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{{Short description|Church in Ukraine under disputed jurisdiction of Russian Orthodox church}} | |||
{{other uses|Ukrainian Orthodox Church (disambiguation)}} | |||
{{About-distinguish|a disputed branch of the ] in Ukraine|Orthodox Church of Ukraine}} | |||
{{main list|Ukrainian Orthodox Church (disambiguation)}} | |||
{{Infobox Christian denomination | {{Infobox Christian denomination | ||
| icon = | | icon = | ||
| icon_width = | | icon_width = | ||
| icon_alt = | | icon_alt = | ||
| name = Ukrainian Orthodox Church | | name = Ukrainian Orthodox Church<br /><small>] (disputed)</small> | ||
| image = |
| image = Logo of the UOC (Moscow Patriarchate).svg | ||
| imagewidth = | | imagewidth = 120px | ||
| alt = | | alt = | ||
| caption = |
| caption = Emblem | ||
| abbreviation = | | abbreviation = | ||
| type = | | type = ] | ||
| main_classification = | | main_classification = | ||
| orientation = | | orientation = ] | ||
| scripture = | | scripture = | ||
| theology = | | theology = | ||
Line 18: | Line 20: | ||
| governance = | | governance = | ||
| structure = | | structure = | ||
| leader_title = |
| leader_title = Primate | ||
| leader_name = ] | | leader_name = Metropolitan ] | ||
| leader_title1 = |
| leader_title1 = Bishops | ||
| leader_name1 = 114<ref name="report 2022">{{Cite web|url=https://news.church.ua/2022/12/24/zvit-keruyuchogo-spravami-ukrajinskoji-pravoslavnoji-cerkvi-za-2022-rik/ |title=Звіт Керуючого справами Української Православної Церкви за 2022 рік |publisher=Ukrainian Orthodox Church |date=24 December 2022 |access-date=24 December 2022}}</ref> (53 governing) | |||
| leader_name1 = Metropolitan ] | |||
| |
| fellowships_type = Clerics | ||
| fellowships = 12,551 <small>(2022)</small><ref name="report 2022"/> | |||
| leader_name2 = ] | |||
| leader_title3 = Bishops | |||
| leader_name3 = 97<ref name="report 2018">http://spzh.news/en/news/58594-v-upc-opublikovali-statistiku-za-2018-god-kolichestvo-prihodov-uvelichilosy</ref> (53 governing) | |||
| fellowships_type = Priests | |||
| fellowships = 12,409<ref name="report 2018"/> | |||
| fellowships_type1 = Nuns | | fellowships_type1 = Nuns | ||
| fellowships1 = 2,727 | | fellowships1 = 2,727{{citation needed|date=November 2022}} | ||
| division_type = Parishes | | division_type = Parishes | ||
| division = 8,097 <small>(May 2024)</small><ref name="mpUopendatabot301372">{{cite news |title=There are still more than 8,000 churches in the Moscow Patriarchate in Ukraine: where are the most|url=https://life.pravda.com.ua/society/v-ukrajini-zalishayetsya-8-tisyach-cerkov-upc-mp-opendatabot-301372/|access-date=3 May 2024|work=]|date=3 May 2024|language=Ukrainian}}</ref> | |||
| division = 12,092<ref name="report 2018"/> | |||
| division_type1 = Monastics | | division_type1 = Monastics | ||
| division1 = 4,620 <small>(2022)</small><ref name="stat2022"></ref> | |||
| division1 = 4,412 | |||
| division_type2 = Monasteries | | division_type2 = Monasteries | ||
| division2 = |
| division2 = 161 <small>(2022)</small><ref name="stat2022"/> | ||
| division_type3 = | | division_type3 = | ||
| division3 = | | division3 = | ||
Line 41: | Line 39: | ||
| area = | | area = | ||
| language = ], ], ] | | language = ], ], ] | ||
| liturgy = | | liturgy = ] | ||
| headquarters = | |||
| headquarters = ]</small><br>Cathedral of the Resurrection of Christ<ref></ref> <small>''(under construction since 2007)''</small> | |||
| territory = Ukraine | | territory = Ukraine | ||
| possessions = | | possessions = | ||
| origin_link = | | origin_link = | ||
| founder = | | founder = | ||
| founded_date = 1990 <small> |
| founded_date = 988 <small>establishment of the ]</small><br>1990 <small>(self-rule within the ])</small> | ||
| founded_place = | | founded_place = | ||
| independence = |
| independence = | ||
| reunion = | | reunion = | ||
| recognition = 27 May 2022{{efn|On 27 May 2022 the church claimed it had amended its status to "testify to the full independence and autonomy of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church".<ref name="Ukrainian Orthodox Church-2022"/><ref name="yevtushenkoUOCMP"/><ref name="32207628ROC"/> Recognized by the Patriarchate of Constantinople as part of the ].<ref name="Yearbookpp. 1007-1026">Yearbook of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, Year 2022, pp. 1007-1026</ref>}}<br>24 March 2023{{efn|Recognized by Patriarch ] as separate from the Russian Orthodox Church on 24 March 2023.<ref name="Georgialetter">{{cite web |title=Georgian Patriarch Ilia II addressed the Patriarch of Constantinople in relation to the situation around the UOC |url=https://news.church.ua/2023/03/27/georgian-patriarch-ilia-ii-addressed-the-patriarch-of-constantinople-in-relation-to-the-situation-around-the-uoc/?lang=en |website=Ukrainian Orthodox Church | date=27 March 2023 |access-date=22 May 2023}}</ref>}} | |||
| recognition = Recognized by majority of canonical Orthodox Churches as Autonomous Church <small>''(no longer recognised as Autonomous Church by the ], ], and ])''</small><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.patriarchate.org/-/communiq-1|title=Announcement of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople|publisher=|accessdate=12 October 2018}}</ref><ref>https://www.thenationalherald.com/264417/hierarchy-of-the-church-of-greece-elects-three-new-metropolitans/</ref><ref>https://www.unian.info/society/10718613-russian-propaganda-ineffective-epifaniy-on-church-of-greece-recognizing-ukraine-s-new-church.html</ref> | |||
| separated_from = | | separated_from = | ||
| branched_from = | | branched_from = | ||
| merger = | | merger = | ||
| absorbed = | | absorbed = | ||
| separations = |
| separations = | ||
| merged_into = | |||
| defunct = | | defunct = | ||
| congregations_type = | | congregations_type = | ||
| congregations = | | congregations = | ||
| members = 6% of the Ukrainian Orthodox population{{efn|March 2022, study by Info Sapiens; 4% of the entire population of Ukraine.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://sapiens.com.ua/publications/socpol-research/215/Release_IS_war_fin_6_04_church_language_ENG.pdf|title=73% of parishioners of the UOC-Moscow Patriarchate no longer identify with this church|publisher=sapiens.com.ua|access-date=2022-04-30}}</ref>}} | |||
| members = 15.2% of the Ukrainian Orthodox population (January 2019, study by ])<ref>http://socis.kiev.ua/ua/2019-01/</ref><br>17.4% of religious population (by ], January 2015)<ref name="Ukrainians shun Moscow Patriarchate as Russia’s war intensifies in Donbas">{{cite web|url=http://www.kyivpost.com/content/ukraine/ukrainians-shun-moscow-patriarchate-as-russias-war-intensifies-in-donbas-378168.html|title=Ukrainians shun Moscow Patriarchate as Russia’s war intensifies in Donbas - Jan. 23, 2015|date=23 January 2015|publisher=}}</ref><br>20.85% of religious population (by ] and Kucheriv democratic initiatives fund, December 2014 – January 2015)<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150417011320/http://dif.org.ua/ua/publications/press-relizy/bilshist-naselgo-patriarhatu.htm |date=2015-04-17 }}.</ref> | |||
