Address of the Primate of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine to Ukrainian society
10 Лютого 2020
Glory to Jesus Christ, dear brothers and sisters! Good
evening! And, this evening is truly “good”! I am touched that so many
people responded and came here to our meeting to speak together about
our Church, its future and Ukraine. About the things that the Christian
love and service to our neighbors inspire us to do.
We are all different in this room. That’s because each human being is
created by God as a unique personality. For this very reason we can
differ in our views and beliefs, our tastes, our interests, our attitude
to politics and many other things. God has endowed us with different
talents that we apply in different areas. But at the same time, we are
all one, as the children of God; we are brothers and sisters to each
other; we are one human family. Also, all of us, regardless of our place
of birth or whether we live here or thousands of kilometers away, are
united by our love for Ukraine, our regard for its present and future.
In our shared history, everything happened as it did. There are pages
of sufferings and triumphs, terrible hardships and martyrdom,
separations and confrontations, but also pages of unity and progress,
glorious accomplishments and heroism. There were sad and joyful moments.
Even if we wanted to, we wouldn’t be able to change what had already happened, we can influence the way we go forward.
And I want to say that we are building a Church that accepts people as
they are, to give everyone an opportunity and resources to be better. A
Church that creates no obstacles on the road to God but invites everyone
to step over the threshold of the house of God. The Church that is
being built upon love.
The Orthodox Church of Ukraine is open to all. And this is our main point of difference.
The Church must be and wants to be where it is needed.
In the center of a prosperous city such as Kyiv and in a poor
neighborhood of a small town. On a bustling street of a metropolis and
in a small rural community. In the Donbass and Galicia, over the Dnipro
river and in Crimea, in Zakarpattia and in Odesa, where I was born, as
well as in Bukovina, where I grew up. Among the rich and the poor. Among
those who dial a phone number by pressing buttons, those who swipe a
glass screen, or even those who rotate a dial. Wherever there is faith
and wherever there are people who identify themselves with the Orthodox
Church of Ukraine.
Today, we are in a situation where sociological surveys show that
there are more people, belonging to the Local Church of Ukraine, than
there are our parishes, which they may join. Most barriers are
artificial ones. They are designed to provoke conflicts and divide
people. We see how skillfully these traps are placed. In our service we cannot respond to force by force, to hatred with hatred. Our
path is not the path of injuria; it is a way of forgiveness and
building trust. It is a long journey that for the Local Church of
Ukraine may take longer than the lifetime of each of us, but it is the
way that our Lord Jesus Christ has showed to us and with which He has
blessed us.
A year ago, we regained our unity and continued our progress. This is
the course, which was started exactly on those Dnipro hills, where we
are now with you, by Saint Volodymyr the Great over a thousand years
ago. The course that was interrupted but was never terminated.
Although I was elected in council as the first Primate of the
universally proclaimed, recognized autocephalous Orthodox Church of
Ukraine, but there were more than one hundred hierarchs of Kyiv sat on
this throne before me. A year ago, our Orthodox Church took its
place in the Diptychs, as an autocephalous one, and we are therefore now
responsible for our works and our decisions. These decisions
go far beyond the temples in terms of their influence and consequences.
The Church is a part of the society backbone of Ukraine. An
autocephalous Ukrainian Church has never been a threat to Ukrainian
society, but the Church, which was losing both its Kyiv centralism and
Ukrainian identity, was being transformed into an instrument of the
imperial state.
Ukraine is compelled to protect itself from aggression.
Hundreds of chaplains from the Orthodox Church of Ukraine serve among
the Ukrainian military, defending Ukraine. Our priests are where there
is pain, where there is challenge, where there is a need for charity or
mercy. They share anxious and joyful moments with society. They should
be integrated into peoples’ lives and understand them in all their
diversity.
How to start a happy and strong family, find your vocation and build a
career, deal with an apartment building co-owners association, what to
do with the land market, to keep a family budget, pay taxes, serve in
the army, prepare for an independent external evaluation (ZNO), travel
for work as migrant laborer and return home? These are all issues that
concern Ukrainians. The Church cannot and should not substitute their
decisions and cannot be an expert in every question. But the Church can and should always be close by, as a counselor, as a friend, as a mentor, and as a shepherd.
Our mission is to spiritually educate a person, to
purify a human soul through the Sacraments, to assist in embodying the
Law of God in a person’s own life. Not through fear, by order, or by
force, but by the enhanced spiritual experience and knowledge persons
and society can find right answers to the questions of concern.
In the history of Ukraine, it is difficult to find an institution
more attuned to the Ukrainian people than the autocephalous Ukrainian
Church. And as a loving mother, it opens its arms to all its children.
