PROFESSSOR
REV. MIKHAIL ZHETLOV: HISTORICAL-CANONICAL BASIS FOR THE UNITY OF THE
RUSSIAN CHURCH
The
following article describes in detail and scrupulously analyzes the
historical events connected with the arrangement of Church life in
Kiev, Moscow, and Western Rus’ over the span of the last
millennium. Over that period of time, the unity of the Russian
Orthodox Church has been attacked a number of times from various
sides, but it has nevertheless continued to exist significantly
longer than those broken periods. In Byzantine times it was namely
the Church of Constantinople that advocated for this unity against
the rising political conflicts between one or another Russian
princedom. Only the Byzantium elite itself was able to tear the
metropolia of all the Russias from Constantinople, when it first
tried to use Russian Orthodoxy as a bargaining chip in its desperate
attempt to get the West to come to the aid of perishing
Constantinople, and then allowed the Uniate metropolitan to usurp the
title of the primate of “All Rus’”; but the objective course of
history has given a comprehensive answer to this question, fixed in a
whole series of ecclesiastical-canonical documents cited by the
author, which leave no grounds for any lawful reinterpretation
whatsoever.
Ιστορικά και κανονικά ερείσματα ενότητας της Ρωσικής Εκκλησίας του Καθηγητή της Θεολογικής Ακαδημίας Μόσχας, Ιερέα Μηχαήλ Ζελτόφ
1.
The fact of the history of the unity of the Churches of “All the
Russias”.
I.1.
Byzantine period
From
the very beginning of its existence, the ecclesiastical organization
of the various lands of historical Rus’ are: the South (Kiev,
Chernigov, Russian Peryaslavl1),
Southwest (Vladimir-Volynian, Galich, and others), West (Polotsk,
Turov, Smolensk), East (Ryazan, Murom), Northwest (Novgorod, Pskov),
and Northeast (Rostov, Suzdal, and later Vladimir-on-Klyazma,2 was
united and headed by the metropolitan in Kiev, who originally bore
the title, τῆς
Ῥωσίας,
“The Russias”, without the addition of any other named
cities.3 Incidentally,
in the mid-eleventh century there was an attempt to either grant the
Peryaslavl and Chernigov bishops the title of metropolitan without
any actual powers, or to actually divide the Russian Church into
three metropolias; but this attempt did not last long and had no
noticeable consequences.4
The
first real threat to the unity of the Russian Church was the edict of
Klim (Clement) Smolyatich in 1147. The political situation in Rus’
by the mid-twelfth century was onerous. After the death of Prince
Vladimir Monomakh, the Russian lands entered a period of infighting,
and by the middle of the century broke apart into about fifteen
princedoms, in part being in complicated, at times extremely hostile
interrelations, which led to a series of bloody internecine wars. In
1147, the Kievan prince Izlyaslav Mistislavich organized in Kiev the
appointment of Metropolitan Klim Smolyatich without consulting with
the Constantinople patriarch.5 This
step was supported by the bishops of Chernigov, Belgorod,
Yuriev,6 Peryaslavl,
and Vladimir of Volhynia, but rejected by the bishops of Smolensk,
Polotsk, Rostov, and Novgorod. The nonparticipation of the
Constantinople Patriarchate in the establishment of Klim in fact
meant Kiev’s declaration of ecclesiastical independence if not de
jure then de
facto,
which, just the same, did not draw all of Rus’ into that
independence, but for mainly only its southern dioceses.
The
reaction of the Constantinople Patriarchate to the Klim’s stance
was demonstratively harsh. Arriving in Rus’ in 1156 from
Constantinople, Metropolitan Constantine I7 deposed
all the clergy appointed by Klim, placed Izyaslav who had established
him under an ecclesiastical curse, and even re-consecrated the St.
Sophia Cathedral in Kiev.8
During
the period of confrontations in Rus’ caused by the appointment of
Klim, one of his main opponents, the bishop of Novgorod St. Niphont,
probably received the title of archbishop from the Constantinople
Patriarchate. Some researchers have seen in this an agreement by the
Patriarchate to church independence of the northern part of the
Russian Church from southern part that had gone out from under
control—which is fundamentally untrue.9
The
Constantinople politics in the years around this event completely
confirmed the City’s reluctance to divide the Russian Church along
lines dictated by a passing political situation. Thus, Patriarch Luke
Chrysoverges responded with a refusal to the request sent him in 1160
by Grand Prince Andrei Bogoliubsky, the son of Yuri Dolgoruki, to
grant Northeast Rus’ a separate metropolia, and he sent his refusal
along with a threat to cease divine services in the
churches.10 Moreover,
in Patriarch Luke’s answer an innovation in the form of the word
“всея”—“all”
was added to the title for Kievan metrolitans, “of Rus’”11—which
was supposed to add additional emphasis to the indivisibility of the
Russian Church.12 From
that time on the title, “All the
Russias (τῆς
πάσης
Ῥωσίας)
also begins to show up on the seals of the Russian metropolitans.13
In
1169, Metropolitan Constantine II, sent to Rus’ by Patriarch Luke
Chrysoverges in 1167, placed an end to the project of creating a
separate metropolia for Northeast Rus’, demonstratively condemning
one Theodore, who St.
Andrei Bogoliubsky had planned to place at the head of this
metropolia. Constantine II did not even stop with a ecclesiastical
punishment of Theodore—humiliatingly renamed “Theodorets [a funny
sounding diminutive.—Trans.], but also ordered that serious
physical damage be inflicted on him14,
which was something unparalleled in Russian Church history up till
then.
Thus,
precisely the Constantinople Patriarchate not only made the main
contribution into the devopment of the idea of an indivisible Russian
Church in the twelfth century, but also decisively defended it
against all state-political contradictions that were tearing apart
the Northeast, South, and other parts of Rus’ during that era,
using to this end all different measures, even extremely harsh ones.
In
the light of what has be said here, it is extremely important to note
that the factual transfer from the mid thirteenth century of the
Russian metropolitans’ permanent residence from Kiev to
Northeastern Rus’—first to Vladimir, and then to Moscow—which
had as its main cause the destruction of southern Rus’ by the
Mongol Tatars—not only met no protest from Constantinople, but even
received a blessing from the Patriarch and the Council of Bishops
(see below). This proves that the Constantinople Patriarchate
continued to view the metropolitan τῆς
[πάσης]
Ῥωσίας
as the head of the undivided Church of all the Russian lands, and not
as the metropolitan of specifically Kiev.
Thus,
Metropolitan Kirill III,15 who
acted in this capacity no later than from 1243, but who was confirmed
only in 1246–1247 by the Constantinople Patriarch who was living in
Nicea due to the occupation of Constantinople by the Crusaders, moved
in 1240 to the “Suzdal lands”.16 Only
closer to the end of his life did Metropolitan Kirill spend any
noticeable amount of time in Kiev itself (1276–1280), but then he
again departed to the Vladimir-Suzdal lands, where in 1281 he died in
the town of Peryaslavl-Zalesky. Metropolitan Kirill’s remains where
taken first to Vladimir and then to Kiev, where they were buried.
St.
Maxim, Metropolitan Kirill’s successor, arrived in Rus’ from
Byzantium in 1283 and ruled the Church for a long time, mainly from
Kiev; however in 1299–1300 he officially transferred his residence
along with its entire apparatus to Vladimir,17 where
he died and was buried in 1305.
During
the time of his visitation in the southwestern lands of Rus’ in
around 1301, St. Maxim, among other things, acquainted himself with
abbot Peter of Ratsk Monastery.18 Over
the course of about two years after this portentous meeting between
Prince Yuri Danilovich of Galicia-Volhynis, Emperor Andronicus II
Paleologus, and the holy Patriarch Athanasius I, as it would later be
seen, would obtain for Prince Yuri approval to create an independent
Galicia metropolia within the borders of his domain.19 The
acting bishop of Galich was raised to the rank of metropolitan.20 In
1307 he died, and Yuri Lvovich decided to place at the head of the
Galicia Metropolia Abbot Peter of Ratsk Monastery, but against his
wishes Peter, a native of Southwestern Rus’, was appointed in
Constantinople not to Galich but to Kiev as the head of the unified
metropolia of All Rus’ and the successor to St. Maxim. Thus, the
short-lived independence of the Galicia Metropolia was annulled by
the same emperor and patriarch who had at first agreed to grant it
and who had now apparently recognized the error of their previous
decision.21 Nevertheless
this example of Constantinople’s departure from its own policy of
preserving the indivisibility of the Russian Metropolia, which was
small in geographic scale and duration, would later play the role of
a historical precedent.
After
his appointment in Constantinople and arrival in Rus’ in 1308, St.
Peter remained for two years in Kiev. But already in 1309 he followed
the example of his predecessors and moved his permanent residence to
Vladimir. In 1325, St. Peter was transferred to Moscow,22 where
he died on December 20, 1326.23 During
the time of his rule over the one Russian Church, the Lithuanian
(Λίτβων/Λιτβάδων)
metropolia of the Constantinople Patriarchate (somewhere between 1315
and 1317) appeared, which at first was probably created as an
ecclesiastical organization for Lithuanians converting to Orthodoxy;
soon after 1329 it ceased to exist.24
The
next metropolitan τῆς
Ῥωσίας,
the Greek St. Theognostos, arrived in Rus’ in 1328 and after a
brief time in Kiev and Vladimir, settled in Moscow. Thus, the
Constantinople Patriarchate, in the person of its primate himself,
consciously sanctioned the relocation of the central governance of
the unified Russian metropolias to Moscow, while keeping its title,
“of Kiev”.
In
the era of Holy Hierarch Theognostos there was a renewed attempt by
the Galicians to have their own metropolia that would be independent
of the rest of Rus’. In around 1331, Patriarch Isaiah of
Constantinople granted Bishop Theodore of Galich, who had been
consecrated by St. Theognostos in 1328,25 the
title of metropolitan26—this
follows from the commemoration of the “Metropolitan of Galicia”
among the participants of the Council in 1331.27 However,
soon Patriarch Isaiah repealed his decision.28 This
can be seen from the fact that the next patriarch, John XIV Kalekas,
between 1342 and 1346 again raised the rank of the same Galich
hierarch to metropolitan and published a conciliar grammota
determining the submission to him of all the dioceses that had been
in submission to him thirty years earlier.29 Patriarch
John Kalekas, who went down in history as the persecutor of St.
Gregory of Palamas, did this deed at the request of the enthroned
prince of Volhynia Liubart-Dimitry, son of the Lithuanian prince
Hedimin, without consulting Emperor John V Palaeologos due to the
latter’s not yet having come of age. But in 1346, John VI
Cantecuzen came to power having been proclaimed the co-ruler of John
V, who was an admirer and supporter of St.
Gregory Palamas and his teachings. In 1347, Patriarch John
Kaleka was deposed, and his acts accordingly revoked. In part, in
August 1347, an imperial chrysobull (golden bulla) was issued that
revoked the creation of a separate metropolia for the “country of
Little Russia, called Volhynia”, after which in September of the
same year followed an act of the bishops’ council headed by
Patriarch Isidore I. The chrysobull and Coucil Act was accompanied by
several Letters (official letters) of the Emperor and Patriarch to
the princes and metropolitans (for more detail see below). According
to these documents, absolutely all dioceses of the different Russian
lands, independent of the state they belonged to, were in submission
to the Metropolitan of All Rus’, Theognostos.
The
next attempt to take a part of the Russian Church out from under the
authority of the lawful metropolitan, closely connected with the
intrigues of various secular rulers of the time, occurred in 1352,
when a certain Theodorit was consecrated by the Patriarch of Tarnovo
(Bulgaria) with the title of Metropolitan of Rus’, and soon took up
residence in Kiev. This act was categorically condemned by the Church
of Constantinople.30 Just
the same, Theodorit continued making attempts for the next few years
to create an independent metropolia with its center in Kiev, ignoring
the fact of his deposition by the patriarch of Constantinople. By
that time, St. Theognostos had reposed in 1353 and was interred in
the Dormition Cathedral of the Moscow Kremlin next to St. Peter, and
Bishop Alexy of Vladimir, who had been elevated to his cathedra by
St. Theognostos not long before the latter’s death, set off for
Constantinople.
St.
Alexy was born in Moscow to a boyar family from Chernigov that had
left their native land due to its destruction by the Tatars, and was
chosen by St. Theognostos as his successor—to which the letters
written to Constantinople by St. Theognostos requesting this testify
(this choice was completely supported by the grand princes, the
bishopric, boyars, and the people), as well as the very fact that St.
Alexy was granted the title “of Vladimir”, which from the time of
St. Maxim was given only to the metropolitans of All Rus’.31 In
1354, Patriarch of Constantinople St. Philotheos, together with his
entire council, having reviewed the request of St. Theognostos, the
grand princes, and everyone else, approved it by confirming St. Alexy
in the rank of Metropolitan—Κυέβου
καὶ
πάσης
τῆς
Ῥωσίας,
about which on June 30, 1354 a Council act was written.32 This
act was supplemented by the patriarchal letters to bishop Moses of
Novgorod from July 2 and July 7, which contains a ban on accepting
Theodorit as metropolitan (or even as a clergymen at all) and an
exhortation to obey the lawful metropolitan Alexy, to turn to him for
judgments instead of taking them directly to the patriarch.33 On
those same days a conciliar Letter of the Constantinople Patriarchate
and the bishops with him was composed, according to which the main
residence of the Metropolitan—Κυέβου
καὶ
πάσης
τῆς
Ῥωσίας—was
transferred to Vladimir, “irrevocably and unto eternal ages
inalienably” (ἀναφαιρέτως
καὶ
ἀναποσπάστως
εἰς
αἰῶνα
τὸν
ἄπαντα).34 In
fact, there was talk of moving the cathedra to Moscow, because by
that time the metropolitans of Rus’ had been living in Moscow for
about thirty years already; Vladimir is mentioned in the Letter only
because it was still the official center of the Grand Princedom.
This
was the end to the story of Theodorit’s self-proclaimed, “Kiev
autocephaly”, and the transfer of the center of the Metropolia
πάσης
τῆς
Ῥωσίας
to Northeastern Rus’ was ratified by the council. However, already
in the same year the unity of the metropolia was dealt a new blow due
to the renewal of the Lithuanian metropolia at the request of the
Lithuanian Grand Prince Algirdas. The decision of the Constantinople
Patriarchate to renew this metropolia and consecrate a Metropolitan
of Lithuania was potentially conflict-making, inasmuch as under the
conditions of a changing political reality—namely the considerable
expansion of the territory of the Lithuanian Grand Princedom—the
new metropolitan could try to extend his jurisdiction to dioceses
that never had any relationship to the Lithuanian metropolia and
historically belonged to the metropolia of All Rus’. In these
conditions, however, the ecclesiastical authorities of Constantinople
did not take any measures to delineate the powers of the two
metropolias and did not reassign any diocese of the Russian
metropolia to the Lithuanian one (unlike what was earlier done in the
case of the Galician metropolia). As a result, the metropolitan
consecrated by St. Philotheos, Roman, almost immediately began to
claim the rule over not only over the dioceses of Lithuania, but of
the entire Russian Church—which of course led to a whole series of
conflicts. It is not entirely clear how to explain this decision by
Constantinople’s to appoint Roman—only by the inconsistency of
either the constrained material circumstances in the Patriarchate (at
which the Russian chroniclers hint directly), or by, more probably,
its inadequate reaction to the change in political reality that was
happening before everyone’s very eyes. Because of the territorial
expansion of the Lithuanian Grand Princedom, several formerly Western
Russian princedoms had become part of its territory, and practically
the entire territory of the Russian South were sure to enter as
well—including Kiev, as well as many central Russian princedoms.
Therefore, it is no surprise that the restoration of a metropolia,
once created for the newly enlightened Lithuanians (see above) turned
out to be impossible without doing damage to the Russian metropolia.
Be
that as it may, the desire itself of Metropolitan Roman to make
claims on the entire territory of Rus’ is testimony that the
perception of the metopolia πάσης
τῆς
Ῥωσίας
as unified and indivisible was still in force. With the death of
Roman in 1362 the conflict began to calm down, and even later St.