| ministers_type = | | ministers_type = | ||
| ministers = | | ministers = | ||
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| other_names = | | other_names = | ||
| publications = | | publications = | ||
| website = |
| website = {{URL|https://church.ua}} <br> | ||
{{URL|https://uoc-news.church/}} | |||
| slogan = | | slogan = | ||
| logo = | | logo = | ||
| footnotes = | | footnotes = | ||
}} | }} | ||
{{Eastern Orthodox sidebar}} | |||
], a mother cathedral of the church <small>(since 1992)</small>]] | |||
The '''Ukrainian Orthodox Church''' ('''UOC'''),{{efn| {{langx|uk|Українська православна церква, УПЦ|Ukrainska pravoslavna tserkva, UPTs}}; {{langx|ru|Украинская православная церковь, УПЦ|Ukrainskaya pravoslavnaya tserkov', UPTs}} }} commonly referred to by the ] '''Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate''' ('''UOC-MP'''),{{efn|{{langx|ru|Украинская православная церковь Московского патриархата, УПЦ-МП|Ukrainskaya pravoslavnaya tserkov' Moskovskovo patriarkhata, UPTs-MP}}}} is an ] church in ]. | |||
], former mother cathedral of the church <small>(1944-1992)</small>]] | |||
] in Kharkiv, a former mother cathedral of the church <small>(1929-1934)</small>]] | |||
] - St. George Church]] | |||
The Ukrainian Orthodox Church was officially formed in 1990 in place of the Ukrainian Exarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC), under the leadership of Metropolitan ], as the Ukrainian branch of the ].<ref name="Lavrapolitika89496">{{cite web|title=Holy War: The Fight for Ukraine's Churches and Monasteries|url=https://carnegieendowment.org/politika/89496|date=11 April 2023|access-date=27 April 2023|website=]|language=English}}</ref><ref name="Yearbookpp. 1007-1026"/> | |||
The '''Ukrainian Orthodox Church''' ('''UOC'''; {{lang-uk|Українська Православна Церква|Ukrayinsʹka Pravoslavna Tserkva}}; {{lang-ru|Украинская Православная Церковь|Ukrainskaya Pravoslavnaya Tserkov'}}), commonly referred to as the '''Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate''' ('''UOC-MP''', {{lang-ru|Украинская православная церковь Московского патриархата, УПЦ-МП}}) is a member of the ]. | |||
On 27 May 2022, following a church-wide council in Kyiv, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church announced its full independence and autonomy from the Moscow Patriarchate. The council made this decision in protest of the February ], and particularly in response to ] ]'s support for the invasion.<ref name="Ukrainian Orthodox Church-2022"/> The UOC (did not and) has never declared full ] from the Russian Orthodox Church.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Chervonenko |first1=Vitaly |date=19 October 2023 |title=Рада дала старт забороні УПЦ МП. Як і коли це може запрацювати |url=https://www.bbc.com/ukrainian/news-65747898 |access-date=23 December 2023 |newspaper=BBC News Україна |agency=BBC, Ukrainian service}}</ref> | |||
It is one of ] ] ecclesiastical bodies in modern ]. It is a constituent part of the ] (ROC); however, the ], the senior-most of all the Orthodox churches and the ] for the ], disputes the legality of the ROC's ecclesiastical jurisdiction over Ukraine, which in the modern era dates back to 1686.<ref> Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the USA</ref><ref> orthodoxyindialogue.com, 2 July 2018.</ref><ref> (The Homily by Patriarch ] after the memorial service for the late Metropolitan of Perge, Evangelos) The official website of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, 2 July 2018.</ref> The current statutes of the ROC define it as a "self-governing with the rights of wide autonomy".<ref>{{cite web|url= http://www.patriarchia.ru/db/text/5082273.html|title= Глава X. Украинская Православная Церковь / Официальные документы / Патриархия.ru|website= Патриархия.ru}}</ref> {{As of | 2014}} the status of the UOC-MP within the Moscow Patriarchate meant that it enjoyed full administrative independence from the ROC's ], whereas the ] was the most senior<ref name="Synod"> // ЖУРНАЛ № 1: «2. Включить в состав Священного Синода на правах постоянного члена митрополита Черновицкого и Буковинского Онуфрия, <…> с определением по протокольному старшинству места, занимаемого Блаженнейшим митрополитом Киевским и всея Украины — первым среди архиереев Русской Православной Церкви.»</ref> permanent member of the ROC's Holy Synod and thus had a say in its decision-making in respect of the rest of the ROC, including its administration in the ]. | |||
The UOC is the ] ] ecclesiastical body in modern ], alongside the ] (OCU). Since the ] on 15 December 2018 which formed the OCU, the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople has disputed the claims by the Moscow Patriarchate of its ecclesiastical jurisdiction over the territory of Ukraine.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://news.church.ua/2018/12/07/zhurnali-zasidannya-svyashhennogo-sinodu-ukrajinskoji-pravoslavnoji-cerkvi-vid-7-grudnya-2018-roku/|title=Журнали засідання Священного Синоду Української Православної Церкви від 7 грудня 2018 року|date=7 December 2018 }}</ref><ref> Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the USA</ref><ref> orthodoxyindialogue.com, 2 July 2018.</ref><ref> (The Homily by Patriarch ] after the memorial service for the late Metropolitan of Perge, Evangelos) The official website of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, 2 July 2018.</ref> | |||
Russia's ] of ] in 2014 notwithstanding, the UOC-MP's ] in Crimea continue under the administration of the UOC-MP.<ref name="religy10mar2015krim"> | |||
{{ru icon}} ], 10 March 2015.<br>{{ru icon}} , ] (18 August 2014) | |||
The Russian Orthodox Church does not currently recognize a change in their relationship to the UOC.<ref name="Lavrapolitika88811"/><ref name="32207628ROC"/><ref name="3461927calendarROC"/> However, in June 2023 ROC hierarch ] of ], scorned the UOC's decision to separate from the Moscow Patriarchate, saying, "When the opportunity presented itself to get out from under the wing of Moscow, they did it," and declared that the ROC would absorb the UOC's dioceses in ].<ref name="LeonidInterview">{{cite web |title=ROC hierarch: As we conquer Ukraine, we will take away UOC eparchies |url=https://spzh.news/en/news/74431-roc-hierarch-as-we-conquer-ukraine-we-will-take-away-uoc-eparchies |website=Union of Orthodox Journalists |language=English |access-date=23 June 2023}}</ref> | |||
</ref> | |||
On 20 August 2024, the ] banned the Russian Orthodox Church by adopting the '']''. Ukrainian religious organizations affiliated with the ROC will have nine months to break off its relations with the Patriarchate of Moscow in accordance with the ]. | |||