However, the Church is relevant not only in the context of
tradition. The Church has been and can be the meeting point for
geographies, times and worlds. The Orthodox Church of Ukraine
provides an opportunity to interact with brothers from other Orthodox
Churches, because we are a local part of the One Church of Christ. The
word “Eucharist” is translated from the Greek “thanksgiving,” defining
the principles of common worship, of communion among the Churches in
unity of faith and sacraments.
Today, we express our gratitude first to our Mother Church of
Constantinople, to the second in honor Alexandrian Patriarchate, to the
Church of Greece, to the Mount Athos monasteries for this unity and
support. Within the past year, the OCU believers have made many
pilgrimage trips.
This is the renewal of the connections which, in the times of the
Holy Princes Volodymyr the Great and Yaroslav the Wise, revealed to our
ancestors the treasures of the spiritual and material culture of the
Greco-Roman world. The connections that continued through fraternal
schools, through the Academies, founded by the saint Prince Kostiantyn
of Ostroh and Metropolitan Petro Mohyla.
The church was the backbone of international relations long before the word “globalization” was coined.
The recognition of OCU is today an ongoing process, which was fruitful
last year – both before and after the political elections, – and is in
progress now. It is a spiritual process and not a political one,
although it also has a political dimension for Ukraine, asserting its
identity.
It is just the beginning. Last autumn I visited the United States of
America to receive the Patriarch Athenagoras Human Rights Award. The
media, professional and political interest which the Orthodox Church of
Ukraine was welcomed with in the United States of America, show an
understanding of the importance of our Church’s role in the lives of
Ukrainians, and therefore for the future of Ukraine and of Europe.
In Washington, and then again a few days ago in Kyiv, we met with the
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, and spoke about the rights of those
who are under the oppression of occupation in Crimea and the Donbas,
about the rights of all people, not just those who would worship in our
churches. We can call it other open doors of the Church, including for
the complex processes of peace-making, for the release of and prisoners
of war from captivity, for an end to occupation and for reintegration.
The Orthodox Church of Ukraine is a Church, which
goes through all the challenges together with its nation, the Church,
which at the moment when our country is in trouble, should be and IS
with its people. And a high level of confidence in the Church also means a high level of responsibility. The
Church shares the dream of every Ukrainian and of previous generations –
to see Ukraine be a place where all may enjoy a decent and happy life.
The path to this dream lies through our daily work, through, as
Winston Churchill put it, our “blood, labor, tears and sweat.” For
although he said this about the war with an external enemy 80 years ago,
such a vision is always relevant to the Church, since our struggle against evil in ourselves and in the world around us is our daily work.
The Church should ask questions: how does the content of our souls affect the way we work with our hands or heads? How
honest and conscientious are we? How productive are we? Can we do
better? Are we capable of more? Can we reach the heights not by heroic
effort but by planned daily work? The Church has an influence on how behavior culture is shaped in all spheres of life and must be more active in this area.
After many decades and even centuries of despair, looting, and rights
unprotected, we should start to learn to investing the long term, be
more strategic, to do better work, and to plan for eventual results. Our doors are open also for difficult discussions about
ourselves, about how to overcome the inertia of suffering, acceptance
of pain, long-standing trauma, and the expectation of betrayal.
One of the most difficult discourses that we have now and that is
ahead of us is the discourse about family values. I hear many appeals
for the protection of family values and they resonate in my heart. At
the same time, we have to understand that values are not created as a
directive and are not protected only by regulation. They should be
cultivated and lived through as an experience. If a person was abused in
the family, it will be difficult to talk to him/her only about making
strengthening of the family a priority value.
We need to understand how to protect love and dignity inside a family.
How not to neglect the sacrament of marriage, how to help families
strengthen the foundation of their safety. Demographic scientists alert
us that the crisis of low birth rates and high mortality in Ukraine has
become a challenge for the Ukrainian state itself. There are no
longer 52 million of us. Exact number cannot be known, but we must end
the imperial Russian and Soviet heritage of treating human life as an
expendable material.
Every life is a gift of God and its appearance and growth in peace and grace is possible when there is love. A
strong family also means a respect for one another, continuous concern
about the well-being of each another, for emotional health, physical
state, and freedom from addictions and abuse. We should and must
talk about the family in the context of a modern society. Then, it will
become clear where migration is truly for wotk, and where it is an
attempt to escape from oneself. What can we do so that children
didn’t grow up without parental care? What can we do so that parents
were not afraid to have children? So that they were not afraid to lose
themselves in household worries, not afraid they will lose the quality
of life or afraid of responsibility and not only in family matters?