Philotheos himself reconsidered his decision to appoint Roman, to
which testifies the patriarchal resolution abolishing the Lithuanian
Metropolia, and the missive of St. Philotheos to St. Alexy and
princes of various Russian regions from 1370 about the need to accept
only the metropolitan Κυέβου
καὶ
πάσης
τῆς
Ῥωσίας—that
is, St. Alexy—as the head of the Russian Church.35
The
next year, the demands of the Polish king Kasimir III to grant Galich
and other territories that were part of Poland at the time their own
metropolitan were reviewed in Constantinople. Kasimir cited the
precedent of the existence of a Galicia metropolia created by St.
Athanasios I (although St. Athanasios himself had abolished it: see
above), and argued his request by the fact that St. Alexy does not
give the Orthodox dioceses in his (Kasimir’s) realm the necessary
pastoral attention (although in reality it was the Polish rulers
themselves who created obstacles for the appropriate pastoral
activity). Furthermore, Kasimir’s request contained a direct threat
to convert his Orthodox population to Roman Catholicism in the event
that he is not given his own metropolitan.36
The
Patriarch gave in to the threat and satisfied the demands of the
Polish king,37 now
separating the Galician, Kholm, Turov, Peremyshl, and
Vladimir-Volhynia dioceses from the Russian Church for the third
time, and proclaiming one of the bishops of these dioceses, Anthony,
Metropolitan of Galicia. This was brought to pass in May, 1371 in the
form of a council act,38 with
a corresponding missive sent to St. Alexy39 (of
Moscow).
The
final years of St. Alexy’s rule of the Russian Church were darkened
by complex intrigues against him, an active part in which played a
highly educated Bulgarian named Cyprian, consecrated in December 1375
in Constantinople to the rank of Metropolitan of Kiev and Lithuania
(the title “of Kiev” at the same time being applied to holy
hierarch Alexy, Metropolitan of All Rus’), and sent in 1376 to Rus’
with the right to review the accusations against St. Alexy that had
been put forth by his enemies, and to become the head of the entire
Russian Church should it be necessary. The proposed trial in fact
never took place, and Metropolitan Cyprian remained in Kiev until St.
Alexy’s death in February, 1378. The following decades, in the
words of Metropolitan Macarius (Bulgakov), “could be called the
most troubled times in the history of our metropolia.”40 The
end of this time of troubles could be considered to be the
unification under St. Cyprian of the Russian dioceses—at first
without counting those included in the Galician metropolia,41 and
later including them.42 This
unification was signified by the arrival of St. Cyprian in 1390 in
Kiev and then in Moscow, from whence he continued to rule the Russian
Church right up till his death in 1406.
St.
Cyprian’s successor, the Greek St. Photius, was consecrated in
Constantinople in 1408 with the right to rule the whole Russian
Church, with the exclusion of the Galicia metropolia (in which by
that time only two of the five dioceses remained). In 1410 St.
Photius reached Moscow, viewing it as his main place of residence.
This displeased the grand prince of Lithuania Vitovt, who even before
St. Photius’s consecration tried to gain a separate Metropolia for
Lithuania. In 1414, Vitovt sent a complaint to Constantinople against
St. Photius and demanded that St. Cyprian’s nephew, Gregory
Tsamblak, be appointed metropolitan of Lithuania. When he received a
refusal, Vitovt organized a council of bishops located on the
territories subject to him, and in 1416 they consecrated Gregory as
metropolitan. The Constantinople Patriarchate reacted sternly to this
self-proclaimed autocephaly, deposing and anathematizing Gregory, to
which the letter of Patriarch Joseph II to St. Photius43 and
the letters sent simultaneously to Emperor Manuil II Palaeologos, St.
Photius, and Grand Prince Vasily I Dimitrievich44 testify.
After Gregory’s death in the winter of 1419–1420, St. Photius
managed to make peace with Vitovt. The conclusion of it was the
complete unification of the entire Russian Church, including
Galicia,45 under
St. Photius. To his death in 1431, the unity of the metropolia of
All the Russias was
not broken by anything else.
Constantinople
by that time, unlike the gradually strengthening Moscow, was on the
threshold of catastrophe. Already by the end of the 14th century the
Ottomans had conquered almost the entire territory of former
Byzantium, and by 1430, other than Constantinople itself, only a part
of the Peloponnesus and a few land on the shores of the Black Sea
remained in the hands of the Greeks. In 1453 Constantinople fell, at
which ended the Byzantine era. This was preceded by almost three
decades of attempts to stave off the inevitable, in the course of
which the Byzantine elite assented to concluding a union with the
Roman Catholic Church, leading fundamental upheavals, including in
the metropolia of All the Russias, which we will discuss below.
The
Byzantine period: conclusions.
During
the course of the whole Byzantine era the official position of the
Constantinople Patriarchate is inevitably summed up as: The unity of
ecclesiastical organization with the metropolitan “of Rus’” at
the head (and from the mid-twelfth century, “of All Rus’”) is a
definite good and should not be stricken down by the changing
political circumstances. This approach was repeatedly affirmed at the
highest level—by patriarchs, councils, and emperors. Moreover, the
Constantinople Church did not doubt that the primate of the Russian
Metropolia was not attached exclusively to Kiev, but is the primate
of all the Russian lands, which is why in the twelfth century
Constantinople included the words “of All” in the metropolitan’s
title, and confirmed at the council the decision to move the
permanent residence of the metropolitan, as a matter of pastoral
prudence, to Northeast Rus’ “irreversibly and for eternal ages
inalienably.”
Each
attempt by Kiev of self-willed separation from other Russian lands
and from Constantinople (Klim Smolyatich, Theodorit, and Gregory
Tsamblak46)
inevitably recieved an extremely tough answer from Constantinople:
Those who dared to do so were defrocked and anathematized.
The
situation with the Lithuanian metropolia was a little more
complicated. It was first created not for Rus’, but for the rulers
at the time over the Lithuanian state; and its metropolitans
themselves perceived it as an alternative Russian metropolia,
inasmuch as the expanding Grand Duchy of Lithuania was encompassing
formerly Russian lands. Several times the Constantinople Patriarchate
satisfied the request of the Lithuanian (not Muscovite) princes and
appointed their candidates as metropolitan. In fact, for
Constantinople the appointment of candidates at the wish of the
Lithuanian (but not the Muscovite) princes did not at all mean that
they agreed to the breaking of the unity of the Russian Church. To
the contrary, these metropolitans—Roman, St. Cyprian, and possibly
Gerasimos (see below) tried each time to extend their authority also
to the northeastern princedoms, which speaks for a continued
understanding of the Rus’ metropolia as one, undivided
ecclesiastical organism. Thus, in the case of the of the Lithuanian
metropolia, Constantinople was trying to maneuver between the centers
of two very large state formations on the former territory of
pre-Mongolian Rus’, but in no way wished to deny the very idea of
the unity of the Russian Church.
Only
in relation to the Galicia metropolia did Constantinople agree to a
true separation of one part of the diocese from the one Church of All
Rus’—even three times (one of these times can be explained by the
bare-faced blackmail coming from the Polish authorities).
Nevertheless, in each of these cases the majority of the dioceses of
the Galicia metropolia were able to separate themselves from the rest
of the Russian Church only for a short period of time, and by the end
of the Byzantine era, this entire metropolia de
facto returned
wholly to the united metropolia of
All Rus’.
I.2.
Events of the 1430s–1460s
The
idea of concluding a union with Rome for the sake of receiving
support in the West was nothing new for the political elite of late
Byzantium. The first such attempt was made by Emperor Michael VIII
Palaeologos, on the behalf of whom in 1274 the Byzantine delegation
signed the Union with the Catholic Church at the Second Council of
Lyons, which guaranteed Michael the recognition of his imperial title
in the West and allowed him to put off the attack on Constantinople
by the navy of Karl of Anjou (which in fact never took place).47 This
union essentially existed only on paper and was formally revoked by
Michael’s son, Andronicus II. The next attempt to use the problem
of the division of Churches in order to try and save Constantinople
was made by the great-grandson of Andronicus II, Emperor John V
Palaeologos, who in August 1369 arrived in Rome, and in October of
the same year, first read the Latin creed before witnesses, then
later publicly bowed down three times to the ground before the pope
and kissed his shoe, then his knee, and then his neck, after which he
took part in the papal mass.48 Incidentally,
the Orthodox clergy was in no way present during that process.49
Many
times after occupying the throne in 1391did the son of John V, Manuil
II, seek support in the West. In 1422, three years before his death,
he sent an ambassador to Rome with an offer to enter into discussions
on a new union. His son, John VIII, who ruled from 1425 to 1448, sent
two more ambassadors in 1426 and 1430, but it was only with the new
pope Eugene IV in 1431 that an agreement came from Rome to begin the
negotiations.
The
circumstances came together in such a way that for the West by that
time, besides the conclusion of an all-encompassing union with the
Christian East as it were, a local union with the Orthodox
inhabitants of the Polish kingdom and the Grand Duchy of Lithuania
became the subject of great interest. Negotiations for this had
already begun in 1396 with the participation of a series of Catholic
rulers and hierarchs, provoked in part by the complicated political
situation in the relations between the two above-mentioned states and
the Teutonic Order.50 One
of the episodes of this process was the participation in the Catholic
Church’s Council of Constance (1414–1418) by the illegitimate
Kiev Metropolitan Gregory Tsamblak, who had been deposed by
Constaninople—but then, by all appearances, recognized
retroactively—who had been sent there undoubtedly by Grand Prince
Vitovt, but who was now acting at the council on behalf of the
emperor and patriarch.51 As
a result, the role of the metropolitan of All the Russias in
concluding a future union became one of the key roles not only by
force of the size of this metropolia, which now exceeded that of all
other metropolias of the Constantinople Patriarchate, but also by
force of the intra-Catholic motivations.
It
is not known whether they were conscious of this in Moscow—a city
where the residence of the metropolitans of All Russia had already
been located for centuries. After the death of St. Photius, the
Russian Church was de
facto headed
by Bishop Jonah of Ryazan and Murom, chosen by the grand prince and
the council of bishops and given the title, “named His Holiness the
Metropolitan of Russia”. The events of the internecine struggles
going on in Moscow did not allow St. Jonah to leave for
Constantinople in time for the official appointment. These struggles
began after the death in 1430 of Vitovt, who was the young Prince
Vasily II’s grandfather on his mother’s side, and were
exacerbated after the death of St. Photius.52 As
a result, in 1433 the former grand prince of Lithuania Svidrigailo,
dethroned in 1432 but stubbornly fighting for power, managed to get
Constantinople’s consent to appoint his own candidate as
metropolitan of All Rus’—Bishop Gerasimos of Smolensk. Bishop
Gerasimos was born in Moscow, established himself in Volhynia, and
participated in the appointment of Gregory Tsamblak. Having obtained
Constantinople’s recognition of his candidate for the metropolia of
All Rus’, Svidrigailo immediately tried to draw Metopolitan
Gerasimos into negotiations on the Unia,53 about
which Moscow, perhaps, did not even have a clue. Metopolitan
Gerasimos never did visit Moscow; just after his appointment he was
unable to get there due to the ongoing feuds between princes, and
already by 1435 he had been burned alive by Svidrigailo who suspected
him of participating in a political struggle on the side of the
active grand prince of Lithuania Sigismund. Having received word of
Gerasimos’s death, Bishop Jonah set off for Constantinople to be
raised to the rank of metropolitan. But when he arrived at the city
he learned that Patriarch Joseph had already sent his own candidate
to Rus’—the educated Greek, Isidore. St. Jonah was forced to
return to Rus’ without the rank of metropolitan, but with the
patriarch’s promise that he would receive it should anything happen
to Isidore.
Isidore
was an even less accidental figure than Gerasimos in the context of
the Byzantine elite’s Unia plans. In 1434 he took part in the
Council of Basel of the Catholic Church, where as an official
representative of the Byzantine emperor he was presented to the
chairman of the council, Cardinal Giuliano Cesarini, and conducted
negotiations concerning the conditions of the Byzantine delegation in
the upcoming unification council.54 The
emperor managed to wrest the right for Isidore to represent the
patriarch of Antioch at the upcoming council. Having appointed
Isidore to the cathedra of All Rus’, Constantinople strengthened
its negotiating position, and guaranteed—or so it mistakenly
seemed—that the Russian lands be drawn into the Unia, and that the
Polish-Lithuanian politics in that region be taken under its own
control.
Isidore
spent a brief time in Kiev and then arrived in Moscow in May, 1437.
Moscow received the unwanted metropolitan nevertheless “with
honor”, but by August of the same year he set off for Ferrara to
participate in the council for unification of the Catholic and
Orthodox Churches. After completing the Unia on December 18, 1439,
Isidore was elevated by Pope Eugene IV of Rome to the rank of a
cardinal of the Roman Church with the title of
Santi-Marcellino-e-Pietro and given the duty of legate for the
province of Lithuania, Livonia,55 and
All Rus’. In this new capacity he returned to Moscow in 1441 along
with his entire retinue.56 There
he served a Liturgy commemorating the pope, and made public the
document of the conclusion of the Unia. Grand Prince Vasily II,
shocked by Isidore’s transformation, refused to receive his
blessing. Three days later Cardinal Isidore was arrested and
imprisoned in the Chudov Monastery [located in the Kremlin], then
condemned by the council of Russian bishops. He then fled Moscow.57
Soon
after this, Grand Prince Vasily II sent a letter to the emperor with
the request to be granted the possibility to choose and appoint a
Russian metropolitan in Moscow. This letter was sent but did not
reach Constantinople; it was recalled by the grand prince since while
on their way the ambassadors received the information that not only
Isidore had fallen into the Unia but also the emperor and the
patriarch58 (there
was no reliable information about this in Moscow at the moment the
letter was sent), which rendered the request entirely senseless. The
simultaneous fall into the Unia of Emperor John III Palaeologos,
Patriarch Mitrophan II,59 and
Metropolitan Isidore of All Rus’ created an unprecedented
ecclesiastical-legal vacuum in the Russian Church.
In
1449 it became known in Moscow that a new emperor had been enthroned
in Constantinople, Constantine XI Palaeologos, who was the blood
brother of John VIII Palaeologos. Unlike John VIII, who was a
supporter of the Unia, Constantine XI did not take such an
unambiguous position. He did not insist on carrying out the decisions
accepted at the Ferraro-Florentine Council and in general tried to
put out the fire of indignation that the Unia had evoked in the
general masses of the population. Having heard of it, the Moscow
grand prince Vasily II ordered a new letter written, this time
addressed to Constantine XI, with the request to recognize the
appointment of Metropolitan Jonah as an accomplished fact and with an
inquiry as to whether a legitimate Orthodox patriarch had appeared in
Constantinople. It is not known whether or not this letter was
sent.60 Of
much greater significance were the negotiations begun in that same
year of 1449 concerning the recognition of St. Jonah as Metropolitan
of All Rus’ not only in Moscow, but also in Lithuania. By 1451
these negotiations were crowned with success, and the
Polish-Lithuanian King Kasimir IV gave St. Jonah a Letter for the
rule of all the Lithuanian dioceses.61 In
this way, the unity of the Russian Church, protected by state
guarantees from several countries, continued unbroken.
In
1453 Constantinople fell to the army of Sultan Mehmet II; Emperor
Constantine XI perished; the Uniate patriarch Gregory III had been
basically kicked out of the city back in 1450. In autumn of 1453,
Sultan Mehmet II confirmed the appointment of Gennadius Scholarius,
who had become one of the opponents of the Unia after the
Ferraro-Florentine Council. In 1454, a representative of Patriarch
Gennadius named Demetrios arrived in Rus’. He visited Pskov and
Novgorod among other cities, and for all appearances handed over to
Moscow a certain patriarchal epistle in answer to which St. Jonah
sent to the patriarch his own letter. He also sent to the Russian
dioceses a circular letter allowing Demetrios to carry out a
collection of money at the request of Patriarch Gennadius.62 In
this way, the appointment of St. Jonah was recognized by
Constantinople, at least de
facto,
and ecclesiastical ties were renewed.