==Name== | ==Name== | ||
The Ukrainian Orthodox Church |
The Ukrainian Orthodox Church insists on its name being just the ''Ukrainian Orthodox Church'',<ref name="uocinterview">{{cite web|url=http://archiv.orthodox.org.ua/page-1690.html|title=Блаженніший Митрополит Володимир: "Помісна Церква в Україні вже існує"|last=Церковь|first=Українська Православна Церква / Ukrainian Orthodox Church / Украинская Православная|website=archiv.orthodox.org.ua|access-date=2007-08-16|archive-date=2011-04-30|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110430090044/http://archiv.orthodox.org.ua/page-1690.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> stating that it is the sole canonical body of Orthodox Christians in the country,<ref name="uocinterview" /> a Ukrainian "local church" ({{langx|uk|Помісна Церква}}). The church rejects being labeled "Russian" or "Moscow."<ref name="SynodLettertoZelenskyy">{{cite web|title=Open address of the Holy Synod of the UOC to President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelenskyi |url=https://news.church.ua/2022/12/21/open-address-of-the-holy-synod-of-the-uoc-to-president-of-ukraine-volodymyr-zelenskyi/?lang=en|date=20 December 2022|access-date=26 April 2022|website=Ukrainian Orthodox Church|language=English}}</ref> | ||
It is also the name that it is registered |
It is also the name that it is registered with the State Committee of Religious Affairs in Ukraine.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.derzhkomrelig.gov.ua/info_zvit_2003.html|title=On the state and tendencies of expansion of the religious situation in government-church relations in Ukraine|work=State Committee of Ukraine in Religious Affairs|language=uk|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041204115821/http://www.derzhkomrelig.gov.ua/info_zvit_2003.html|archive-date=2004-12-04|url-status=dead|access-date=2008-01-12}}</ref> | ||
It is often referred to |
It is often referred to as the ''Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)'' or ''UOC (MP)''<ref>{{multiref2|{{cite book|title=Politics and Society in Ukraine|isbn=9780813335384 <!-- requires url, but for the fans: |access-date=2008-10-24--> |last1=d'Anieri|first1=Paul J.|last2=Kravchuk|first2=Robert S.|author2-link=Paul J. Kravchuk|last3=Kuzio|first3=Taras|date=22 October 1999|publisher=Avalon|page=75}}|{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=NEiUVsa7Gx8C&q=Ukrainian+Orthodox+Church+MP&pg=PA85|title=Post-Soviet Political Order|isbn=9780415170697|access-date=2008-10-24|last1=Rubin|first1=Barnett R.|last2=Snyder|first2=Jack L.|year=1998|page=85|publisher=Routledge }}|{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2cP0wc_E6yEC&q=Ukrainian+Orthodox+Church+MP&pg=PA370|title=The Orthodox Church in the History of Russia|page=370|isbn=9780881411799|access-date=2008-10-24|last1=Pospielovsky|first1=Dimitry|date=January 1998|publisher=St. Vladimir's Seminary Press }}}}</ref> in order to distinguish between the two rival churches contesting the name of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church. | ||
Following the creation of the ], on December |
Following the creation of the ], on 20 December 2018, the ] voted to force the UOC-MP to rename itself in its mandatory state registration, its new name must have "the full name of the church to which it is subordinated".<ref name="unian.info">, ] (20 December 2018)</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://religionpravda.com.ua/2018/12/20/%d0%b2%d0%b5%d1%80%d1%85%d0%be%d0%b2%d0%bd%d0%b0-%d1%80%d0%b0%d0%b4%d0%b0-%d0%bf%d0%b5%d1%80%d0%b5%d0%b9%d0%bc%d0%b5%d0%bd%d1%83%d0%b2%d0%b0%d0%bb%d0%b0-%d1%83%d0%bf%d1%86-%d0%bc%d0%bf-%d0%b2-%d1%80/|script-title=uk:Верховна Рада перейменувала УПЦ МП на РПЦ в Україні|date=2018-12-20|website=Релігійна правда|language=uk|access-date=2018-12-20|archive-date=2019-09-14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190914032121/http://religionpravda.com.ua/2018/12/20/%D0%B2%D0%B5%D1%80%D1%85%D0%BE%D0%B2%D0%BD%D0%B0-%D1%80%D0%B0%D0%B4%D0%B0-%D0%BF%D0%B5%D1%80%D0%B5%D0%B9%D0%BC%D0%B5%D0%BD%D1%83%D0%B2%D0%B0%D0%BB%D0%B0-%D1%83%D0%BF%D1%86-%D0%BC%D0%BF-%D0%B2-%D1%80/|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.kyivpost.com/ukraine-politics/ukraine-passes-law-forcing-moscow-backed-church-to-identify-as-russian-fight-erupts-in-parliament.html|title=Ukraine passes law forcing Moscow-backed church to identify as Russian; fight erupts in parliament | KyivPost - Ukraine's Global Voice|date=20 December 2018}}</ref> This was protested by UOC-MP adherents.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://religionpravda.com.ua/2018/12/20/%d1%83%d0%bf%d1%86-%d0%bc%d0%bf-%d0%bf%d1%96%d0%b4-%d1%80%d0%b0%d0%b4%d0%be%d1%8e-%d0%b2%d0%bb%d0%b0%d1%88%d1%82%d1%83%d0%b2%d0%b0%d0%bb%d0%b0-%d0%b0%d0%ba%d1%86%d1%96%d1%8e-%d0%bf%d1%80%d0%be%d1%82/|script-title=uk:УПЦ МП під Радою влаштувала акцію проти перейменування церкви на РПЦ|date=2018-12-20|website=Релігійна правда|language=uk|access-date=2018-12-20|archive-date=2020-08-14|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200814115239/http://religionpravda.com.ua/2018/12/20/%D1%83%D0%BF%D1%86-%D0%BC%D0%BF-%D0%BF%D1%96%D0%B4-%D1%80%D0%B0%D0%B4%D0%BE%D1%8E-%D0%B2%D0%BB%D0%B0%D1%88%D1%82%D1%83%D0%B2%D0%B0%D0%BB%D0%B0-%D0%B0%D0%BA%D1%86%D1%96%D1%8E-%D0%BF%D1%80%D0%BE%D1%82/|url-status=dead}}</ref> On 11 December 2019 the ] allowed the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC) to retain its name.<ref name="10796912-supreme-court-of-ukraine"/> The UOC had argued that their governing center is in Ukraine's capital, ], not in ]'s capital, ], and therefore it should not be renamed.<ref name="10796912-supreme-court-of-ukraine"/> | ||
On 27 December 2022 the ] ordered the UOC to change its name and indicate its affiliation with Russia.<ref name="mpUopendatabot301372"/><ref name="7382561UCConc">{{cite news |title=The Constitutional Court recognized the constitutional law, which obliges the UOC of the MP to indicate affiliation to Russia|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/news/2022/12/27/7382561/|access-date=3 May 2024|work=]|date=27 December 2022|language=Ukrainian|author=Valentina Romanenko}}</ref> It took into account the verdict of the ] in the case "Ilin and others against Ukraine" that stated ] could force "religious organization, wishing to be registered, to take a name which makes it impossible to mislead the faithful and society as a whole and which makes it possible to distinguish it from existing organizations."<ref name="7382561UCConc"/> | |||
In May 2024 of the 8,097 UOC parishes 22 of them directly indicated their affiliation in their name.<ref name="mpUopendatabot301372"/> | |||
==Relationship with the Russian Orthodox Church== | |||