Having its own voice and opinion, the Church is open for a dialogue and exchange of views.
The dreams of many Ukrainians for rapid prosperity are often a
reaction to the fear of poverty. Within recent decades millions of
Ukrainians have, certainly, improved their living conditions, although
by many indicators we are still far behind the most developed nations of
the world. Communal apartments, the lack of and inaccessibility of
basic household goods, the coequality in poverty, in which millions of
Ukrainians lived only two or three generations ago, has now pass into
history, just as has hand laundering or unavailability of radios,
televisions or telephones. Today most Ukrainians wear shoes and clothes
which the previous generations could only dream of, eat foods, which
their ancestors never tasted.
Ukrainians tell sociologists that they are becoming wealthier, but also they believe their condition is socially vulnerable.
We must start speaking about how to accept changes that are taking
place inside and around us; how to stop mindlessly accumulating; how not
to become dependent on status attributes; how to be more self-sufficient and be able to feel joy from simple things; how not to despise love by choosing bright packaging over substance.
Our Church is open for dialogue with wounded souls, so that with the
help of God, every person could find themselves, nurture the good, and
fight with the bad.
The flipside of vulnerability is striving to protect oneself through status and the aspiration to gain power through any means necessary is often a reaction to vulnerability. Then
power is not perceived as taught by the Lord, but meaning that it
becomes a tool of domination rather than service. And, this is not
confined to some individual cases, but it’s a generalized challenge
which affects the whole complexity of relations between a state and its
citizens. Power as domination, despotism, instead of leadership,
have no hope of a different reaction from the people than the
revolutionary resistance, the Maidan. Our society today is in a state in
which it, when it cannot afford new shocks, new victims, and new
forceful confrontations without fatal consequences, even if they result
from good intentions.
It is the high time to that we recast leadership as service, as a means for contributing to a common goal.
What can we do to make serving easier for those who seek to serve? What
can we do to protect leadership without disrespecting those who cannot
or do not wish to lead? How do we remain alert to outrage and prevent it
from becoming a threat? Here, too, Church is open for dialogue and for
seeking the best answers.
These are some of the challenges we face, but others will follow.
What will happen with the climate and environment? How can we conserve
energy? How can we learn not to hurt the environment, how to preserve
resources? That is, how can we fulfill our obligation given to us by the
Creator to be stewards of nature, taking advantage of its riches, while
not devastating or destroying it? How should we think about
sustainability, look ahead into the years ahead, and consider our next
steps? These are common concerns of young people who are in fear that
they will have to deal with the consequences of decisions made by
previous generations.
Ukraine with its picturesque four seasons, plentiful land, clean water, forests and steppes is a little paradise compared to many countries in the world. What
should we do not to ruin it all, not to lose fertility, beauty and
diversity? What should we do not to lose your land but let the land
deliver? How smaller communities will survive in a more urbanized
environment?
The Church is not an expert in ecology or economics, and does not
wish to become one. But, the Church sees the importance of those issues,
their moral dimension, which is within its area of responsibility, and
therefore it is open to being a meeting place for experts,
entrepreneurs, farmers, and local citizens, who seek answers.
These and other problems concern anyone who reflects about how they affect our lives.
What is the role of the Church in solving these problems?
Attempts to politicize or use the Church to accomplish some ephemeral
tasks, trying only to take advantage of the Church’s authority and
capabilities, while not heading the Church or its teachings, narrow
religious life to something private, and leave society isolated and in
peril.
We need a different Church, a Church, which plays an
important and unique role in the life of society, while remaining a
spiritual rather than a political power, beyond ideological constraints,
free from political fights or business interests. It is a Church with an active parish life, these being both the basic element and the public face of the life of the Church.
This is the Church, which is a place of sincere prayer. It is a
Church with monasteries, with modern Orthodox educational institutions
and foundations, which strengthen the Church and help it be a part of a
public dialogue. This is the Church, where honest and frank
conversations take place. It is the Church, which elevates itself and
the world around it. It is the Local Church that loves and teaches to
love its homeland. It is the Church that both preaches love in words and
exemplifies love in its real life.
It is the Church, which has a voice and calls out, “Be ye therefore
merciful, as your Father also is merciful” (Luke 6:36), “be then
complete in righteousness, even as your Father in heaven is complete”
(Matt. 5:48). It is not by our own effort that we can accomplish this,
but, as the Holy Scripture says, “The things which are impossible with
men are possible with God” (Luke 18:27).
To Him be glory for ever and ever!