But
soon the former metropolitan of All Rus’ began meddling, and the
cardinal and papal legate Isidore, who had convinced the Roman pope
Callistus III to try and tear the Western part of the Russian Church
way from it. No later than 1458, the pope made the decision to “give”
the entire Orthodox diocese within the borders of Polish-Lithuanian
King Kasimir IV’s realm to the rule of the Uniate metropolitan
ordained in Rome, keeping Isidore’s formal title as papal legate
for all the other dioceses of the Russian Church. As a candidate for
Uniate metropolitan “of Kiev, Lithuania, and all Rus’, Isidore
offered his close assistant, Gregory the Bulgarian, who had back in
1439 visited Moscow as an archdeacon for Isidore, and now had the
rank of abbot. Now with the new pope, Pius II, the future Uniate
metropolitan Gregory was ordained on October 15, 1458 by the Latin
titular patriarch of Constantinople Gregory III (the very same one
who had been exiled from the city in 1450), but before his departure
to Lithuania Pope Pius II decided to extend the claims of the Roman
Church also to Muscovite Rus’. At the instructions of the pope,
Isidore formally declined the parts of the metropolia “preserved”
for him in favor of Gregory the Bulgarian, and in January 1459,
Gregory set off to Kasimir IV accompanied by a representative of the
pope, who carried the papal missive to the king. It contained a curse
against St. Jonah and demanded that the king refuse to recognize the
authority of St. Jonah over the Orthodox dioceses and territories of
Lithuania and Poland in favor of Gregory, and then obtain the same
from the Russian government—on the very territory of the Muscovite
Grand Duchy.63
The
king obediently carried out the demands of Pope Pius II. Despite his
own promise made in 1451, he forced the Orthodox bishops of Lithuania
and Poland64 into
submitting to the Catholic hierarch sent from Rome, Gregory “of All
Rus’,”65and
sent a letter also to Vasily II in which he suggested removing Jonah
due to his advanced age and accepting Gregory in Moscow as
metropolitan.66 In
Moscow, the fact of this extremely crude meddling by the Roman
Catholic Church in the affairs of the Russian Church were, of course,
received with extreme indignation.67 In
1459, the council of bishops of Northeastern Rus’ passed the
resolution of loyalty to St. Jonah and of categorically refusing to
recognize the “apostate from the Orthodox Christian faith, the
disciple of Isidore, Gregory… a fighter against God’s Church, who
came from Rome… excommunicated from the holy catholic (universal)
Church, who calls himself the Metropolitan of Kiev.”68
Against
the expectations of the creators of the Unia, the Orthodox population
of Lithuania reacted to this forced submission to the papal legate
very painfully, which in the end forced Gregory the Bulgarian to seek
recognition in Constantinople. In 1465 he sent his own ambassador to
Patriarch Simeon of Constantinople, but the patriarch did not receive
him. However the next patriarch, St. Dionysios I, in 1467 agreed to
receive Gregory the Bulgarian into ecclesiastical communion,
recognized his status as metropolitan of All Rus’, and on February
14 of the same year sent his Letter to Moscow.69 In
this Letter the patriarch confirmed that the Constantinople
Patriarchate supposedly did not recognized St. Jonah as the lawful
primate of the Church of all Rus’ (without any explanation of
the de
facto recognition
of St. Jonah by Patriarch Gennadius Scholarius) and he does not
recognize his successors, and he demanded that they give over the
rule of the Church of All Rus’ specifically to Gregory.70
On
the one hand, Patriarch Dionysios’s action had a positive side: An
entire Church organization in the person of its first hierarch and
the bishops subject to him left Latinism and converted to
Orthodoxy.71 But
on the other hand, this act retroactively legitimized the papal
meddling in the affairs of the Russian Church. The demand of
submission to the Roman stooge, the “disciple of Isidore”
Gregory, was declared unacceptable in Moscow.72 So
Patriarch Dionysios’s letter not only did not help to restore the
control of the Constantinople Patriarchate over the historical
Russian metropolia, but to the contrary, the Patriarchate, with its
own hands pushed it away from for a long time.73 Thus
on the territory of the metropolia of All Rus’ two independent
hierarchies formed—one of them, with the metropolitan of Vladimir,
Moscow and All the Russias at the head, had been raised to the
metropolia πάσης
τῆς
Ῥωσίας
as part of the Constantinople Church of the Byzantine era; the other,
with the Metropolitan of Kiev, Galica, and (!) All the Russias at the
head, originally as a Uniate papal project, but which was then
accepted by Constantinople into ecclesiastical communion.
At
all this it is important to note that the Letter from Patriarch
Dionysios that was rejected by the Russian government contained the
very same Byzantine idea of preserving the unity of the Russian
church regardless of passing political situations: “That you would
have one Church and one metropolitan, that you would also cleave to
him in unity, that there would be one Church, and in it one shepherd…
It is also pleasing only that he be a metropolitan true and right for
the whole Russian land, true to the old customs and rules of Russia.
It is not fitting that the old customs and rules be broken.” From
the text of the Letter from St. Dionysios it is clear that the
Constantinople Church did not presuppose that with the recognition of
Gregory the Bulgarian into ecclesiastical communion the former
Russian metropolia would be divided into the Kiev and Moscow parts—to
the contrary, it continued to insist on preserving the “old customs
and rules” regarding the unity and indivisibility of the metropolia
of All the Russias. The submission of the Russian Church to Gregory
the Bulgarian in the Letter is argued by the supposed illegitimacy of
metropolitans in Moscow: “these our Great catholic and Holy Church
does not recognize, and does not honor, and does not call them
metropolitans”, but from this inevitably come the conclusion that
with a recognition of the status of the Moscow metropolitan (or
patriarch), it is he who should have been accepted by Constantinople
as “one… metropolitan, truly right for the whole Russian land.”
Therefore,
in the following sixteenth century the undisputed recognition of the
legitimacy of the metropolitans of Moscow and All Rus’ on the part
of the Constantinople Patriarchate implicitly also presupposes the
recognition of their authority over the Church of all the
Russian lands, and not only over the dioceses located on territories
politically controlled by the Russian government.
Events
of the 1430s–1460s: conclusions.
As
a result of the simultaneous apostasy into the Unia by the Byzantine
emperor, the Constantinople patriarch, and the Metropolitan Isidore
of All Rus’, who became a Catholic cardinal, an unprecedented
ecclesiastical-canonical vacuum formed in the Russian Church. After
long years of waiting, St. Jonah was placed at the head of the united
Russian Church, even before the arrival in Rus’ of Isidore, with
the title of “nominated metropolitan” and who had received a
promise from Patriarch Joseph II—that last primate of the
Constantinople Church before it fell into the Unia—that precisely
Jonah would head the Russian Church should anything happen to
Isidore. St. Jonah’s authority extended over the whole Russian
Church, including its southern and southwest regions, then subject to
the rule of the Polish-Lithuanian king—a rule that was confirmed
among other things by an imperial Letter.
However,
when at the advice of Cardinal Isidore the papal throne decided to
announce its claims to the entire Russian Church and the Uniate
metropolitan Gregory was sent to Poland, the latter, with the support
of the government, managed to subject a number of Orthodox bishops to
his authority. The thus newly appeared Uniate hierarchy “of All
Rus’” later went out of communion with Rome but had been just the
same rejected by the Constantinople Church in the person of Patriarch
Simeon; later, it was accepted into communion by Patriarch Dionysios
I.
The
acceptance of this hierarchy as part of the Constantinople
Patriarchate did not presuppose the division of the metropolia of All
the Russias into parts; to the contrary, by receiving Gregory, the
patriarch demanded from all dioceses without exclusion that they
submit themselves to him and not to the Moscow metopolitans, who were
now pronounced illegitimate. It follows that in declaring the Moscow
metropolitans illegitimate, Constantinople should have presupposed
also the restoration of the unity of the Russian Church under rule of
Moscow. The first—recognition—took place gradually during the
course of the sixteenth century and (see below) was finally
formulated in documents from 1589–1593 on the establishment in Rus’
of patriarchy. The consequent attainment of the second—restoration
of the unity of the Russian Church—also took about another hundred
years.
1.3.
The restoration of the unity of the Russian Church during the course
of the seventeenth century.
As
a result of the apostasy at the end of the sixteenth century of the
metropolitan of Kiev, Galica, and All the Russias, Michael Rogozy and
the majority of the bishops in his metropolia who were part of the
Unia pronounced at the Council of Brest in 1596, the formation of a
Russian Uniate Church, and then the carrying out by the Polish
government of various measures to force the Orthodox population of
the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth into the either the Unia or the
Latin rite, the situation of the Orthodox hierarchy in the former
southern, southwestern, and western Russian lands became extremely
complex. By the beginning of the seventeenth century the Orthodox
Kievan metropolia did not have its own metropolitan, and its entire
hierarchy consisted of two bishops—Gideon (Balaban) of Lvov and
Michael (Kopystensky) of Peremyshl, who were in an illegal position.
After Gideon’s death (1607) his successor, Jeremiah (Tissarovsky)
had to go to Moldavia to be consecrated because bishop Michael could
not do it alone. And as if that were not enough, in order to be
recognized by the Polish government Jeremiah even had to take an oath
of accepting the Unia—most likely he pretended to take it, since
later he would show himself to be a struggler against uniatism. After
Michael’s death in 1610 (or 1612), Bishop Jeremiah remained as the
only bishop of the former metropolia.
In
1620, the hierarchy of this metropolia was practically created anew
by Patriarch Theophan III of Jerusalem, who came to Kiev from Moscow.
He informed Patriarch Philaret of the decline in church life in
Kiev74 and
under secretive circumstances he consecrated three hierarchs: Job
(Boretsky) as Metropolitan of Kiev, Galicia, and All the Russias,
Meletius (Smotrinsky) as Archbishop of Polotsk, and Isaiah (Kopinsky)
as bishop of Peremyshl. There were also consecrations for four more
empty cathedras. These consecrations constituted the founding of the
hierarchy of the Kiev metropolia. However in Moscow no one rushed to
recognize them, because regardless of Moscow’s good relationship
with the Eastern patriarchs in general—which came together after
the establishment of the Moscow Patriarchate in 1589—and especially
to Theophan who had visited Moscow for the second time and played an
important part in the appointment of the Moscow patriarch Philaret,
the Moscow Patriarch’s relationship to the Western Russian
metropolia (which titled itself as “of Kiev”, etc.) was
intolerant—because of the latter’s claims on “All Rus’), as
it’s title showed, and also because of the Uniate sympathies of
many of its hierarchs.75 Therefore,
when the newly appointed Metropolitan Job (Boretsky) sent letters in
1621 to Tsar Michael Feodorovich and Patriarch Philaret (Nikitich),
he did not receive any answer, even though he not only wisely omitted
the words “and of All Rus’” but also called Patriarch Philaret
“my master and pastor”.
Later
their relationship in fact came together—from 1622–1623
unofficially,76 and
after 1624 on the official level. In fact, Metropolitan Job addressed
his letters to the patriarch of Moscow “to His All Holiness and
Beatitude, Master and Father, Father of fathers, Master father lord
Philaret Nikitich, by God’s mercy Patriarch of Moscow and All Rus’,
my master and pastor”, “Master of All Russia”, and calling
himself his “good and obedient servant and faithful intercessor in
prayer”.77 In
1622, Bishop Isaiah (Kopinsky), the future metropolitan of Kiev and
Galich (from 1631–1632), addressed his letter “to His All
Holiness and All Beatitude lord Philaret, by God’s mercy His
Eminence the Patriarch of Great and Little Russias and to the last
great ocean.78 In
this manner, the hierarchs consecrated by Theophan III already fully
recognized that they are united with the Church of the Russian
nation, and recognized the supremacy of the Moscow Patriarch.
However
for Moscow the establishment of relations did not yet mean an
implicit recognition of the status of the Kiev and Galich
metropolitans, especially since that title was not guaranteed for
them even on the territory of the Polish-Lithuania Commonwealth. Only
in 1632, desiring to make sure there would be loyalty on the part of
the Orthodox population on the eve of a new war with Russia, did the
Polish government officially recognize the rights of the Orthodox to
have their own hierarchy—in submission to Constantinople (there
could be no talk of Moscow). Part of the property of the former
Orthodox cathedrae was returned, but in exchange the bishops who had
been secretly consecrated by Patriarch Theophan had to be exchanged
for new ones. On the Orthodox side, a key role in the negotiations
was played by Archimandrite Peter (Mogila) thanks to his diplomatic
talents and aristocratic ties. He would head the Kiev and Galich
metropolia in 1633, remaining its primate until the end of his days
in Kiev on January 1647.
The
next year, in 1648, the Bogdan Khmelnitsky uprising took place in the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, which set very complex historical
processes in motion.79 For
the question of the status of the Kiev and Galich metropolia the main
event of these complex processes became the rebirth of the Orthodox
diocese in Chernigov (taken away by the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth from Russia during the Time of Troubles) in 1649 and its
subsequent transfer along with the Kiev diocese to the Moscow
government from 1654. At that moment, the metropolitan of Kiev and
Galich was Silvester (Kosov). In April of 1657 he died; in January
1658, Bishop Dionysius (Balaban-Tukalsky)80 of
Lutsk was chosen as the next metropolitan. In February of the same
year, Bishop Dionysius brought Hetman Ivan Vygovsky to the Russian
Tsar to make his oath of allegiance. The Russian officials who
participated in the ceremony offered Dionysius to ask Patriarch Nikon
of Moscow for confirmation of his rank of metropolitan, but the
chosen metropolitan declined, later receiving this confirmation from
Patriarch Parthenius IV of Constantinople. Having left Kiev due to
the military actions begun by Ivan Vygovsky, Dionysius transferred
the right of rule over parishes of the Kiev diocese to the Chernigov
hierarch Lazar (Baranovich), and practically to his very death in
1663 he had no real authority over Kiev and the Left Bank. In 1658,
Vygovksy with Dionysius’s participation signed the Gadychsky treaty
with the Poles, which evoked dissatisfaction among the Cossacks. The
Cossack Rada chose Bogdan Khmelnitsky’s son Yuri as hetman, and the
latter in October 1659 signed a new agreement with representatives of
the Russian Tsardom. This was the Peryaslavl articles, which included
a resolution of submission by the Kiev metropolitan to the Moscow
Patriarch on conditions of autonomy: “The Metropolitan of Kiev, as
well as other clergy of Little Russia, to be under the blessing of
His Holiness the Patriarch of Moscow and All Great and Little and
White Russias, and His Holiness the Patriarch will not trespass on
the clerical rights.81
In
accordance with this condition and the long absence from Kiev of
Metropolitan Dionysius, in 1661 the locum tenens of the Moscow
Patriarchal throne, Pitirim, consecrated Methodius (Philimonovich) to
the vacant Mstislavsky82 cathedra
of the Kiev Metropolia, with the rights of locum tenens of the whole
metropolia. When he learned of this, Metropolitan Dionysius
consecrated Joseph (Neliubovich-Tukalksky)83 to
the same cathedra. In his turn, Patriarch Nikon, who did not
recognize the status of Pitirim, in 1662 pronounced an anathema
against him and against Methodius who was consecrated by him. This
act was not accepted by anyone in Russia or in Little Russia, but in
the same year the Constantinople Patriarchate, at that moment in
complete alliance with Nikon, also pronounced an anathema against
Methodius. Nevertheless, the latter took advantage of the support for
Hetman Ivan Briukhevetsky and continued to rule the Kiev diocese,
although news of the canonical measures taken against him became
known to many clergy and laity and brought them great confusion.
At
that time, in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth after the death of
Dionysios, Joseph (Neliubovich-Tukalsky) and Bishop Anthony
(Vinnitsky)84 of
Peremyshl were simultaneously chosen for the Kiev cathedra, and both
of them received the privileges of the Kiev cathedra from the Polish
king. As a result the Kiev cathedra now had two primates, who were
located far from Kiev, and at the same time two locum tenens, who
remained in the Left Bank (Lazar [Baranovich] and Methodius
[Philimonovich]), and not one of them had been confirmed by
Constantinople. Anthony’s factual authority extended over Volhynia,
Peramyshl, and Kholm dioceses, while Joseph (excluding the period of
1663–1665), when the Polish government arrested him) over the
territory under the rule of P. Doroshenko. In 1668, thanks to the
emerging closeness between Doroshenko with the Ottoman Empire, Joseph
was able to receive recognition from the Constantinople patriarch for
Methodius III.85 In
the same year, Anthony gave Patriarch Joasaph II of Moscow a message
about his readiness to go under his omophorion (this offer was not
accepted), and Methodius was deposed from his cathedra.86 Having
settled matters with Methodius, Joseph never did set off for Kiev,
because the Kiev clergy did not wish to recognize him since they had
not participated in his election. As a result the rule over the
parishes of the Kiev diocese again ended up in the hands of Lazar
(Baranovich). After Joseph’s death (1675), Anthony in 1676
announced at the Polish Sejm his rights to the Kiev cathedra. However
the Polish king Yan Sobesky decided to transfer these rights to
Bishop Joseph (Shumlyansky)87 of
Lvov, who by that time had secretly accepted the Unia. Incidentally,
in 1678 Anthony nevertheless managed to get his rights back from the
Polish government but by 1679 he had died.