Prior to the ] the church stated that it was one of the "self-governing" churches under the jurisdiction of the Moscow Patriarchate, i.e. the ]. (In the terminology of the current Statute of the ROC, a "self-governing Church" is distinguished from an "]").<ref name="chapter10">{{cite web|url= http://www.patriarchia.ru/db/text/5082273.html|title= Глава X. Украинская Православная Церковь|website= patriarchia.ru|language=Russian}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=XII. Самоуправляемые Церкви |url=https://mospat.ru/ru/documents/ustav/xii/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200809172327/https://mospat.ru/ru/documents/ustav/xii/ |archive-date=2020-08-09 |access-date=2023-01-06|language=Russian}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=XI. Автономные Церкви |url=https://mospat.ru/ru/documents/ustav/xi/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200809173643/https://mospat.ru/ru/documents/ustav/xi/ |archive-date=2020-08-09 |website=mospat.ru|language=Russian}}</ref> | |||
The UOC claims since May 2022 that 'any provisions that at least somehow hinted at or indicated the connection with ] were excluded'; since then it is a matter of dispute as to whether the Church is under the ] of the Russian Orthodox Church.<ref name="Lavrapolitika88811">{{cite web|title=Can the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Survive the War With Russia?|url=https://carnegieendowment.org/politika/88811|date=17 January 2023|access-date=31 March 2023|website=]|language=English}}</ref> Despite claims that the church did not publish its new statute,<ref name="yevtushenkoUOCMP"/> the new statute is publicly available on government,<ref name="DESS-Statute">{{cite web |title=Statute UOC |url=https://dess.gov.ua/wp-content/uploads/2022/12/1.2-Statut-UPTS.pdf |website=State Service of Ukraine for Ethnic Affairs and Freedom of Conscience |access-date=29 November 2023}}</ref> news,<ref name="RISU-Statute">{{cite web |title=Statute on the governance of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (with additions and amendments) dated 27.05.2022 |url=https://risu.ua/statut-pro-upravlinnya-ukrayinskoyi-pravoslavnoyi-cerkvi-z-dopovnennyami-i-zminami-vid-27052022_n130894 |website=Religious Information Service of Ukraine |access-date=29 November 2023}}</ref> and official church<ref name="KhmelnytskyUOC-Statute">{{cite web |title=Statute on the governance of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Khmelnytskyi Diocese of the UOC) |url=https://www.eparhia.khmelnitskiy.ua/statut-upcz/ |website=Diocese of Khmelnytskyi (UOC) |access-date=29 November 2023}}</ref> websites. | |||
The ROC defines the UOC-MP as a "self-governing church with rights of wide autonomy".<ref name="chapter10" /> It has also ignored all UOC-MP's declarations of it not being connected with it anymore and continues to include UOC-MP clerics in various commissions or working groups.<ref name="Lavrapolitika88811"/><ref name="32207628ROC">{{Cite news |website=] |date=2023-01-04 |url=https://www.radiosvoboda.org/a/rpts-kyrylo-putin-ukrayina-uptsmp-vyibr/32207628.html|language=Ukrainian|author=Dmytro Horevo |title=The Russian Orthodox Church does not recognize the independence of Ukraine or the independence of the UOC|access-date=2023-01-06}}<br>{{Cite news |website=Official website of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)|date=2022-12-31 |url=https://news.church.ua/2022/12/31/the-charter-of-the-uoc-does-not-contain-any-provisions-that-would-even-hint-at-the-connection-with-moscow-the-head-of-the-legal-department/?lang=en|language=en |title=The Charter of the UOC does not contain any provisions that could even hint at the connection with Moscow — the Head of the Legal Department|access-date=2023-01-06}}<br>{{Cite news |website=Official website of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)|date=2022-12-31 |title=The UOC priest protested his inclusion in the ROC Publishing Council|language=Ukrainian|url=https://news.church.ua/2022/12/31/svyashhennik-upc-visloviv-protest-cherez-jogo-vklyuchennya-vidavnichoji-radi-rpc/|access-date=2023-01-06}}</ref> | |||
According to the Russian Orthodox Church, the ] is the most senior<ref name="Synod"> // ЖУРНАЛ № 1: «2. Включить в состав Священного Синода на правах постоянного члена митрополита Черновицкого и Буковинского Онуфрия, <…> с определением по протокольному старшинству места, занимаемого Блаженнейшим митрополитом Киевским и всея Украины — первым среди архиереев Русской Православной Церкви.»</ref> permanent member of the ROC's ] and thus has a say in its decision-making in respect of the rest of the ROC throughout the world. | |||
Despite the ''de facto'' ] in 2014, the ] of the UOC in ] have continued to be administered by the UOC.<ref name="religy10mar2015krim"> | |||
{{in lang|ru}} ], 10 March 2015.<br>{{in lang|ru}} ] (18 August 2014)</ref> In June 2022 the ] claimed to transfer Crimea from the Ukrainian Orthodox Church to the Moscow Patriarchate.<ref name="patriarchiaru5934581">{{cite web | url=http://www.patriarchia.ru/db/text/5934581.html | title=Симферопольская, Джанкойская и Феодосийская епархии приняты в подчинение Патриарха и Синода Русской Православной Церкви и вошли в состав учрежденной Крымской митрополии / Новости / Патриархия.ru }}</ref> The UOC continues to list the Crimean eparchies as its own, and has not recognized any change to its territorial boundaries based on decisions taken by the ROC.<ref name="church.ua">{{in lang|uk}} (10 November 2022)</ref> On 27 March 2023, Archbishop Viktor (Kotsaba) said that the territories of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church include the Crimea and Donbas areas of Ukraine.<ref name="Kotsaba">{{cite AV media | people =Archbishop Viktor (Kotsaba) | date= 27 March 2023 | title =Millions of Ukrainians identify themselves as members of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church. | trans-title = | type = | language =English | url =https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6oMRG8W8a4s | access-date =9 April 2023 | format = | time = | location = | publisher =YouTube | id = | isbn = | oclc = | quote = }}</ref> | |||
On 21 June 2023, ] of ], a hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church, decried the Ukrainian Orthodox Church's decision to separate from the Moscow Patriarchate and declared that the Russian Orthodox Church would absorb UOC dioceses in ].<ref name="LeonidInterview"/> | |||
