Diaspora Sobor, 1938
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