By
the time of Anthony’s death, the religious politics of the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth had become unbearable for the Orthodox
inhabitants of that nation. They were being forced into the Unia,
their church and monastery property was being confiscated from them
under various pretexts, and the activities of the Orthodox clergy
were being curtailed in every way. Already in 1676, by decision of
the coronation Sejm of the Polish-Lithuanian nation, any contact with
the Constantinople Patriarchate not specifically permitted by
government was forbidden under threat of execution and confiscation
of property—which rendered the participation of Constantinople in
the election of a Kiev metropolitan impossible. There were two
reasons for this: the desire of the Polish authorities to not leave
the Orthodox any alternative other than joining the Unia, and the
conflict between the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth and the Ottoman
Empire (they viewed the Constantinople Patriarch as an agent of
Ottoman influence). The Kiev cathedra was formally vacant from 1679,
and by that time the Mstislav and Polotsk dioceses were also vacant.
The city of Kiev itself had not seen its metropolitans since 1658.
Bishop Joseph (Shumlyansky) of Lvov and the named bishop of Peremyshl
Innokenty (Vinnitsky) had been secretly sworn into the Unia and did
everything to spread it among the Orthodox. The only Orthodox bishop
left in the entire territory of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth
was Bishop Gideon (Sviatopolk-Chetvertinsky) of Lutsk, but even he
had to flee in 1684 to Left Bank Ukraine. This whole situation
required some intervention—for the sake of defending the religious
freedom of the Orthodox inhabitants of the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth, as well as for the sake of normal church life in Kiev
and on the Left Bank, which had conclusively become a part of the
Russian tsardom.
Russia
was in no hurry to intervene, but that does not mean that it expected
the fate of the Western Russian metropolia to be decided by
Constantinople. To the contrary, the position of the Russian
government was no different from its position two centuries before
with regard to the unity of the Russian metropolia, which is clearly
expressed in a letter of Patriarch Joachim of Moscow to Hetman Ivan
Samoilovich dated September 1685: “From the beginning when the
holy, pious faith took root in Russia, the Russian metropolia was
united, and everywhere the Russians were in submission and obedience
to the all-Russian throne [meaning the Church hierarchical
throne].”88 Moreover,
now this unity was based not only on historical facts, but also on
the decision of the council of Eastern patriarchs (that is, on
documents concerning the establishment in Moscow of the patriarchy):
“When by the council held in the reigning city of Moscow of the
most holy Eastern Church patriarchs and many hierarchs, in the
presence of pious Orthodox tsars at the patriarchal throne, all
willed as a council that all Russian hierarchical thrones, in the
northern country, submit themselves to the patriarch of Moscow and
all Russia and northern countries,”89 as
well as at the interpretation of the decision of the Peryaslavl Rada
of 1654 as an act of reunification of two different parts of a once
united people. In a missive to Patriarch Yakovos of Constantinople
dated November of the same year, Patriarch Joachim added to the cited
arguments (on the historical unity of the Russian metropolia and on
the recognition by the Eastern patriarchs of the jurisdiction of
Moscow over all Russian dioceses of the northern countries) also that
in olden times it was specifically the Moscow metropolitans who had
the title, “of Kiev and All Russia.”90
Moscow’s
slowness in the matter of filling the vacant Kiev cathedra,
regardless of the fact that Kiev and the entire Left Bank belonged to
Russia, fixed by agreement already in 1667, should by no means be
explained by its uncertainty over the rights of the Moscow Patriarch
over the Ukrainian dioceses. By 1685, church life in the Left Bank of
the Ukraine already de
facto depended
upon Moscow. The Locum Tenens of the Kiev cathedra, Methodius, was
sent from Kiev to Moscow back in 1661. Another locum tenens, Bishop
Lazar (Baranovich) of Chernigov, held an unambiguous pro-Moscow
position (and was raised to the rank of archbishop at the Moscow
council of 1666–1667); in 1684 in Moscow yet another key church
figure of that era was given the rank of archimandrite of the
Kiev-Caves Lavra—Varlaam (Yasinsky); and so on. The Russian
government was looking for a solution to an entirely different
problem: how to ensure the rights and religious freedom of the
Orthodox inhabitants of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth. The Kiev
metropolitan, appointed in Moscow, would most probably not be
recognized by the Polish authorities. Direct ecclesiastical relations
with Constantinople in the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth was
forbidden. In the course of long negotiations with the participation
of various sides91 a
plan proposed by Hetman I. Samoilovich was approved: The clergy of
the Kiev metropolia were to choose a Kiev metropolitan with the
participation of the Cossackry; consecrate him Metropolitan of Kiev
in Moscow; then address Constantinople for recognition.
In
November 1685, Bishop Gideon of Lutsk, chosen in Kiev for the
metropolia cathedra, took his hierarchical oath in Moscow and
received the title, of Kiev, Galich, and all Little Russia. The
consecration of Gideon as the Metropolitan of Kiev took place in
Moscow without asking permission from Constantinople, which was
entirely in agreement with Russia’s position on the historical
indivisibility of the Russian Church and on the original
identicalness of the Kiev and Moscow cathedras. Nevertheless,
following the plan, Patriarch Joachim of Moscow and Tsars John V and
Peter I addressed Constantinople for recognition of the completed
appointment. The recognition was received, and the further submission
of the Kiev cathedra to the Moscow Patriarchate was approved by a
patriarchal and council Letter from Patriarch Dionysios IV in 1686,
upon which ended the just over two hundred years of division in the
united Russian Church.92
General
conclusion on the historical unity of the Russian Church.
The
Orthodox dioceses of the different Russian lands originally belonged
to the one Metropolia of Rus’s (from the eleventh century, “of
All Rus”). The vast majority of attempts to create an independent
metropolia for one or another part of the Russian lands —whether de
jure or de
facto is
not important—failed93 and,
as a rule, were subjected to harsh condemnation first of all from the
Constantinople Church (the cases of Klim Smolyatich, Theodorets,
Theodorit, and Gregory Tsamblak). The Constantinople Palamite
councils of the fourteenth century officially recognized Northeastern
Rus’ as the only legitimate center of the former Kiev metropolia.
The
project of independence from Moscow of the Kiev metropolia was born
in the bowels of the Roman Catholic Church. The Uniate Metropolitan
Gregory the Bulgarian, ordained in Rome, was received into the bosom
of the Constantinople Church by economia,
and Constantinople not only did not expect that receiving Gregory
would lead to division of the Russian into parts, but insisted on
preserving its unity, which had deep historical roots. The subsequent
recognition by Constantinople of the legitimacy of the Moscow
metropolitans inevitably meant that they would restore control over
the whole Russian Church, which did gradually happen. Out of the more
than 1000-year history of the Russian Church, the period of its
actual division into two large independent parts—the Kievan, with
its formal center in Constantinople—and the Muscovite, continued
for just a little over two centuries.
II.
Council and patriarchal documents testifying to the unity of the
Russian Church, and an overview of the decisions contained in them.
II.1.
Documents of the Byzantine era
To
the more general view of the unity and indivisibility of the Russian
Church testifies the title of the Russian metropolitans and later
patriarchs, in which the word Rus’ with the definer “All” is
added, emphasizing the broad powers of the primate of the Russian
Church and the diversity of lands that make up the Russian
metropolia. In this refined form, this title is first witnessed to in
the missive of the Constantinople patriarch Luke Chrysoverges to
Grand Prince Andrei Bogoliubsky,94 and
later in the seals of the Russian metropolitans of the mid-eleventh
century,95 and
then in the Letter of Patriarch Germanos II of Constantinople to the
metropolitan of All Rus’ Kirill I dated 1228;96 and
so on. It is possible to be convinced of the justness of this
specific interpretation of this title, for example, from the missive
of the same Patriarch Germanos II to the cardinals of the Roman
Church in 1232, where the flock of the Russian metropolia is
described as ἡ
ἀμέτρητος
Ῥωσικὴ
πανσπερμία—“the
innumerable multitude of peoples of Rus’.97
In
1347, Emperor John VI Cantecuzen and the Constantinople patriarch
published a whole package of documents dedicated to the question of
the unity and indivisibility of the Russian Church. In the center of
this package was: 1) the imperial chysobull, published in August
1347,98 which
exactly corresponds with what was published at the council of bishops
of the Church of Constantinople, headed by Patriarch Isidore I: 2)
the Acts of the Council; and with citations on these two foundational
documents the emperor sent his Letter: 3) to the metropolitan of Kiev
(whose permanent residence was in Moscow) and All Rus’, St.
Theognostos; 4) to Grand Prince Simeon Ioannovich Gordy of Moscow; 5)
Prince Liubart-Dimitry Gedimovich of Vladimir-Volhynia; and the
patriarch sent: 6) a Letter to Metropolitan Theodore of Galich.99 The
essence of these documents boils down to the fact that the decision
on the division of several dioceses of Southwestern Rus’ from the
rest of the Russian Church was accepted100 “by
the former patriarch of Constantinople according to an evil design”
(διὰ
τὴν
κακογνωμίαν
τοῦ
χρηματίσαντος
πατριάρχου
Κωνσταντινουπόλεως101),
was uncanonical (ἔξω
τῶν
θείων
καὶ
ἱερῶν
κανόνων,102 or
παρὰ
κανόνας103),
and therefore the emperor and the council of bishops revoke it and
prescribe that the Russian Church return to its unity under the
authority of one primate, “according to the customs that have been
made lawful in that country—All Rus’” (τῶν
ἐκ
παλαιοῦ
νενομισμένων
ἐθίμων
εἰς
τὴν
τοιαύτην
χώραν
τῆς
πάσης
Ῥωσίας).104 Besides
the fact that this definition is already important in and of itself,
the argumentation supporting the council’s act of 1347: Τὸ
γάρ
ἔθνος
τῶν
Ῥώσων—χρόνος
ἤδη
μακρὸς
εἰς
τετρακοσίους
ἐγγὺς
ἐξήκων—ἕνα
μητροπολίτην
γνωρίζον,
“For the people of Rus’ over the course of almost four hundred
years have known only one metropolitan.”105 Thus,
specifically the fact of historical unity of the Russian Church was
for the fathers of the council of 1347 a key argument in deciding the
question of abolishing the independent Galich metropolia. The next
important document is the Letter of the council of bishops of the
Constantinople Church headed by Patriarch Philotheos, published in
January 1354. It ratifies the transfer of the residence of the Kievan
metropolitans to Vladimir (but factually to Moscow, which had already
since 1326 become the main place of residence of the Kievan
metropolitans), preserving their authority over the entire Russian
Church: οὔκ
ἐστιν
ἑτέρα
καταμονὴ
καὶ
ἀνάπαυσις
καὶ
κατάντημα
τῇ
ἁγιωτάτῃ
μητροπόλει
Ῥωσίας
διὰ
τὰς
προειρημένας
αἰτίας
εἰ
μὴ
τὸ
Βλαντίμοιρον
(“there is no other place of residence, refuge, and protection for
the holy metropolia of Rus’, due to the above stated
reasons,106 other
than Vladimir”), and therefore, ἐν
Ἁγίῳ
παρακελεύεται
Πνεύματι
διὰ
τοῦ
παρόντος
συνοδικου
γράμματος
εἶναι
καὶ
εὑρίσκεσθαι
τόν
τε
ἱερώτατον
μητροπολίτην
Ῥωσίας
καὶ
τοὺς
μετ᾽
αὐτὸν
πάντας
ἐν
τῷ
Βλαντιμοίρῳ
καὶ
ἔχειν
τοῦτο
ὡς
οἰκεῖον
κάθισμα
ἀναφαιρέτως
καὶ
ἀναποσπάστως
εἰς
αἰῶνα
τὸν
ἅπαντα,
καὶ
ἔνι
μὲν
καὶ
τὸ
Κύεβον
ὡς
οἰκεῖος
θρόνος
καὶ
πρῶτον
κάθισμα
τοῦ
ἀρχιερέως,
ἐὰν
περισώζηται,
μετ᾽
ἐκεῖνο
καὶ
σὺν
ἐκείνῳ
δεύτερον
κάθισμα
καὶ
καταμονὴ
καὶ
ἀνάπαυσις
ἡ
ἁγιωτάτη
ἐπισκοπὴ
Βλαντιμοίρου
(“in the Holy Spirit it is willed, by means of the present council
Letter, that the holy metropolia of Rus’, and all who are part of
it, be located and found in Vladimir, and have it as its own
cathedra, irrevocably and for all the ages inalienably, and let it
continue to have, firstly, Kiev—if it should continue to exist—as
its own hierarchical throne and first hierarchical cathedra, and
after it and together with it—the holy Vladimir bishopric, as its
second cathedra and place of residence, and refuge”).107
One
more document of the Byzantine era is the patriarchal Letter of
Patriarch Joseph II of Constantinople of 1416, on the council’s
deposing of Gregory Tsamblak, sent to Metropolitan Photius of
Rus’:108 “Today
the divine and holy Council has assembled, the holy hierarchs,
all-honorable metropolitans of Heraclius and Ánkyra, and many
others, and by the judgment of these together, Tsamblak, Gregory, is
to be deposed, by divine and sacred law, and after his removal,
defrocked and cursed.”109 Besides
others, Patriarch Joachim refers to this document in his instructions
to the ambassadors who were sent for negotiations on the recognition
of the establishment of the metropolia in Moscow.110
II.2. Documents
of the mid-fifteenth century:
The
attempt to contend the rights of the Moscow primate and subsequent
confirmation of his rights to all the Russian dioceses.
Of
principal significance are the contents of the patriarchal Letter of
Patriarch Dionysios I of Constantinople addressed to the princes and
people of Rus—“The leaf of Dionysios, Patriarch of
Constantinople, written to Moscow” in 1467.111 The
Patriarch insists here, citing the ancient custom, upon the
indivisibility of the Russian Church: “Would that you should have
one Church and one metropolitan, and in this vein that you cleave to
him in unity, that there be one Church, and in it one pastor, that in
this the Lord God be praised, Who destroys all sins and divisions,
and that the devil be cast out… In this regard it is pleasing that
there be one metropolitan truly righteous over the whole Russian land
according to the ancient Russian custom and rule. It is not right
that the old custom and old rule be broken.” Furthermore in the
Letter it is confirmed that the Constantinople Church did not
recognize St. Jonah’s rank of metropolitan112 and
that of his successors, from which it proceeds that the head of the
united Russian Church should be considered to be the one now accepted
by Constantinople, Gregory the Bulgarian: “But they should stop
doing what they did in Moscow, and the Holy Supreme Great catholic
Church commands it, for this is against the canons and against the
law of God; those metropolitans named [appointed/consecrated] in
Moscow, beginning with Jonah and to this day, our Great catholic and
Holy Church does not recognize, and does not honor, and does not call
them metropolitans. And likewise all should accept, and should honor,
and be in obedience to him—the rightly appointed and true
metropolitan, who is called the Metropolitan of Kiev and All Rus’,
lord Gregory, the beloved brother and co-servant in the Holy Spirit
of our humbleness.” This latter part of the Letter of Patriarch
Dionysios was not accepted in Moscow, where they continued to
consider the successors of St. Jonah to be the true metropolitans of
All Rus’, but it is important to emphasize that, first of all, it
is clear from the Letter that the Constantinople Church did not
pronounce a decision to divide the Russian Church into the “Moscow”
and “Kiev” parts; secondly, with the acceptance of the legitimacy
of the Moscow metropolitans, Constantinople would have to either
pronounce just such a decision (which was not done at all), or to the
contrary to deprive the metropolitans of Kiev and Galich of
legitimacy (which the course of history itself did in
Constantinople’s place).
The
formal legitimatization of the Moscow primates by Constantinople can
be considered the already cited “all holy Metropolitan of Moscow
and All the Russias” Varlaam (his name is not cited) in the Letter
of Patriarch Theolyptos I of Constantinople in 1516; what is
particularly important, in this same Letter the same metropolitan is
also called “the most holy Metropolitan of Kiev and All the
Russias”.113 Thus,
also in the sixteenth century the Constantinople Patriarchate fully
recognized that the Moscow metropolitan is also the Kiev metropolitan
at the same time.