In a Patriarchal calendar for 2024 released by the Russian Orthodox Church in December 2023 all the then bishops of the (designated itself as not connected to ]) UOC were listed as bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church.<ref name="3461927calendarROC">, {{ill|Censor.NET|uk|Цензор.нет|ru|Цензор.нет}} (15 December 2023)</ref> In response, Archbishop Jonah (Cherepanov) of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church said that the UOC does not recognize any of the ROC's attempts to make decisions affecting Ukrainian dioceses.<ref name="Jonah Cherepanov">{{cite web |title=Иона Черепанов |url=https://www.facebook.com/arh.iona/posts/pfbid02rshdq5TEeiSr2w4MacMvhYhAPwpzKgNqc6UcL7UMMLpATASCh9qh7jDPJyzryuHSl |website=Facebook |access-date=17 December 2023}}</ref> Later, the UOC's official website stated the following: "In order not to become an object of manipulation, everybody wishing to obtain official information about the UOC and its episcopate should refer solely to official sources of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church. This pertains also to information included in church calendars."<ref>{{cite web |title=The source of authentic information about the UOC is only its official information sources |url=https://news.church.ua/2023/12/18/the-source-of-authentic-information-about-the-uoc-is-only-its-official-information-sources/ |website=Ukrainian Orthodox Church |date=18 December 2023 |access-date=18 December 2023}}</ref> | |||
The UOC publicly distended itself from the ] headed and led by ROC head ] ] of late March 2024.<ref name="newsweek188457744"/> During this Congress a document was approved that stated that the Russian invasion of Ukraine was a "]."<ref name="newsweek188457744">{{cite web |author=Brendan Cole|title=Ukraine Is Now 'Holy War,' Russian Church Declares|url=https://www.newsweek.com/russia-ukraine-war-holy-1884577|date=28 March 2024 |access-date=29 March 2024|website=]}}<br>{{cite web |author=Tetyana Oliynyk|title=Russian Orthodox Church calls invasion of Ukraine "holy war", Ukrainian church reacts|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2024/03/28/7448650/|date=28 March 2024 |access-date=29 March 2024|website=]}}</ref> The document also stated that following the war "the entire territory of modern Ukraine should enter the zone of Russia's exclusive influence".<ref name="newsweek188457744"/> This was to be done so "The possibility of the existence of a ] political regime hostile to Russia and its people on this territory, as well as a political regime controlled from an external center hostile to Russia, should be completely excluded."<ref name="newsweek188457744"/> The document also made reference to the "]" and it claimed that ] and ] "should be recognised only as ]s of the ]".<ref name="newsweek188457744"/> The UOC stated on 28 March 2024 that they "dissociates itself from the ideology of the ]."<ref name="newsweek188457744"/> | |||
==History== | ==History== | ||
{{See also|History of Christianity in Ukraine}} | {{See also|History of Christianity in Ukraine}} | ||
===Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople=== | ===Under the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople=== | ||
====Metropolises in Moscow, Lithuania and Galicia==== | |||
The Ukrainian Orthodox Church considers itself the sole descendant in modern Ukraine of the ] that was established in the 10th century following the ]. Due to the ] in the 13th century, the metropolitan seat was moved to ] and later to ]. In the ] to the south-west, a separate metropolis was erected - the ]. Similarly, in the north-west, another metropolis was erected at the behest of ], the ] - the ]. | |||
====Moscow, Lithuania, Halych metropolia==== | |||
The Ukrainian Orthodox Church considers itself the sole descendant in modern Ukraine of the ] within the jurisdiction of the ] ] in Kyiv in the 10th century. Due to ] in the 13th century the metropolitan seat was moved to ] and later to ], while in the Duchy of Halych and Volhynia was created a separate Metropolis of Halych with own Metropolitan. In the 14th century, the Grand Duke of Lithuania ] who established his control over the former territories of ] attempted to move the metropolitan seat back to Kyiv. | |||
====Revival==== | ====Revival==== | ||
In 1596, the Metropolitan of Kyiv, |
In 1596, the Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galich and all Rus' ] accepted the ] transforming dioceses of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople into the ] under the ]'s jurisdiction. In 1620, the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople ] reestablished Orthodox dioceses for the Orthodox population of what was then the ] — under the Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galicia, and all Russia ] as the Patriarchal ]. | ||
===Merger into the Moscow Patriarchate=== | ===Merger into the Moscow Patriarchate=== | ||
{{Main|Metropolis of Kiev (Patriarchate of Moscow)}} | |||
Following the ] of the ] under the sovereignty of the ] in 1654, the Kyivan metropolis in 1686<ref> ], 5 July 2018.</ref><ref>Khomenko, S., Denysov, M. ''''. BBC Ukraine. 2 November 2018</ref> was transferred by the Patriarch ] under the jurisdiction of the ], following the election of ] as the Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galicia, and all Russia with the help of the ] ]. In late 2018, the ] indicated that information about that it transferred jurisdiction over Ukraine to Moscow Patriarchate is inaccurate as Constantinople temporarily provided Moscow with stewardship over the Ukrainian church.<ref>. Ekho Moskvy. 28 September 2018</ref> The ] retorted immediately by stating that the Constantinople's statement is false and further discussion and revision of historical archives needs to be conducted.<ref>. ]. 27 September 2018</ref> | |||
Following the ] of the ] under the sovereignty of the ] in 1654, the Kyivan metropolis in 1686<ref> ], 5 July 2018.</ref><ref>Khomenko, S., Denysov, M. ''''. BBC Ukraine. 2 November 2018</ref> was transferred by the Patriarch ] under the jurisdiction of the ], following the election of ] as the Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galicia, and all Russia with the help of the ] ]. In late 2018, the ] indicated that information about that it transferred jurisdiction over Ukraine to the Moscow Patriarchate was inaccurate as Constantinople temporarily provided Moscow with stewardship over the Ukrainian church.<ref>. Ekho Moskvy. 28 September 2018</ref> The ] immediately rejected that statement and called for further discussion and revision of historical archives.<ref>. ]. 27 September 2018</ref> | |||
Soon, Gedeon gradually lost control of the dioceses which had been under the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan of Kyiv. In January 1688, Gedeon's title was changed by Moscow to the ″Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galich, and Little Russia″. Gedeon's successors were effectively mere diocesan bishops under the Moscow Patriarchate and later ]'s ]. | Soon, Gedeon gradually lost control of the dioceses which had been under the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan of Kyiv. In January 1688, Gedeon's title was changed by Moscow to the ″Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galich, and Little Russia″. Gedeon's successors were effectively mere diocesan bishops under the Moscow Patriarchate and later ]'s ]. | ||