An
indiputables legitimatization is the mention of the name of the
Moscow metropolitan, St. Macarius in the council Letter concerning
the recognition of Ivan Vasilievich “the Terrible” title of Tsar,
published in 1561 by Patriarch Joasaph II of Constantinople on behalf
of the council of bishops,114just
as in the patriarchal missive of the same patriarch, where
metropolitan Macarius, in the status of “Patriarchal Exarch”, is
granted the right to perform Ivan IV’s (the Terrible) coronation as
Tsar on behalf of the Patriarch himself.115
The
final act of recognition of this legitimacy should be considered the
document on the establishment of patriarchy in Rus’: The posted
Letter of Tsar Feodor Ioannovich [son of Ivan the Terrible],
Patriarch Jeremiah II of Constantinople and the Church Council of
1589; the Council Letter of the same patriarch and council of bishops
of the Constantinople Church of 1590, and most importantly, the
Council Act of the Great Constantinople Council of all the ancient
Orthodox Churches of the East in 1593. It is precisely the third of
these documents that is the key one, both by the circumstances of its
publication,116 as
well as by its level of authoritativeness, inasmuch as it is the
decision of a council of all the Eastern patriarchs,117 and
not only the Constantinople Church. In the Council Acts of 1593 were
pronounced the following definitions: … τὸν
θρόνον
τῆς
εὐσεβεστάτης
καὶ
ὀρθοδόξου
πόλεως
Μοσκόβου
εἶναί
τε
καὶ
λέγεσθαι
πατριαρχεῖον,
διὰ
τὸ
βασιλείας
ἀξιωθῆναι
παρὰ
Θεοῦ
τὴν
χώραν
ταύτην,
πᾶσάν
τε
Ῥωσίαν
καὶ
τὰ
ὑπερβόρεια
μέρη
ὑποτάττεσθαι
τῷ
πατριαρχικῷ
θρόνῳ
Μοσκόβου
καὶ
πάσης
Ῥωσίας
καὶ
τῶν
ὑπερβορείων
μερῶν…
(…the throne of the most pious and Orthodox city of Moscow shall be
called patriarchal, for that country has been made worthy by God of
royal [of the tsar] power, and all Rus’ and the Northern countries
shall submit to the patriarchal throne of Moscow and all Rus’ and
all Northern Countries…”)118 This
definition not only does not presuppose the division of the Church
of All
Russia into
any parts at all, but furthermore subjects all the Russian dioceses
to the Moscow cathedra. Being the council decision of all the Eastern
patriarchs, this definition is patently higher than any decision of
one Local Church—including that of the Constantinople—and takes
unconditional priority over them.
Of
no minor importance is also the argument by which the fathers of the
council of 1593 based the prudence of granting the patriarchal title
to the Moscow primate: “The country has been made worthy by God of
royal [of the tsar] power.” Below in the Council Acts of 1593 it is
prescribed to all the Local Churches to commemorate the name of the
Moscow tsar at the divine services: in the dyptichs, at the
proskomedia, and most importantly, at the reading of the two Psalms
during Matins, where once only the name of the Byzantine emperor was
commemorated. Recognizing the royal dignity of the Moscow rulers, the
fathers of the council of 1593 thus recognized the authority of the
Russian tsars to influence the administrative and territorial
establishment of the Church, in accordance with Orthodox canon law:
“If any city is or shall be renewed by the Emperor, the
ecclesiastical order shall follow the political and public example.”
(Canon 38 of the Council of Trullo; compare the 17th canon of the
Fourth Ecumenical Council).
Thus,
the Council Act of 1593 not only did not presuppose the possibility
of the further coexistence of two metropolias “of All Rus’”,
but also granted the Russian tsar and the Moscow patriarch all the
necessary instruments for overcoming the division existing at that
moment with the Western Russian metropolia. The Moscow primates
understood the contents of the Council Acts precisely in this way,
which can be seen from their own words (see the above citation from
the missive of Patriarch Joachim), and from the facts of the
appointment of the Kiev locum tenens in 1661, the elevation of Bishop
Lazar (Baranovich) of Chernigov to the rank of archbishop at the
Moscow Council of 1666–1667, the confirmation of Varlaam
(Yasnitsky) as archimandrite of the Kiev-Caves Lavra in 1684, and
finally, the appointment of the Kiev metropolitan in 1685—all
without asking for permission from Constantinople.
An
important symbolic precedent was Patriarch Nikon’s acceptance of
the newly acquired official title, “Holy Archbishop of Moscow,
Patriarch of All Great and Little Russia”.119 This
form of title on the one hand reflected the title of the
Constantinople patriarch (“Holy Archbishop of Constantinople and
Ecumenical Patriarch”), and on the other hand, was a direct tracing
of the title of the Moscow tsar (Sovereign Tsar and Grand Prince,
Sovereign of All Great and Little and White Russia). Patriarch
Paisios I of Constantinople approved of this titling, thus
recognizing by this approval the rights of the Moscow patriarch to
the Little Russian dioceses. In the famous Council Letter of 1654,
which became the cornerstone that led to the [Old Believer] schism in
the Russian Church after the church book reforms of Patriarch Nikon,
Patriarch Paisios together with the hosts of hierarchs calls Nikon
the “Patriarch of Muscovy, Great and Little Russia”, etc. (Τῷ
μακαριωτάτῳ
καὶ
εὐσεβεστάτῳ
πατριάρχῃ
Μοσχοβίας,
Μεγάλης
τε
καὶ
Μικρᾶς
Ῥωσίας,
καὶ
πολλῶν
ἐπαρχιῶν
τῶν
κατὰ
γῆν
καὶ
θάλατταν
παντὸς
βοῤῥείου
μέρους
κυρίῳ
ΝΙΚΟΝΙ
ἀδελφῷ
καὶ
συλλειτουργῷ
ἡμῶν…).120
II.3.
Documents of 1686.
From
what has been said it follows that for the establishment of the Kiev
metropolia in Moscow, there was really no need for approval as such
from Constantinople. Nevertheless, in 1682, at the initiative of the
Russian government, a negotiation process was begun on the question
of presenting this approval in written form. As we have already noted
above, the main aim of this process consisted not in receiving
control over the ecclesiastical life of Kiev and the Left Bank, which
was already in the hands of the Moscow Patriarchate, but in the
creation of an irrefutable jurisdictional base for future pressure on
the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth in matters of observing the rights
and religious freedoms of its Orthodox population. In 1684, in
Constantinople, the Greek Zacharias Sophiros, invested with powers by
Polish decree, conducted preliminary negotiations with Constantinople
Patriarch Jakovos on the issue of appointing a Kievan metropolitan in
Moscow. The Patriarch replied with a refusal, citing the necessity to
receive approval for such a decision from the Grand Viziar of the
Ottoman Empire. This refusal did not have any influence on
preparations for appointing a metropolitan to the vacant Kievan
cathedra in Moscow. In the same year of 1684, the Left Bank Hetman
attempted to persuade the Russian government to appoint the bishop
they had chosen, Gideon (Sviatopolk-Chetvertinsky) who had fled the
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth due to persecution, as the
metropolitan. However in Moscow they were convinced of the need to
choose a metropolitan not according to the hetman’s ideas, but by
ecclesiastical council of the same metropolia. In fulfillment of
this, on June 29, 1685, an assembly commenced in Kiev of the clergy
of the Kiev metropolia with the participation of prominent
representatives of the Cossackry (first of all, Ivan Mazepa); neither
Lazar of Chernigov, nor Gideon (and there were no other Orthodox
hierarchs left in the metropolia) participated in the assembly. At
the session of July 8, Gideon was chosen metropolitan of Kiev.
Simultaneously the clergy of Kiev, headed by Archimandrite Varlaam
(Yasnitsky) of the Kiev-Caves Monastery, expressed to the Hetman
their concern over the imminent appointment of Gideon in Moscow
without the consent of the Constantinople Patriarchate. A list was
composed of demands relating to the preservation of “the rights and
freedoms of the Little Russian land”, the main part of which
consisted of the desire not to conduct the Orthodox services in the
Ukrainian lands according to the Moscow practice. On July 20, Hetman
I. S. Samoilovich and Bishop Gideon sent a missive to Moscow with a
description of the proceedings, requests that ambassadors be sent to
Constantinople, and the preservation of their “freedoms”. In
September 1685, the Moscow government considered the requests of the
Kiev clergy and consented to five of the six. The hetman agreed to a
compromise, removing the point of contention for Moscow, which opened
the path to consecrating Gideon in Moscow. This indeed took place on
November 8 in the Dormition Cathedral of the Moscow Kremlin.
After
Gideon’s consecration, Hetman Ivan Lisitsa and church clerk Nikita
Alexeyev were sent as ambassadors to Constantinople with Letters from
Patriarch Joachim, Tsars John V and Peter I, and the Hetman with a
request to confirm the transfer of the Kiev metropolia to the
jurisdiction of Moscow. In complete agreement with the explanations
of Patriach Yakovos of Constantinople, the negotiators first received
approval from the grand vizier, and then from Patriarch Dionysios IV.
In May-June of 1686, the Constantinople Patriarchate published four
official documents approving the transfer of the Kiev metropolia to
the jurisdiction of the Moscow patriarchs: 1) a patriarchal Letter
addressed to the Moscow tsars, 2) a patriarchal Letter addressed to
Hetman I. Samoilovich, 3) a patriarchal and council Letter addressed
to Patriarch Joachim of Moscow, and 4) a patriarchal and council
Letter on the new order of electing the metropolitan of Kiev.121 A
series of missives were also written that had no legal
significance,122 on
which for this reason we make no commentary.
The
contents of all four of these cited documents, if you omit the
differences in terms of address to the addressees and what has no
relation to matters of rhetoric, boils down to the fact that the
patriarch and hierarchs of the Constantinople Church recognized the
objective necessity of re-submitting the Kiev cathedra to the Moscow
patriarch, that they render to the Moscow patriarch the power to
consecrate the Kiev metropolitan chosen according to the custom of
his metropolia, and judge him—that is, have full jurisdiction over
him—moreover, forever (in accordance with the rights conveyed to
the Moscow patriarch “as before, so also to all succeeding (ὅ
τε
ἤδη
καὶ
οἱ
μετὰ
τοῦτον)”;
and from the Kiev metropolitan is demanded that he henceforth relate
to the Moscow patriarch as his “primate”, that is, canonical
head, and turn namely to him for his appointment certificate, and not
to Constantinople.
Generally
speaking, in light of the definition by the Great Council of
Constantinople of 1593, the canonical status of all of these
documents is doubtful, in that this council had already confirmed
the rights of the Moscow patriarch in relation to all the Russian
dioceses, and its authority is higher than that of the Constantinople
Church taken separately. And in fact the Constantinople Church itself
in its Council Acts of 1654 had already recognized
the right of the Moscow patriarch not only over Great Russia, but
also over Little Russia.
Nevertheless,
lately in literature there is a noticeable tendency to give the
documents of 1686 an almost definitive significance.123 In
part, it is being said that the expression contained in these
documents, ἔχῃ
ἄδειαν…
χειροτονεῖν,
in relation to the right of the Moscow patriarch to consecrate the
Kiev Metropolitan supposedly does not mean “has the power to
consecrate”, but means “has the permission/is authorized (sur
autorisation)
to consecrate”, and that the Kiev metropolitan’s obligation to
accept the Moscow patriarch ὡς
γέροντος
καὶ
προεστῶτος,
“as elder and primate”, supposedly actually means, “acceptance
in the capacity of spiritual father” and no more.124 Such
conclusions are no more than an attempt to give out the desired as
the actual truth. Thus, in accordance with the dictionary of E.
Kriaras, the most authoritative dictionary of the Greek language of
the Byzantine and post-Byzantine periods—that is, the main ones—the
meanings of the word ἄδεια
are as follows: 1) ελευθερία
να
κάνει
κανείς,
2) απόλυτη
ελευθερία,
that is, “the freedom to do something”, “complete freedom (of
actions)”,125 and
by no means the supposed representation by someone as the
above-mentioned “authorization”. As for the term, προεστός
(προεστώς),
according to that same dictionary, it means “head, [chief,
superior]” in the same broad meaning of the word;126and
most importantly, examples of the use of this word as a synonym for
the term “patriarch” can be cited.127
No
limits to the power of the Moscow patriarch to consecrate the Kiev
metropolitan or the prerogative of the Kiev metropolitan to relate to
the Moscow patriarch “simply as to a spiritual father”128 are
actually contained in the documents of 1686. The Kiev metropolitan is
completely and irrefutably subject to the canonical authority of the
Moscow patriarchate. Neither is there in these documents a
confirmation that the Kiev metropolitan supposedly reserves the
status of an “exarch of the Constantinople patriarch” in relation
to Little Russia. The term “exarch” in relation to the Kiev
metropolia can be found in two secondary documents of June 1686—the
patriarchal epistles to the clergy and faithful of the Kiev
metropolia, and along with them to the Hetman.129 The
addressees of these epistles are exhorted not to depart from their
obedience to Metropolitan Gideon, who has been named “Metropolitan
of Kiev… and Exarch of All Russia”. The expression “Exarch of
All Russia” can be understood in two ways—either as the
Constantinople patriarch’s pretenses on all of Rus’, which would
go against the decision of the Great Council of Constantinople of
1593 and would violate a whole series of sacred canons, or as a
synonym for the transfer of the metropolitan of Kiev to being under
the authority of the Patriarch of All Rus’—in an analogy to the
fact that in the previous era that same metropolitan could be called
the “Exarch of the Constantinople Patriarch”. Obviously, the
second interpretation is the only acceptable one: the Metropolitan of
Kiev is recognized as the exarch of [the Patriarch] of All Rus’.
The
only counter-condition being promoted in the documents of 1686—to
which in fact these documents themselves testify130—is
the request that the Kiev metropolitan commemorate the name of the
Constantinople patriarch at the divine services before the name of
the Moscow Patriarch. From the legal point of view, this request is
no more than simple good wishes. There are no sanctions stipulated
for its non-observance, and most importantly, neither the Moscow
Patriarch, nor the Kiev metropolitan accepted any obligations to
fulfill this request. No conclusion can be drawn from this request
that the Kiev metropolia supposedly kept is canonical submission to
Constantinople—this request speaks exclusively about the
metropolitan; the motivation for the request (which is shown
forthrightly) does not contain even a hint at the preservation of the
jurisdiction of Constantinople over Kiev,131 and
the commemoration of the Constantinople patriarch by all the other
bishops (never mind the priests) of the metropolia is not stipulated.
Nevertheless,
rather paradoxically, this request was automatically satisfied. The
fact of the matter is that even during the time of Patriarch Nikon,
out of respect for the Eastern patriarchs the commemoration of them
was included in the standard publications of the Russian service
books. In part, in the Moscow publication of the Service Book of
1655, there first appeared the commemoration at the proskomedia not
only of the Moscow patriarch, but also of the four Eastern
patriarchs, and by name at that.132 In
turn, in the Book of the Order of Hierarchical Services of 1677 and
its reprints the Eastern patriarchs are commemorated at the
exclamations of the anaphora. Even in the rite of the hierarchical
Liturgy there appeared a commemoration of the Eastern patriarchs at
the Great Entrance and what is called the Great Laudation—a series
of exclamations before the singing of the Liturgical Trisagion. All
of this supplemented the commemoration of the patriarchs at the
proskomedia, which continued to be served according to the Service
Book. By comparison, in the old Hierarchical Book of Order of the
Kiev Metropolia133,
there was no Great Laudation at all, just as there was no
commemoration of patriarchs at the Great Entrance; there was only the
commemoration of the “ecumenical patriarchs” (without names) at
the proskomedia and the remembrance of the ecumenical patriarch
contained in the exclamation at the prayer of the Eucharist. As a
consequence, in the hierarchical—and even in the ordinary
priestly—rite of the Liturgy after the unification of the Kiev
Metropolia with the Moscow Patriarchate, the volume of commemorations
of Eastern patriarchs noticeably grew in comparison with the earlier
period. In this way, the desire of the Patriarch Dionysios IV of
Constantinople to underscore the unity of the Churches to “all the
ends of the universe”, as he himself wrote, was completely
satisfied by the very fact of the Kiev metropolia’s change to
Moscow’s publications of the Divine Service books.134
Finally,
it is extremely important to emphasize that neither at the end of the
seventeenth century, nor in the eighteenth to nineteenth centuries
was the fact of a final and irrevocable unification of the Kiev
metropolia with the Church of All Rus’ placed under any doubt by
anyone.135 Even
Patriarch Dositheus of Jerusalem, who before the publication of the
documents of May-June 1686 expressed his criticism of the idea of
such a unification, after the resolution was accepted by
Constantinople gave not the slightest cause to doubt the Kiev
Metropolia’s total canonical submission to Moscow. To the contrary,
in a whole series of letters he called upon Moscow to make use of its
ecclesiastical and canonical authority to remove the elements of
Catholic influence in Little Russian theology and Liturgical
practices (that is, essentially to abolish those very “rights and
freedoms”, which the Kiev clergy had stipulated the possibility of
preserving in 1685!).136
A
remarkable testimony to the unconditional acceptance of what happened
on the part of the higher figures of the Constantinople Patriarchate
is the request of the former Patriarch of Constantinople Seraphim II,
who was forced to flee the Ottoman Empire due to his anti-Turkish
position during the Russo-Turkish War of 1768–1774, that he be
allowed to serve in the churches of the Kiev (!) diocese. In June
1776, the patriarch sent the following request to the Holy Governing
Synod [of the Russian Orthodox Church]:137
By
force of the Supreme and Holy governing Synod’s will, I arrived
last February at the Maksakov Monastery of the Savior of the Kiev
diocese, but since I do not have the written permission of the Holy
Synod, I do not dare to serve the divine services. For this cause,
according to the ecclesiastical established order, I most humbly ask
your permission to serve and that an order be sent to the
Metropolitan of Kiev from the Holy Synod. I have signed this
report. †
Πατριάρχης
πρώην
Κωνσταντινουπόλεως
Σεραφίμ.
As
can be seen from this request, which was reviewed and approved by the
Synod,138the
former Patriarch of Constantinople was asking for permission to
serve—and not just anywhere, but in the very diocese of the Kiev
metropolitan!—from the supreme ecclesiastical authority of the
Russian Church, and not from Constantinople; and he knows nothing of
any supposed “preserved” obligations of the Kiev metropolitans
with regard to the primate of Constantinople.
Conclusions
on the canonical grounds for the unity of the Russian Church:
The
very fact in and of itself of the historical unity of the Russian
Orthodox Church possesses more than sufficient canonical force (the
Council Acts and imperial chrysobull) of 1347, and the patriarchal
Letter of 1467). The center of the united Russian Church was
transferred in a canonical manner to the Vladimir-Suzdal lands, that
is, to Moscow, preserving the Moscow hierarch as that of Kiev, it
being his own ancient cathedra (Council Act of 1354; patriarchal
Letter of 1516).
The
Great Council of Constantinople of 1593 confirmed the right of the
Moscow patriarch to all the historical Russian dioceses, not limiting
them to the territories under the current political control of
Moscow. In 1686, it remained only for the Constantinople Patriarchate
to with dignity decline to contest the rights of the Moscow Patriarch
with regard to the Kiev cathedra. The only stipulation, made in 1686,
regarding the commemoration of the Constantinople Patriarch before
the others, was not binding for the Russian Church, inasmuch as there
are not and never were any documents whatsoever that confirmed the
agreement of the Moscow Patriarchate of the Kiev Metropolia itself
for that matter with this stipulation. Secondly, it could have been
interpreted either as the proclamation of the Constantinople Church’s
universal authority (something that would suspiciously sound like
papal dogma and would therefore be theologically unacceptable), or as
the good desire to emphasize the unity of the Ecumenical Church
through the aid of Liturgical commemoration (which the Russian Church
had begun to do even earlier than 1686, under Patriarch Nikon).
III.
General conclusions.
The
unity of the Russian Orthodox Church, which has existed for more that
a thousand years, has been under attack a number of times from
various sides, but despite all this, this unity has continued to
exist much longer than the periods of its violation.
In
the Byzantine time, precisely the Constantinople Church defended this
unity, despite the political conflicts that have arisen between one
or another Russian princedom. On their own part, the clergy and
faithful of the metropolia of
All Rus’ have
always responded to the Constantinople Church with love, respect,
recognition, and significant material support.
Only
the Byzantine elite itself could have torn the metropolia of
All Rus’ from
Constantinople when it first of all tried to use Russian Orthodoxy as
a bargaining chip in a desperate attempt to force the West to come to
the aid of perishing Constantinople, and then when it allowed the
Uniate metropolitan to usurp the title of the primate of “All
Rus’”.
The
restoration of complete ecclesiastical communion between Moscow and
Constantinople could not question who actually has the right to the
title of the first hierarch of “All Rus’”, but the objective
course of history has given this question an exhaustive answer,
confirmed in a whole series of ecclesiastical-canonical documents,
for which there are no lawful grounds for reinterpretation.
Fr. Mikhail
teaches at the Moscow Theological Academy, The St. Cyril and
Methodius General Ecclesiastical masters and doctoral programs, a
member of the Synodal Biblical-Theological Commission, the Synodal
Church Services Commission, and the Inter-Council Presence of the
Russian Orthodox Church.
Professor
Zhetlov will also teach Liturgical Theology in the inter-Orthodox
post-graduate program on “Orthodox Ecumenical Theology” at the
International Hellenic University
Translation by OrthoChristian.com at 10/9/2018
1 Now
Peryaslavl-Khmelnitsky (Ukraine, Kiev province).
2 Later
we will call this city simply Vladimir, without the distinction (from
Vladimir in the Southwest).
3 See
the list of hierarchical cathedrae of the Constantinople
Patriarchate: Darrouzès J. Notitiae episcopatuum Ecclesiae
Constantinopolitanae. P., 1981. P. 333, notitia 10 [recensio a]
(681); p. 343, notitia 11 (62). The notation of Kiev in the title of
the Metropolitan of the Russias—τῷ
Κυέβῳ
τῆς
Ῥωσίας—appears
only in later variations of the lists (Ibid. P. 335, notitia 10
[recensio d] (701); P. 403, notitia 17 (136); p. 481, notitia 20
(50)).
4 See
A. Poppe, Russian
Metropolitans of the Constantinople Patriarchate in the eleventh
century,
Byzantine annals (Moscow, 1968) 28:85–108; 1969, 29:95–104; A. V.
Nazarenko, The
Metropolia of the Yaroslavichi during the second half of the eleventh
century,
Ancient Rus’. Questions of medieval studies (Moscow, 2007. No. 1
(27), 85–103; K. Zuckerman, Duumverates of the Yaroslavichi. On the
question about the metropolitans of Chernigov and Peryaslavl,
Дьнєслово:
Збiрка
праць
на
пошану
дiйсного
члена
Нацiональної
академiї
наук
України
Петра
Петровича
Толочка
з
нагоди
його
70-рiччя.
К.,
2008, 40–50.
5 The
precedent with the establishment in 1051 by Metropolitan Hilarion
without the agreement of Constantinople does not interest us in the
given case, because it was not connected with the division of the
Russian metropolias into parts.
6 That
is, the bishop of the city of Yuriev on the Ros River, now called
Belaya Tserkov (White Church), Ukraine, Kiev province).
7 His
appearance in Rus’ became possible after Izyaslav Mistislavovich
was exiled from Kiev to Volhynia by the armies of several allied
princes headed by Prince Yuri Dolgoruki, who was up till then ruling
in Northeastern Rus’.
8 Priests
A. Vinogradov, Y. Zheltov, “Legal actions of the Russian metropolia
under Constantine I (1156–1159)”, At
the origins and sources: at international and inter-discipline paths.
The anniversary collection in honor of A. V. Nazarenko (Moscow
2018), 35–56.
9 For
the grounds for this assertion see the articles: A. V. Nazarenko,
“Archbishops in the Russian Church in pre-Mongolian times”, Anciet
Rus’: Questions in Medieval Studies (Moscow,
2015), No 4 (62), 67–76; M. V. Pechnikov, “Novgorod Holy Hierarch
Niphont, princely power and the Kiev Metropolia (30–50s of the
twelfth century)”, Journal
of Church History (Moscow,
2017), No. ¾ (47/48), 237–278.
10 A.
V. Nazarenko, “The metropolia that didn’t happen (on one of the
ecclesiastical-political projects of Andrei Bogoliubsky)”, “We
worthily praise…”: Andrei Bogoliubsky in Russian history and
culture. International scholarly conference (Vladimir,
July 5–6, 2011) (Vladimir, 2013), 13–36.
12 See
Franklin S., “Diplomacy and Ideology: Byzantium and the Russian
Church in the mid-twelfth century”, Byzantine
Diplomacy: Papers from the 24th Spring Symposium of Byzantine
Studies, Cambridge, March, 1990,
J. Shepard, S. Franklin, eds. (Aldershot [Hampshire], 1992).
(Variorum Series), 145–150.
13 Known
are three seals from the twelfth century containing this title and
the name “Constantine” (V. L. Yanin, Official
seals of Ancient Rus’, X-XV cc,
[Moscow, 1970], 1:49), which, according to the supposition of V.
Loran, should be connected not with Metropolitan Constantine I, but
with Metropolitan Constantine II (1167-1170); Laurent
V. Le
corpus des sceaux de l’Empire Byzantin. P., 1972. T. V, 3. P.
606–607; see, however: A. A. Kupranis, “Dating of the seals of
the hierarchs of the Russian Church (the pre-Mongolian
period)”, Church
Archeology,
4th edition: Materials of the Second All-Russian Church archeology
conference, dedicated to the 150th anniversary of the birthday of N.
V. Pokrovsky (1848-1917) (St. Petersburg, Nov. 1-3, 1998. St.
Petersburg, 1998), 162. But the observations of N. P. Likhachev, the
image of the Mother of God represented on these seals is “as if a
transformation of the “Sign” type to the “Kiev-Caves” type
(N. P. Likhachev, “Materials for the history of Byzantine and
Russian sphragistics. (St. Petersburg, 1907, 2nd edition), 5—it is
possible that in this can also be seen the desire of the
Constantinople hierarch who arrived to underscore the unity of North
and South Rus’.
14 «Митрополитъ
же
Костѧнтинъ
повелѣ
ѥму
iaзъıкъ
оурѣзати
. iaко
злодѣю
и
єретику
. и
руку
правую
оутѧти
. и
ѡчи
єму
вынѧти»--“Metropolitan
Constantine commanded that his tongue be cut out, as an evil-doer and
heretic, and his right arm cut off, and his eyes gouged out.”
(Complete collection of Russian Chronicles, Vol 1: Chronicles of
Lavrenty (Leningrad, 1926-1928), 356.
15 Or
Kirill II, if the commemoration in the Kiev St. Sophia Cathedral
commemoration book for a metropolitan with the name Kirill who lived
in the eleventh century (his name is not mentioned in the chronicles)
is incorrect.
17 «Митрополитъ
Максимъ
. не
терпѧ
Татарьско
насильia
. ѡставѧ
митрополью
и
збѣжа
ис
Києва
. и
весь
Києвъ
розбѣжалъсѧ
. а
митрополитъ
иде
ко
Брѧньску
. и
. иде
в
Суждальскую
землю
. и
со
всѣм
своимъ
житьєм»—
Metropolitan
Maxim, not able to endure the Tatar violence, left the metropolia and
fled from Kiev, and all of Kiev scattered, while the metropolitan
went to Briansk, and, went to the Suzdal lands, together with all his
living” (Ibid., 485). Moreover the active bishop of Vladimir was
moved to Rostov: «Того
же
лѣта
Максимъ
митрополитъ
сѣде
въ
Володимери
на
столѣ.
а
Семена
вл(а)д(ы)кү
посади
в
Ростовѣ»--“That
same year Metropolitan Maxim sat upon the throne in in Vladimir, and
changed the vladika [bishop], setting him upon Rostov” (Ibid. 528).
18 Located
on the Ratsk River, now the territory of Lvov province, Ukraine.
19 Besides
the Galicia diocese, Vladimir-Volhynia, Lutsk, Kholm, Peremyshl, and
Turov diocese.
20 See
A. S. Pavlov, On
the beginning of the Galician and Lithuanian metropolia and on the
first metropolitans there, according to Byzantine documental sources
of the 14th century (Moscow,
1894) [Separate imprint from No. 5 of the periodical, Russian
Review],
3-10. Compare with: Darrouzès. Notitiae… P. 403, notitia 17 (157);
Laurent V. Les regestes des actes du Patriarcat de Constantinople.
Vol. I: Les actes des patriarches. Fasc. IV: Les regestes de 1208 à
1309. P., 1971. P. 374–375 (№1592).
21 Incidentally,
in later sources a brief mention is preserved of the presence in
Galich of a metropolitan named Gabriel after holy Hierarch Peter was
sent to the Rus’ cathedra, but this is either a mistake, or the
activities of Gabriel did not continue very long.
22 There
is a famous prophecy of St. Peter about the future of Moscow as,
among other things, the center of the Russian Church: “This city
will be glorified in all the cities of Rus’, and holy hierarchs
will live in it… and God will be glorified in it”; however, it is
not included in the most ancient version of the Life of St. Peter,
and appears only in editions created by Holy Hierarch Cyprian (B. M.
Kloss, “The broad editing (by Cyprian) of the Life of Metropolitan
Peter”, Kloss, Selected
Works (Moscow,
2001), 2:32-47—one of the more important Church figures in 14th
century Rus’, about whom more will be said below.
23 The
honored relics of the saint are located to this day in the altar of
the Kremlin Dormition Cathedral, and the feast in his honor was
considered in Moscow to be one of the main events of the
ecclesiastical year all the way up until the 17th century.
24 In
fact, we only know of the title of its metropolitans and the name of
one of them: Darrouzès. Notitiae… P. 399, notitia 17 (83); Hunger
H., Kresten O. Das Register des Patriarchats von Konstantinopel. Teil
1: Edition und Übersetzung der Urkunden aus den Jahren 1315–1331.
W., 1981 (= Corpus Fontium Historiae Byzantinae; XIX/1). S. 554 (№98:
14–15).
25 The
very fact of this consecration shows that in 1328, the Galica
metropolia did not yet exist.
26 Most
probably fulfilling the request of the Galich prince, Yuri II
Boleslav.
27 Darrouzès
J., Les regestes des actes du Patriarcat de Constantinople. Vol. I:
Les actes des patriarches. Fasc. V: Les regestes de 1310 à 1376. P.,
1977. P. 122 (№2164).
28 Undoubtedly
at the request of St. Theognostos.
29 Darrouzès,
Les regestes… Fasc. V: Les regestes de 1310 à 1376. P. 175–177
(№2224). See citation 19.
30 About
the synodal epistle with the condemnation of the metropolitan see:
Darrouzès, Les regestes… Fasc. V: Les regestes de 1310 à 1376. P.
278–279 (№2336)
31 This
title appears again in the title registers of ordinary ruling
hierarchs only in the mid-eighteenth century.
32 Publication
of the texts with commentary: J. Koder, Hinterberger M., Kresten O.
Das Register des Patriarchats von Konstantinopel. Teil 3: Edition und
Übersetzung der Urkunden aus den Jahren 1350– 1363. W., 2001 (=
Corpus Fontium Historiae Byzantinae; XIX/3). S. 104–117 (№193).
33 Publication
of texts with commentary: Ibid. S. 116-131 (№194–195).
34 Publication
of texts with commentary: Ibid. S. 130–139 (№196; cited fragment:
S. 136: 58–61).
35 Darrouzès,
Les regestes… Fasc. V: Les regestes de 1310 à 1376. P. 489–495
(№2579–2582, 2584). The epistle was sent, but the seal was not
officially published.
36 As
later history would show, the Orthodox people’s receiving their own
metropolitan did not at all stop the execution of these threats.
Casimir himself had already offered to the pope to create a separate
Catholic metropolia for Galicians. Under his reign, Catholic dioceses
were established in ancient Russian cities: in Peremyshl no later
than 1351, in Vladimir-Volhynia in 1358, in Khom and Lvov in 1359. In
around 1357, according to mentions in sources, the Catholic hierarch
of Galich had the rank of archbishop. The project of creating
Catholic metropolias was completed after Casimir’s death, and
without taking into consideration at all the opinion of the already
existing Orthodox metropolia: in 1375 by a papal bulla, to the
archbishop of Galich (from 1412 is residence was moved to Lvov) the
Catholic bishops of Peremyshl, Vladimir-Volhynia (by 1427 the see was
moved to Lutsk), and Kholm were put in submission; in the eighties of
the 14th century, within the framework of this archbishopric was
created a see in Kamenets-Podolsk, and in 1410, in Kiev. The politics
of secular rulers placed the Orthodox inhabitants of Galicia-Volhynia
in a vulnerable position—they not only were considered
“schismatics” and subjected to psychological pressure, but also
had to pay higher taxes than the Catholics, were deprived of certain
civil rights, and the property of Orthodox churches and dioceses in
the dioceses were much less protected than that of the Catholics (see
B. N. Floria, Research
in the history of the Church. Ancient Russian and Slavic Medieval
Period [Moscow,
2007], 309-327). All of this prodded the Orthodox population into
converting to Catholicism.