Before the ] when ] sided with ], the new Metropolitan Ioasaf along with bishops of Chernigov and Pereyaslav was summoned by ] to ] where they were ordered to declare an ] onto Mazepa. After the battle of Poltava, in 1709 Metropolitan Ioasaf was exiled to ] and in 1710 a church censorship was introduced to the Kyiv metropolia. In 1718 Metropolitan Ioasaf was arrested and dispatched to ] for interrogation where he died. | Before the ], when ] sided with ], the new Metropolitan Ioasaf along with bishops of Chernigov and Pereyaslav was summoned by ] to ] where they were ordered to declare an ] onto Mazepa. After the battle of Poltava, in 1709 Metropolitan Ioasaf was exiled to ] and in 1710 a church censorship was introduced to the Kyiv metropolia. In 1718 Metropolitan Ioasaf was arrested and dispatched to ] for interrogation where he died. | ||
From 1718 to 1722 the Metropolitan |
From 1718 to 1722, the Metropolitan See in Kyiv was vacant and ruled by the Kyiv Spiritual Consistory (under the authority of the ]); in 1722 it was occupied by Archbishop Varlaam. | ||
===Synodal period=== | ====Synodal period==== | ||
In 1730, Archbishop Varlaam with all members of the Kyiv Spiritual Consistory were put on trial by the Privy Chancellery. After being convicted, Varlaam as a simple monk was exiled to the ] in Vologda region where he served a sentence of imprisonment of 10 years. After the death of the Russian Empress ] in 1740, Varlaam was allowed to return and recovered all his ] titles. He however refused to accept back those titles and, after asked to be left in peace, moved to the ]. In 1750 Varlaam accepted the ] under the name of Vasili and soon died in 1751. | In 1730, Archbishop Varlaam with all members of the Kyiv Spiritual Consistory were put on trial by the Privy Chancellery. After being convicted, Varlaam as a simple monk was exiled to the ] in Vologda region where he served a sentence of imprisonment of 10 years. After the death of the Russian Empress ] in 1740, Varlaam was allowed to return and recovered all his ] titles. He however refused to accept back those titles and, after asked to be left in peace, moved to the ]. In 1750 Varlaam accepted the ] under the name of Vasili and soon died in 1751. | ||
Line 129: | Line 151: | ||
On 2 April 1767, the Empress of Russia ] issued an edict stripping the title of the Kyivan Metropolitan of the style "and all Little Russia".<ref> at the Orthodox Encyclopedia</ref> | On 2 April 1767, the Empress of Russia ] issued an edict stripping the title of the Kyivan Metropolitan of the style "and all Little Russia".<ref> at the Orthodox Encyclopedia</ref> | ||
===Fall of monarchy in Russia and Exarchate=== | ====Fall of monarchy in Russia and Exarchate==== | ||
{{see also|Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church}} | {{see also|Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church}} | ||
] | ] | ||
Metropolitan ] chaired the All-Ukrainian Church Council that took a break between its sessions on 18 January 1918 and was to be resumed in May 1918. On 23–24 January 1918, the Red Guards of ] occupied Kyiv (see ]). In the evening of 25 January 1918, Metropolitan Vladimir was found dead between walls of the Old Pechersk Fortress beyond the Gates of All Saints, having been killed by unknown people. |
Metropolitan ] chaired the All-Ukrainian Church Council that took a break between its sessions on 18 January 1918 and was to be resumed in May 1918. On 23–24 January 1918, the Red Guards of ] occupied Kyiv (see ]). In the evening of 25 January 1918, Metropolitan Vladimir was found dead between walls of the Old Pechersk Fortress beyond the Gates of All Saints, having been killed by unknown people. | ||
In May 1918, the Metropolitan of Kyiv and |
In May 1918, the Metropolitan of Kyiv and Galich ] was appointed to the ], a former candidate to become the ] at the ] of 1917 and losing it to the ]. In July 1918 Metropolitan Antony became the head of the All-Ukrainian Church Council. Eventually he sided with the Russian ] supporting the forces of ]'s of ], while keeping the title of Metropolitan of Kyiv and Halych. After the defeat of the Whites and the exile of Antony, in 1919-21 the metropolitan seat was temporarily held by the bishop of Cherkasy Nazariy (also the native of ]). After the arrest of Nazariy by the Soviet authorities in 1921, the seat was provisionally held by the bishop of Grodno and newly elected Exarch of Ukraine Mikhail, a member of the Russian ] nationalistic movement. After his arrest in 1923, the Kyiv eparchy was provisionally headed by various bishops of neighboring eparchies until 1927. After his return in 1927 Mikhail became the Metropolitan of Kyiv and Exarch of Ukraine until his death in 1929. | ||
In 1945, after the integration of ] into the ], eastern parts of the ] were transferred from the supreme jurisdiction of the ] to the jurisdiction of the Exarchate of Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine, and a new Eparchy of Mukachevo and Uzhgorod was formed. | In 1945, after the integration of ] into the ], eastern parts of the ] were transferred from the supreme jurisdiction of the ] to the jurisdiction of the Exarchate of Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine, and a new Eparchy of Mukachevo and Uzhgorod was formed. | ||
===Dissolution of the Soviet Union and self rule=== | ====Dissolution of the Soviet Union and self rule==== | ||
] | |||
On 28 October 1990,<ref>: ″Определение фактически вступило в силу уже 28 октября 1990 года (когда Святейший Патриарх Алексий вручил занимавшему тогда Киевскую кафедру митрополиту Филарету соответствующую Грамоту)″</ref> it was granted a status of a self–governing church under the jurisdiction of the ROC (but ''not'' the full ] as is understood in the ROC legal terminology). | |||
On 28 October 1990,<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.patriarchia.ru/db/text/1302845.html|title=К 20-летию Благословенной Грамоты Святейшего Патриарха Московского и всея Руси Алексия II о даровании Украинской Православной Церкви самостоятельности в управлении / Статьи / Патриархия.ru|website=Патриархия.ru}}</ref> the Moscow Patriarchate granted the Ukrainian Exarchate a status of a self–governing church under the jurisdiction of the ROC (but ''not'' the full ] as is understood in the ROC legal terminology). However, the Ukrainian branch remained crucial to the Moscow Patriarchate, because of historical and traditional roots in Kyiv and Ukraine, and because nearly a third of the Moscow Patriarchate's 36,000 congregations were in Ukraine.<ref name="defender_2019_05_19_ecfr_eu" /> | |||
Metropolitan ], who succeeded ], was enthroned in 1992 as the Primate of the UOC under the title ], with the official residency in the ], which also houses all of the Church's administration. | Metropolitan ], who succeeded ], was enthroned in 1992 as the Primate of the UOC under the title ], with the official residency in the ], which also houses all of the Church's administration. | ||