37 Casimir
III did not manage to live to see the fulfillment of his demand—he
died on November 5, 1370.
38 Darrouzès,
Les regestes… Fasc. V: Les regestes de 1310 à 1376. P. 524–525
(№2622).
39 Ibid.
P. 528–529 (№2625).
41 Ibid.,
57-61.
42 In
1393, after the death of Metropolitan Anthony of Galich (1391), the
king of Poland and suzerain of the grand princes of Lithuania
Vladislav (Yagailo) sent the bishop of Lutsk, John (Babu) to
Constantinople to be made a metropolitan. At the same time St.
Cyprian informed the Patriarchate of the accusations against John
made by the bishop of Vladimir-Volhynia (by which he ipso
facto made
known his rights to the diocese of the Galicia metropolia). Not
waiting for the arrival of the Vladimir-Volhynia hierarch, Bishop
John left Constantinople with the excuse that the king had already
appointed him Metropolitan of Galicia, and he had supposedly already
received the blessing of the Constantinople Patriarch when the latter
blessed him at his arrival, according to custom. Patriarch Anthony
IV, indignant at such a shameless substitution of concepts, in
October 1393 send St. Cyprian an epistle with instructions to bring
Bishop John to trial, depose him, and appoint a new bishop to the
Lutsk cathedra (Darrouzès J., Les regestes des actes du Patriarcat
de Constantinople. Vol. I: Les actes des patriarches. Fasc. VI: Les
regestes de 1377 à 1410. P., 1979. P. 214 (№2935)). In this way,
the patriarch in fact recognized the authority of St. Cyprian over
the dioceses of the Galicia metropolias. The king, however, did not
heed the patriarchal decision, and Bishop John began ruling the
dioceses of the metropolia; in 1397, Patriarch Anthony IV made
another attempt to resolve the conflict, sending the king a letter
with the offer to either forgive John if he comes to “his own
metropolitan” for trial, or to appoint another candidate for the
metropolia; at the same time a letter was sent to St. Cyprian with a
reproach for his meddling in in the affairs of the Galicia metropolia
((Ibid. P. 302–305 (№3039–3040)). How the conflict was finally
settled we don’t know, but in any case in 1398 Bishop John had
still not been appointed metropolitan (B. N. Floria, John
(Baba), Orthodox
Encyclopedia (Moscow,
2010)23:380), and in 1411-1412, Metropolitan Photius of Kiev and All
the Russias made a pastoral visit to Galich, which would have been
impossible if there the city had its own metropolitan. In 1423,
Yagailo entrusted the Catholic bishop of Lvov with oversight of the
“schismatics” (that is, the Orthodox), which also indicates that
the Galician lands did not have a separate Orthodox metropolitan.
43 Darrouzès
J., Les regestes…. Fasc. VII: Les regestes de 1410 à 1453. P.,
1991. P. 11 (№3302). The Greek text of the Patriarchal Letter has
been lost; for the Russian translation see: РИБ.
Т.
6. Кол.
357–360 (№40).
44 Saved
in the manuscripts of ГИМ.
Муз.
№ 1209. Л.
223 об.—225.
In fact, according to the testimony of late Gustyn chronicles, the
Byzantine leadership, already on the verge of catastrophe, in the end
had to accept Gregory’s appointment (Fijałek J. Biskupstwa greckie
w żiemiach ruskich od połowy XIV w. na podstawie żrodel greckich
// Kwartalnik historyczny. Lwów, 1897. S. 51), which is confirmed by
the fact that during the Council of Constance the Byzantine
delegation was present at the Liturgy presided over by Gregory, and
he himself addressed the Roman pope not only from himself but from
“the lord Emperor of Constantinople… and the patriarch of that
city” (E. M. Lomize, The Constantinople Patriarchate and church
politics of the emperors from the end of the 14th century to the
Ferraro-Florentine Council (1438-1499), Byzantine
Annals [Moscow,
1994), v. 55 (80), chap. 1, pp. 104-110). This created a precedent
for the legitimization of the metropolitan post
factum, which
later played its role at the recognition as metropolitan of All the
Russias of another Gregory—Gregory the Bulgarian, and also made
known the desire of the Byzantine rulers to used the factor of the
Kiev metropolia, the fate of which had become interwoven with
Catholic Poland and Lithuania, in negotiations on the West’s
possible emergency aid in the struggle with Ottoman aggression.
45 About
which a second pastoral visit, after 1411-1412 to Galich by St.
Photius in 1420-1421.
46 The
enthronement of Metropolitan Hilarion in 1051 is not considered here.
See fn. 5.
48 Ibid.,
219.
49 Though
earlier, in 1367, negotiations had been held with him in the person
of Patriarch Philotheus who had agreed to convene a great council and
discuss the split between the East and the West: Ibid. P. 216–217.
See also: Lomize E.M., “The Project of the 1367 Union in the
Context of the Patriarchate of Constantinople’s Policy in the
Balkans in the Second Half of the Fourteenth Century,” Slavyane
I Ikh Sosedy (Moscow,
1991) No. 3, 29-40.
50 Florya
B.N., Research of the Church History…, 328-367.
51 See
fn. 44.
52 Though
in the spring of 1432 Vasily II did receive the license from the
Golden Horde to take the throne, his struggle with his uncles and
later with his cousin who laid claims to the throne continued till
the 1450s.
53 Pope
Eugene IV even sent his papal bull to “Archbishop Gerasimos of the
Russian Lands” (Gerasimo provincie Ruthenorum Archiepiscopo) with
the direction of the preparation for the process towards the union of
the Churches (Kotsebu A., Svidrigaylo,
the Grand Duke of Lithuania (St.
Petersburg, 1835), 26-28 of pagination 2). That is yet another
confirmation of the above: The figure of the Russian Metropolitan
played a key role in the Papal Curia’s plans for the Union.
54 Cardinal
Isidore, c. 1390–1462: A Late Byzantine Scholar, Warlord, and
Prelate, (L.; N. Y., 2018), 38–78.
55 That
is, of the Teutonic Order. In Slavonic documents of Isidore his title
is mentioned as “Archbishop”, or “Metropolitan of Kiev”—“of
All Rus’, legate of the Apostolic See to Poland, Lithuania and
Germany” (Ibid., 100–102).
56 Simeon
of Suzdal was the only Russian bishop to take part in the Council and
sign its acts under duress, though afterwards he repudiated his
signature. Isidore conveyed him to Moscow in shackles.
57 It
was probably not without the grand prince’s authorization because
he decided to get rid of Isidore in this way. See Ibid., 103–104.
See also Akishin S. Yu., Florya B.N. “Isidore, Metropolitan of Kiev
(1436-1443), Cardinal and Latin Patriarch of Constantinople
(1459–1463)” The
Orthodox Encyclopedia (Moscow,
2011), 27:177-182.
58 “The
news came that the tsar went to Rome for his kingdom, accepted the
Latin faith, and ordered the recall of the ambassadors” (The
Complete Collection of Russian Chronicles,
Vol. 6: The Chronicles of Sophia [St. Petersburg, 1853],167).
59 Metrophanes
II, who succeeded Joseph II who died during the Council of Florence,
reposed in 1443. His successor was Gregorios III, who due to the
rejection of the Union by the majority of Constantinople residents
and most probably the disapproval of it by Emperor Constantine XI
Palaeologos (who ascended the throne in 1449) was forced to leave the
city in 1450. From 1451 he resided in Rome in the status of the
Titular Latin Patriarch of Constantinople.
60 There
is a record in one of the surviving copies of the letter: “The
letter… not sent.” (See The Historical Acts Collected and Issued
by the Commission for the Study and Publication of Early Texts. St.
Petersburg, 1841. V. 1 (1334–1598). P. 495). However, Emperor
Constantine XI eventually had to attract everybody’s attention as
an adherent of the Unia. In 1452, hoping to secure military
assistance from the West, he allowed Isidore who came from Rome as a
papal legate to celebrate a service at Hagia Sophia and commemorate
the pope as well as the exiled Patriarch-Uniate Gregorios III.
61 The
text of the document: The Historical Acts… 85-86 (no. 42).
62 The
texts of the message of the Holy Hierarch Jonas to Patriarch
Gennadius and the epistle to Demetrios the Greek on Alms on the
occasion of the capture of Constantinople by the Ottoman Turks: Ibid.
Pp. 495-496 (no. 263-264). Another evidence of the recognition by
Patriarch Gennadius of the canonicity of the metropolitan in Moscow
is his own words in one of his official answers to the questions of
the Serbian Despot George, where the patriarch mentions the
Metropolia of “Russia – that is, of Kiev and All Rus’”,
though “situated in Moscow”, as a positive example of the fact
that the historical name of the see can be retained despite its
physical relocation (Oeuvres completes de Gennade Scholarios /
Publiées… par L. Petit, X. A. Sideridès, M. Jugie. P., 1935. T.
IV. P. 208).
63 See
the comment of B.N. Florya in the book: Metropolitan Makary
(Bulgakov), The History of the Russian Church. Vol. V / B.N. Florya,
science editor, b. V. (Moscow, 1996), 422-423, fns. 3* and 10*.
64 Including
the dioceses of the former Metropolia of Galich, which therefore
became a thing of the past.
65 Only
one of the bishops, Euphymius of Bryansk, or Chernigov, fled to
Moscow and afterwards was appointed to the Diocese of Suzdal (that
is, of Vladimir).
66 “When
Isidore’s pupil Gregorios came to Lithuania as metropolitan, Andrew
the King of Poland sent a request to his brother, Grand Prince of All
Russia Vasily Vasilievich [Vasily II] that he accepts [Gregorios] as
Metropolitan of Russia, since Metropolitan Jonas is already advanced
in years” (The
Complete Collection of Russian Chronicles,
6:169).
67 “The
king’s request was not accepted by the Grand Prince, neither did he
accept Isidore’s disciple, and Metropolitan Jonah sent a letter to
his bishops ordering them not to receive the blessing from him
[Gregorios]” (Ibid).
68 The
Russian Historical Library. Vol. 6. Cols. 627-632 (no. 83); the
Council addressed the bishops of the Southwest with the same letter
(Ibid. Pp. 631-634, [no. 84]). Subsequently, St. Jonah sent a large
number of such letters to different addressees (Ibid. Pp. 635-678
[no. 85-90]).
69 It’s
unlikely that the hurry of Patriarch Dionysius was purely
coincidental. He made this decision in less a month after his
enthronement. Mara Brankovich, the extremely influential sultan’s
stepmother of a noble Serbian origin, was most likely behind this
decision. Dionysius owed his election to Mara who for some reason was
interested in the legitimation of Gregory (on Mara Brankovic see:
Поповић
М.
Мара
Бранковић:
жена
измецђу
хришћанског
и
исламског
културног
круга
у
15. веку.
Нови
Сад,
2014).
70 The
publication of the document’s surviving Slavonic translation: East
Slavonic and South Slavonic Manuscripts in the Collections of the
Polish People’s Republic / Compiled by Ya.N. Shchapov. Moscow,
1976. Part 2. Pp. 145-147.
71 As
is seen in the light of the subsequent course of history, this
hierarchy’s rupture of relations with Rome wasn’t quite sincere.
Though the hierarchy that in fact was established by Gregory the
Bulgarian strove to preserve the Orthodox teaching and rites, it at
the same time desired to rid itself of its unequal status and the
persecutions, stemming from the local Catholic authorities. This made
it seek recognition from the Roman Church. Thus, in 1476, Misael, the
first successor of Gregorios the Bulgarian as head of the Metropolia
of Lithuania, right after his election officially appealed to Rome
(to Pope Sixtus IV) and not to Constantinople for approval. His four
immediate successors appealed to Constantinople for endorsement and
took no steps towards Rome, but the fifth metropolitan, Joseph
Bolgarinovich, openly took several steps to return to the Unia with
Rome despite being approved by Constantinople. Living side by side
with Catholics and obtaining education in Catholic educational
establishments, Orthodox Christians of the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth gradually adopted Western approaches to theology along
with Latin liturgical traditions. For example, by the seventeenth
century the traditional Catholic-style ordinations of acolytes and
ostiaries (“doorkeepers”) were practiced in Ukraine; the typical
Catholic practice of simultaneous ordination of many deacons and
priests at the same Liturgy was widespread; and so on. During the
sixteenth century the propaganda of the open Union was gradually
gathering momentum among the clergy and laity of the Lithuanian
Metropolia; thus, by the end of that century the Unia became a
reality and attracted a considerable portion of the clergy and laity.
In the Uniate historiography you can often find an assertion that the
acceptance of the Unia in 1596 by the bishops of the Metropolia of
Kiev was explained by their disinclination to be subordinate to the
Patriarchate of Moscow, established in 1589. This assertion is not
confirmed by the contents of the surviving correspondence of the
representatives of the future Uniate Church, and the course of the
historical process that preceded the Union indicates that the “seeds”
of the Unia had “fallen on good ground” long before it was
concluded. With the establishment of the Russian Uniate Church in
1596 (Ecclesia Ruthenica unita) the hierarchy that had originated
with Gregorios the Bulgarian in effect returned to its origins
(primarily all the bishops of the Metropolia of Lithuania planned to
join the Unia and would have done this but for Prince K.K.
Ostrozhsky, who at the very last moment found weighty arguments to
persuade two bishops—Gideon of Lvov and Michael of Peremyshl—to
reject the Union). Thus we can evaluate the decision of Patriarch
Dionysius not only in the light of the state of affairs at that
moment, but also in the light of its long-term impact
72 Grand
Prince John III of Moscow barred the ambassadors of Gregory the
Bulgarian and the Patriarch of Constantinople from entry to Moscow
(The Russian Historical Library. Vol. 6. Pp. 707-712 (no. 100)).
73 John
III formulated this break in the following way: “I want neither
him, nor his blessing, nor his non-blessing; we want him out, this
alien and rejected patriarch” (Ibid. p. 711).
75 The
extent of this unacceptance is colorfully testified to by the
decision of the Moscow Council of 1620 headed by Patriarch Philaret
on the Baptism by complete immersion of those Orthodox who are
transferring from the Western Russian metropolia, who had been
baptized by sprinkling (Chrismation was not repeated; those baptized
by the Uniates were both rebaptized and rechrismated). According to
this document, the Council resolution of 1621 entered into the
contents of a series of publications of the Book of Needs from 1623
to 1651. There were precedents of similar “rebaptisms” of even
some the clergy, who were then likewise reordained.
76 B.
N. Florya, “New data on the beginning of the contacts Metropolitan
Job (Boretsky) with Russia”, Journal
of Church History,
2011, No. 3-4, 542-543.
77 Archive
of Southwestern Russia… Chap. 1, V. 5, R, 1872, 88 ((№XIX).
78 A.
Krylovsky, the Lvov Stravropegic Brotherhood (Experience of
ecclesiastical-historical research), (K., 1904), 79 [2nd pag.] (Entry
XXXVI).
79 The
main conclusion of Bogdan Khmelnitsy’s speech was the resolution of
the People’s council in Moscow (October 1653) on the acceptance of
the Zaparozhie Army as Russian citizens, and the Cossack Rada in
Peryaslavl (January 1654)—on the unification of the territories of
the Zaporozhie Army with the Russian Tsardom and the oath of
allegiance of the Cossacks to the Russian tsar. These resolutions in
turn led to the Russo-Polish War of 1654-1677, the first months of
which Smolensk was returned (after which the Uniate Smolensk
archdiocese, instituted in 1626, was dissolved, and in 1659 the
Smolensk diocese was restored to the Moscow Patriarchate) and a
series of other territories taken over by the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth during the Time of Troubles. Soon the war revealed an
internal contradiction amongst the Cossackry, which in 1663 became
divided into the Left and Right Banks. The war ended with the
Andrusov peace treaty of 1667, according to which, first of all, the
Left Bank Ukraine (for which Russia paid the Poles a large monetary
compensation) and Smolensk went to Russia, as well as Kiev for a term
of two years. To the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth returned the
Right Bank Ukraine. The Right Bank Cossackry headed by Hetman Petro
Doroshenko, unhappy with the terms of the treaty, called a Rada in
1669 at which it was decided to go under the rule of the Ottoman
Empire; in 1672 came the Turkish invasion of the Right Bank and the
Buchach peace treaty was signed, according to which Podolye went to
Turkey, a large part of the Right Bank Ukraine headed by P.