The |
The UOC-MP, prior to 2019, was believed to be the largest religious body in Ukraine with the greatest number of parish churches and communities counting up to half of the total in Ukraine and totaling over 10,000. The UOC also claimed to have up to 75 percent of the Ukrainian population.<ref>Pravoslvieye v Ukraine {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071029043158/http://orthodox.org.ua/uk/node/197 |date=29 October 2007 }}</ref> Independent surveys showed significant variance. According to ], in 2008, more than 50 percent of Ukrainian population belonged to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church under the Moscow Patriarch.<ref name="Countries in Crisis: Ukraine Part 3">{{Cite web|url=https://worldview.stratfor.com/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120118215455/http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20081118_part_3_outside_intervention|url-status=dead|title=Stratfor: The World's Leading Geopolitical Intelligence Platform|archive-date=January 18, 2012|website=worldview.stratfor.com}}</ref> ] survey results, however, tended to show greater adherence to the rival ].<ref> ]<span zoompage-fontsize="12"> about the religious situation in Ukraine (2006)</span> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140408220038/http://razumkov.org.ua/ukr/poll.php?poll_id=300 |date=2014-04-08 }}</ref> | ||
Many Orthodox Ukrainians do not clearly identify with a particular Orthodox jurisdiction and, sometimes, are even unaware of the affiliation of the parish they attend as well as of the controversy itself, which indicates the difficulty of using survey numbers as an indicator of a relative strength of the church. Additionally, the geographical factor plays a major role in the number of adherents, as the Ukrainian population tends to be more churchgoing in the western part of the country rather than in the UOC-MP's heartland in southern and eastern Ukraine. Politically, many in Ukraine see the UOC-MP as merely a puppet of the ROC and consequently a geopolitical tool of ], which have stridently opposed the consolidation and recognition of the independent OCU.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.eurozine.com/the-changing-dilemmas-of-ukrainian-orthodoxy/|title=The changing dilemmas of Ukrainian Orthodoxy|last=Younger|first=Katherine|date=8 November 2019|website=www.eurozine.com|access-date=2019-12-27}}</ref> | |||
The number of parishes statistics seems to be more reliable and consistent even though it may not necessarily directly translate into the numbers of adherents. By number of parishes and quantity of church buildings, the UOC (MP)'s strong base is central and northernwestern Ukraine. However, percentage wise (with respect to rival Orthodox Churches) its share of parishes there varies from 60 to 70 percent. At the same time, by percentage alone (with respect to rival Orthodox Churches) the urban ] southern and eastern Ukrainian provinces peak with up to 90 percent of church buildings. The same can be said about ], although there the UOC's main rival is the Greek Catholic Church and thus in all its share is only 40 percent. The capital ] is where the greatest Orthodox rivalry takes place, there the UOC (MP) has only half of the Orthodox communities. The only place where the UOC (MP) is a true minority, in both quantity, percentage and support are the former Galician provinces of Western Ukraine. There the total share of parishes does not exceed more than five percent. The UOC (MP) does not have any parishes abroad, as its followers identify themselves under the same umbrella as those of the Russian Orthodox Church. | |||
==== Russo-Ukrainian War and changing allegiances of parishes==== | |||
As of 2006 the Ukrainian Orthodox Church had the allegiance of 10,875 registered religious communities in Ukraine (approximately 68 percent of all Orthodox Christian communities in the country), located mostly in central, eastern and southern regions and claims to be the largest religious body in terms of church property in Ukraine. | |||
{{See also|2018 Moscow–Constantinople schism|Russo-Ukrainian War}} | |||
Since 2014, the church has come under attack for perceived ] and ] actions by its clergymen.<ref>, ] (23 Januari 2015)<br>, ] (18 February 2014)</ref> | |||
In spring 2014, Ukraine lost control over ], which ] by Russia in March 2014.<ref name="Ukraine crisis timeline BBC"/><ref name="EU & Ukraine 17 April 2014 FACT SHEET"> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140514174415/http://eeas.europa.eu/statements/docs/2014/140417_03_en.pdf |date=14 May 2014 }}, ] (17 April 2014)</ref>{{efn|The status of the Crimea and of the city of ] is currently ]; Ukraine and the majority of the international community consider the Crimea to be an ] of Ukraine and Sevastopol to be one of Ukraine's ], while Russia, on the other hand, considers the Crimea to be a ] and Sevastopol to be one of Russia's three ].<ref name="Ukraine crisis timeline BBC">, ]</ref><ref name="Reuters">{{cite news|last=Gutterman |first=Steve |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-ukraine-crisis-idUSBREA1Q1E820140318 |title=Putin signs Crimea treaty, will not seize other Ukraine regions |agency=Reuters.com |date= 18 March 2014|access-date=26 March 2014}}</ref>}} The Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) Metropolitan of ] and ] Platon Udovenko, and other Ukrainian Orthodox Church priests, blessed Russian weapons and met with representatives of (the then formed Russian administrative unit) ].<ref name="20230420anatomy-of"/> Notwithstanding this Russian annexation of Crimea, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) kept control of its eparchies in ] until June 2022.<ref name="religy10mar2015krim"/><ref name="patriarchiaru5934581"/> | |||
=== Russia-Ukraine conflict === | |||
{{See also|2018 Moscow–Constantinople schism}} | |||