Doroshenko became an Ottoman protectorate, and the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth was obliged to pay tributes to the Ottomans. The
conditions of the treaty were unacceptable and soon the
Polish-Turkish War began, resulting in the Zhuravensk agreement of
1676, which differed from the Buchachk agreement mainly only by the
absence of tributes. In the same year, Doroshenko took an oath of
allegiance to the Russian government and fled the Right Bank, and in
1678 his capital, Chigirin, was destroyed. In 1686 the Russian
tsardom and the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth signed a permanent
treaty, according to which Kiev became part of the Russian Tsardom
thenceforth and forever (again with a large monetary compensation),
after which the Russian forces declared war on the Ottoman Empire and
the Crimean Khanate on the side of the Polish-Lithuanian
Commonwealth, which for the latter ended with its return of Podolye
and other parts of the Right Bank Ukraine, which was confirmed by the
treaty of Karlovac in 1699.
80 For
this see: B. N. Florya, “Dionysios (Balaban-Tukalsky)”, Orthodox
Encyclopedia (Moscow,
2007), 15:282-284.
81 Complete
Collection of Laws of the Russian Empire. First Collection (St.
Petersburg, 1830), 1:494.
82 That
is, of Mogilev.
83 About
him see: B. N. Florya, “Joseph (Neliubovich-Tukalsky), Orthodox
Encyclopedia (Moscow,
2010), 25:638-645
84 About
him see: B. N. Florya, “Anthony (Vinnitsky)”, Orthodox
Encyclopedia (Moscow,
2010), 2:624-625.
85 Acts
releted to the history of Western Russia, collected and published by
the Archeographical Commission (St. Petersburg, 1853),
5:1633-1699:114-116 (No. 71).
86 He
was siezed by Doroshenko’s Cossacks, defrocked by Joseph, but
managed to flee to Kiev, was brought to Moscow, where he was at first
arrested and finally sent to live in the Novospassky Monastery, where
he eventually died.
87 On
him see: V. G. Pidgaiko, I. Ya. Skochilyas, “Joseph
(Shumlyansky), Orthodox
Enclyclopedia (Moscow,
2010), 25:682-694.
88 Archive
of Southwestern Russia… Chap. 1 (T.V.K., 1872), 88 (No. XIX).
89 Ibid.
90 Ibid.,
106. This variation of the missive (Ibid., 104-111 [No. XXIV])
according to the decision of the authorities was in the end not sent,
but it was made public in the collection, Icon. In
the variation of the missive sent to the Constantinople patriarch
(Ibid., 112-115 [No. XXV]) the historical-canonical theme is touched
upon in an extremely laconic way: “In Russia from the beginning the
reception of the Orthodox faith was (the Kiev cathedra.—auth.) our
All-Russian throne” (Ibid., 115), but in the instructions given to
the ambassadors it was commanded to set forth all the other arguments
orally in case some discussion should arise (РГАДА,
ф.
89. Оп.
1. Кн.
25. Л.
236–238 об.).
91 For
more detail see the article by B. N. Florya, K. A. Kocheganov, N. P.
Chesnokova, and M. R. Yafarova, “The Kiev Metropolia, the Moscow
Patriarchate, and the Constantinople Patriarchate in 1676-1686” as
part of a collection of documents on Church politics in Moscow and
Kiev in the 1670s-1680s, currently being prepared for publication.
92 More
precisely, this division changed to a qualitatively different level,
because the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church—the direct descendent
of the Russian Uniate Church (and consequently the Metropolia of
Gregory the Bulgarian)—still exits today; other very serious
problems for the unity of the Russian Church consist in the Old
Believer schism, which arose during the patriarchy of Nikon, and the
autocephaly movement in Ukraine of the 20th century, which received
indirect (and from 2018, direct) support from the Constantinople
Patriarchate.
93 The
only exception consists in a small Galich metropolia, the existence
of which was approved three times by Constantinople, but the dioceses
of which have in the end three times again returned to the united
Russian Church.
94 See
fn. 11.
95 See
fn. 13.
97 The
original Greek text of the missive was not published, but it was
preserved in a series of manuscripts (Laurent. Les regestes … de
1208 à 1309. P. 65–66 (№1257)), but one of them—Vatican. gr.
1409, fol. 260–261 (Loran shows erroneous page numbers:
360-361)—this is what we cite.
98 Dölger
F. Regesten der Kaiserkunden des Oströmischen Reiches. Teil 5:
Regesten von 1341–1453. München, 1965. S. 16 (№2925).
99 The
texts of the council acts and all the enumerated Letters, with a
German translation and commentary, published in the book, Hunger H.,
Kresten O., Kislinger E., Cupane C. Das Register des Patriarchats von
Konstantinopel. Teil 2: Edition und Übersetzung der Urkunden aus den
Jahren 1337–1350. W., 1995 (= Corpus Fontium Historiae Byzantinae;
XIX/2). S. 468–501 (№167–171).
100 This
Patriarch was John XIV the Cripple who went down in history as an
opponent of the teaching of St. Gregory Palamas as well.
101 This
expression is repeated in two of three letters of the emperor: Ibid.,
471-472 (no. 167: 8-9); 484 (no. 169: 15-16). In the third letter the
emperor accuses the former patriarch of unreason rather than ill
will: ὁ
χρηματίσας
πατριάρχης
Κωνσταντινουπόλεως
διὰ
τὰς
τοιαύτας
αὐτοῦ
παραλογίας
(Ibid. P. 478 (no. 168: 19–20); Cf. 484 (no. 169: 16–17)).
102 Ibid.,
478 (no. 168: 21), 484 (no. 169: 17).
103 Ibid.,
472 (no. 167: 13).
104 Ibid.
P. 492 (no. 179: 49–50).
105 Ibid.,
490 (no. 179: 11–12).
106 The
Mongol-Tatar destruction of Kiev and political instability.
107 Koder,
Hinterberger, Kresten, Das
Register… Teil 3. P. 136 (no. 196: 51–64). A century later the
canonicity of the move of the See of the Metropolis of Kiev and All
Russia to Moscow was recognized by Patriarch Gennadius II Scholarius
(see fn. 62).
108 Darrouzès
J. Les
regestes des actes du Patriarcat de Constantinople. Vol. I: Les actes
des patriarches. Fasc. VII: Les regestes de 1410 à 1453. P., 1991.
P. 11 (№ 3302). Only the Slavonic translation of the letter
survives.
109 The
Russian Historical Library. Vol. 6. Col. 359-360.
110 The
Russian State Archive of Ancient Acts, F. 89. Op. 1. Kn. 25. f 360v.
111 Output
data see in fn. 70.
112 As
we saw above, that was not true: Before the appointment of Isidore
the Apostate as Metropolitan of Kiev the Holy Hierarch Jonah had the
status of the “nominated metropolitan”; the Patriarch of
Constantinople pointed out to St. Jonah that he (Jonah) would be
enthroned as metropolitan if something happened to Isidore (a
conversion to Catholicism obviously fitted within this condition);
After St. Jonah had been consecrated the Metropolitan of Russia the
envoy of Patriarch Gennadius named Demetrios arrived in Russia and
set about travelling to the cities under the pretext of raising money
to pay ransom for Orthodox Byzantines who had been allegedly captured
by Ottoman Turks (The Historical Acts… P. 496 (no. 264)).
113 Russia
and the Greek World in the Sixteenth Century: in two vols. /
editor-in-chief S.M. Kashtanov. Moscow, 2004. Vol. 1. P. 339 (no. 3).
114 Fonkich
B.L., “The Charter from Patriarch Joasaph
II of Constantinople and the Synod of the Patriarchate of
Constantinople Confirming the
Title of “Tsar”
for Ivan IV,”
Ibid., 381-388.
115 Ibid.,
268-273 (No. 129).
116 The
Legislative decree was prepared in Moscow not Constantinople and
without convening a synod of bishops of the Patriarchate of
Constantinople; the decree of 1593, as the graphology analysis
reveals, contains a large number of fictitious signatures (which
doesn’t necessarily mean that the decree itself was faked—according
to a study, functionaries of the Patriarchate of Constantinople
deliberately forged signatures to have the decree published as soon
as possible: Fonkich B.L., “From the History of the Establishment
of the Patriarchate in Russia: Synodal Decrees of 1590 and 1593”.
See the same author: Greek
Manuscripts and Documents in Russia in the Fourteenth to Early
Eighteenth Centuries (Moscow,
2003), 377-384). The Council act of 1593 was composed impeccably.
117 The
Patriarch of Antioch who was absent at the Synod delegated his vote
to the Patriarch of Alexandria.
118 Fonkich
B.L., “The Decree of the 1593 Synod of Constantinople on the
Establishment of the Patriarchate of Moscow”, see the same
author: Greek
Documents…,
385-399; here p. 395.
119 “The
Letter of Patriarch Paisios I of Constantinople to Patriarch Nikon of
Moscow”, Khristianskoye
Chtenye (St.
Petersburg, 1881), No. 3-4:d 303-353; No. 5-6: 539–595.
120 See:
“Letter of Patriarch Paisios of Constantinople to Patriarch Nikon
of Moscow,” Christian
Readings (St.
Petersburg, 1881), 3-4: 303-353; 5-6: 539-595.
121 The
first is preserved in the original (РГАДА,
ф.
52. Оп.
2. Ед.
хр.
669), the third and fourth in copies made in the beginning of the
eighteenth century, but verified according to the Slavonic
translation, made directly from the original, subsequently lost in a
fire (cf. V. G. Chentsova, “Synodal Decision of 1686 on the Kiev
Metropolia,” Ancient
Rus’: Questions of Medieval Studies (Moscow,
2017), 2(68):89-110), and the second only in translation.
123 See:
Vetochnikov K. La «concession» de la metropole de Kiev au
patriarche de Moscou en 1686: Analyse canonique // 23rd International
Congress of Byzantine Studies (Belgrade, 22–27 August 2016): Round
Table «Les frontières et les limites du Patriarcat de
Constantinople». Abstracts
(Belgrade, 2016), 37–41.
125 Κριαράς
Ε. Λεξικό της Μεσαιωνικής Ελληνικής
Δημώδους Γραμματείας, 1100–1669. Θεσσαλονίκη,
1969. T. 1. Σ.
81.
126 Ibid., 18:54-55.
The article Vetochnikov. La «concession»… p. 39, further states
that the term προεστώς
“is used in official Church documents only in a monastic context”
(«dans les documents ecclésiastiques officiels, n’est utilisé
que pour le monachisme»). However, “in a monastic context” this
term can mean only and exclusively “abbot” and not “spiritual
father,” whereas in the official document under consideration, the
meaning of “abbot” does not fit the context, which means that the
author of the article mentioned is mistaken, and misleads others.
127 ἐνχείρισε
τῷ
ἁγίῳ
ἀποστόλῳ
καὶ
εὐαγγελιστῇ
Μάρκῳ,
ὑφ’
οὗ
ὁ
ταύτης
προεστὼς
εἰς
τάξιν
καὶ
τιμὴν
ἀνήχθη
πατριάρχου
(Missive of Patriarch Peter of Antioch to Archbishop Aquileia, PG.
120. Col. 757); Ὁ
δέ
γε
μετ’
αὐτὸν
Βασίλειος
βασιλεύσας,
ὅ
τε
τῆς
ἐκκλησίας
προεστὼς
πατριάρχης
τὸν
Νικόλαον
προσκαλοῦνται
(Life of St. Evariste: Vorst Ch., van de. La Vie de S. Evariste,
higoumene a Constantinople // Analecta Bollandiana. Bruxelles; Paris,
1923. T. 41. P. 288–325); etc.
128 Here
it would be useful to note that the term γέρων
is not so simple. In modern Church usage it means, first of all,
“elder,” in the sense of an experienced monk-spiritual father.
But, for example, in the eighteenth century such a title was given to
the pivotal metropolitans of the Patriarchate of Constantinople,
having the right to participate in the election of a patriarch. The
given title has now has the meaning of hierarchical seniority in the
diptychs in the Church of Constantinople.
130 ἡ
Μητρόπολις
αὕτη
Κιόβου
ἔστω
ὑποκειμένη
ὑπὸ
τὸν
Ἁγιώτατον
Πατριαρχικὸν
τῆς
Μοσχοβίας
θρόνον,
καὶ
οἱ
ἐν
αὐτῇ
ἀρχιερατεύοντες,
ὅ
τε
ἤδη
καὶ
οἱ
μετὰ
τοῦτον,
γινώσκωσι
γέροντα
καὶ
προεστῶτα
αὐτὸν
τὸν
κατὰ
καιροὺς
Πατριάρχην
Μοσχοβίας
ὡς
ὑπ’
αὐτοῦ
χειροτονούμενοι,
ἑνὸς
μόνου
φυλαττομένου…(Let
this Kiev Metropolia be subjected to the holy Moscow Patriarchal
Throne, and let its bishops, both present and future, honor the
Patriarch of Moscow, who will be at this time as the senior and head,
inasmuch as they are consecrated by him, saving only one…, from the
Letter of Patriarch Dionysius to the Tsars).
131 In
his Letter to the Tsars, Patriarch Dionysius justifies his request
about the commemoration of the Patriarch of Constantinople by the
Metropolitan of Kiev not in that the Kiev Metropolia remained in his
jurisdiction, but in that from the Ecumenical Patriarch supposedly
“all blessings are distributed to the ends of the world” (ἐξ
αὐτοῦ
πάντα
τὰ
ἀγαθὰ
εἰς
τὰ
τῆς
οἰκουμένης
πέρατα
διαδιδόμενα).
This should probably be understood as a call to preserve the unity of
the Orthodox Church throughout the world, as other interpretations
would suspiciously resemble the Papal dogma.
132 In
the 1667 Moscow edition of the Priest’s
Service Book,
to this is added another audible commemoration of all the Patriarchs
in the Eucharistic prayer, pronounced by the deacon as diptychs (note
that this is not about a hierarchical Liturgy, but the standard
Liturgy text, intended for use in all churches of the Russian
Church), which is reproduced in the 1668 and 1670 editions. Only in
the 1676 edition was the diaconal diptych priestly form of the
Liturgy simplified—in the extended form it was decided to keep it
as belonging exclusively to a hierarchical service, and in the
Synodal period it was excluded from there. However, the commemoration
of the Eastern Patriarchs at the proskimidia was preserved; moreover,
it has been preserved in the Russian Priest’s
Service Book until
the present (!), but in a generalized form: After realizing the fact
that ordinary clergy are not able to regularly update information
about the actual names of the frequently changing (including at the
whim of the Ottoman authorities) patriarchs, the commemoration by
name was replaced with a general formula.
133 Preserved
in manuscripts at the State Historical Museum. Син.
310, нач.
XVI в.;
БАН.
Новг.
918, XVI в.
134 We
can also point to the special right of the Metropolitan of Kiev
according to modern practice: To pronounce the “Great Laudation,”
that is, the series of “many years” before the Liturgical
Trisagion, in the “Patriarchal” redaction, with the proclamation
of the names and titles of the primates of all the Local Churches,
according to the diptychs.
135 The
first such statement was made only in the twentieth century by
Patriarch Gregory VII (Zervuoudakis) of Constantinople, who in the
Tomos of November 13, 1924, on the granting of autocephaly to the
Polish Orthodox Church (that is, to a group of dioceses formerly of
the Russian Church), declaratively announced that the subjection of
the Kiev Metropolia to the Patriarch of Moscow supposedly took place
“not according to the prescriptions of the canonical rules,”
inasmuch as “the full ecclesiastical autonomy of the Kiev
Metropolitan” was not maintained (which in no way follows from the
original documents of 1686!).
136 See:
N. F. Kapterev, Relations
Between Patriarch Dositheus of Jerusalem and the Russian
Government (1669-1707),
(Moscow, 1891).
137 РГИА,
ф. 796. Оп. 56, д. 575. Л. 18.
138 See: The
Complete Collection of the Decrees and Orders of the Orthodox Church
of the Russian Empire: The Reign of Empress Catherine II (St.
Petersburg, 1915), 2:1159-160 (No. 835).