Since 2014 the church has come under attack for perceived ] and ] actions by its clergymen.<ref>, ] (23 Januari 2015)<br>, ] (18 February 2014)</ref> On 14 September 2015 it urged the ] separatists of the ] to lay down their arms and take advantage of the amnesty promised to them in the ] agreement.<ref>{{uk icon}} , ] (14 September 2015)</ref> Ukraine passed laws which the Moscow Patriarchate interpreted as discriminatory in 2017.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://euromaidanpress.com/2017/05/19/ukrainian-legislation-about-religion-will-finalize-divorce-between-kyiv-and-moscow-euromaidan-press/#arvlbdata|title=Ukrainian legislation about religion will finalize divorce between Kyiv and Moscow|date=19 May 2017|accessdate=25 September 2017}}<br />{{cite web|url=https://www.rt.com/news/388751-ukraine-orthodox-church-discriminatory/|title=Russian church leader asks UN, Pope to intervene with Kiev over 'discriminatory' religious laws|date=17 May 2017|accessdate=25 September 2017}}</ref> From 2014 until 2018 around 60 Moscow Patriarchate parishes switched to the Kyivan Patriarchate in transfers the leadership of the Moscow patriarchate says were illegal.<ref name="Orthodoxswitch27418b"/> According to the ], among the 27.8 million Ukrainian members of Orthodox churches, allegiance to the Kyiv Patriarchate grown from 12 percent in 2000 to 25 percent in 2016 and much of the growth came from believers who previously did not associate with either patriarchate.<ref name="ACAPRIL242018b">{{cite web |url=http://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/ukraine-may-be-getting-its-own-church-but-not-as-fast-as-poroshenko-thinks |title= Ukraine May Be Getting Its Own Church, but Not as Fast as Poroshenko Thinks|publisher= ] |first= JAMES J. |last= COYLE |date= April 24, 2018 }}</ref> In April 2018 Moscow patriarchate had 12,300 parishes and the Kyivan Patriarchate 5,100 parishes.<ref name="Orthodoxswitch27418b">{{cite news |url= https://www.ncronline.org/news/world/ukrainian-orthodox-switch-allegiance-moscow-kiev-linked-churches|title= Ukrainian Orthodox switch allegiance from Moscow to Kiev-linked churches |first= Olga |last= Rudenko |work= ] |date= 4 April 2018 }}</ref> | |||
Continuing during the spring of 2014 in the ] region of ], ] escalated into an armed separatist insurgency. Early in April 2014, masked gunmen took control of several of the region's government buildings and towns.<ref name="Ukraine crisis timeline BBC"/><ref>, ] (30 April 2014)</ref> This action led to the creation of the ] ] and ].<ref name="Ukraine crisis timeline BBC"/><ref>, ] (22 May 2014)</ref> This further resulted in ] between ] and the ].<ref name=UND3316>, ] (3 March 2016)</ref> Instances were recorded of Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) clergymen supporting the Donetsk People's Republic and Luhansk People's Republic.<ref name="Lavrapolitika89496"/><ref name="20230420anatomy-of">, ] (20 April 2023)</ref> On 14 September 2015, the church urged the ] to lay down their arms and take advantage of the amnesty promised to them in the ] agreement.<ref>{{in lang|uk}} , ] (14 September 2015)</ref> | |||
By decision of the Russian Orthodox Church Bishops’ Council (November 29-December 2, 2017), a separate chapter of the ROC Statute was singled out to confirm the status of UOC with the following provisions: | |||
From 2014 until 2018 around 60 Moscow Patriarchate parishes switched to the Kyivan Patriarchate in transfers the leadership. The Moscow patriarchate says these changes were illegal.<ref name="Orthodoxswitch27418b"/> According to the ], among the 27.8 million Ukrainian members of Orthodox churches, allegiance to the Kyiv Patriarchate grew from 12 percent in 2000, to 25 percent in 2016—and much of the growth came from believers who previously did not associate with either patriarchate.<ref name="ACAPRIL242018b">{{cite web |url=http://www.atlanticcouncil.org/blogs/ukrainealert/ukraine-may-be-getting-its-own-church-but-not-as-fast-as-poroshenko-thinks |title= Ukraine May Be Getting Its Own Church, but Not as Fast as Poroshenko Thinks|publisher= ] |first= JAMES J. |last= COYLE |date= April 24, 2018 }}</ref> In April 2018, the Moscow patriarchate had 12,300 parishes and the Kyivan Patriarchate 5,100 parishes.<ref name="Orthodoxswitch27418b">{{cite news |url= https://www.ncronline.org/news/world/ukrainian-orthodox-switch-allegiance-moscow-kiev-linked-churches|title= Ukrainian Orthodox switch allegiance from Moscow to Kiev-linked churches |first= Olga |last= Rudenko |work= ] |date= 4 April 2018 }}</ref> | |||
In 2017, Ukraine passed laws which the Moscow Patriarchate interpreted as discriminatory.<ref>{{cite web|date=19 May 2017|title=Ukrainian legislation about religion will finalize divorce between Kyiv and Moscow|url=http://euromaidanpress.com/2017/05/19/ukrainian-legislation-about-religion-will-finalize-divorce-between-kyiv-and-moscow-euromaidan-press/#arvlbdata|access-date=25 September 2017}}</ref> | |||
====Greater autonomy from the ROC==== | |||
From 29 November to 2 December 2017, the Russian Orthodox Church Bishops’ Council met to consider the matter of autonomy to the UOC-MP. The members decided to write a separate chapter of the ROC Statute to confirm the status of UOC-MP which contained the following provisions: | |||
<blockquote> | <blockquote> | ||
#The Ukrainian Orthodox Church is granted independence and self-governance according to the Resolution of the Bishops’ Council of the Russian Orthodox Church which took place on 25–27 October 1990. | |||
#The Ukrainian Orthodox Church is an independent and self-governed Church with broad autonomy rights. | |||
#In her life and work the Ukrainian Orthodox Church is guided by the Resolution of the 1990 Bishops’ Council of the Russian Orthodox Church on the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, the 1990 Deed of the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia and the Statute on the governance of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church.<ref name="report2017">{{Cite web|url=https://mospat.ru/en/news/47942/|title=Report by Metropolitan Onufry of Kiev and All Ukraine to the Russian Orthodox Church Bishops' Council (November 29-December 2, 2017)|website=mospat.ru}}</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | </blockquote> | ||
] in Kyiv, 8 May 2016]] | |||
In December 2017, the ] published classified documents revealing that the ] of the USSR and its units in the Union and autonomous republics, territories and regions were engaged in the selection of candidates for participation in the 1945 council that elected ] from the representatives of the clergy and the laity. This included "persons who have religious authority among the clergy and believers, and at the same time checked for civic or patriotic work". A letter sent in September 1944 and signed by the head of the 2nd Directorate of the NKGB of the USSR Fedotov and the head of the Fifth Division 2nd Directorate of Karpov stated that "it is important to ensure that the number of nominated candidates is dominated by the agents of the NKGB, capable of holding the line that we need at the Council."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://espreso.tv/news/2017/12/10/moskovskyy_patriarkhat_stvoryuvaly_agenty_nkvs_svidchat_rozskerecheni_sbu_dokumenty|title=Московський патріархат створювали агенти НКВС, - свідчать розсекречені СБУ документи|website=espreso.tv}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.znak.com/2017-12-10/sbu_rassekretila_arhivy_moskovskogo_patriarha_v_1945_godu_izbirali_agenty_nkgb|title=СБУ рассекретила архивы: московского патриарха в 1945 году избирали агенты НКГБ|access-date=2017-12-11|archive-date=2017-12-11|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171211003534/https://www.znak.com/2017-12-10/sbu_rassekretila_arhivy_moskovskogo_patriarha_v_1945_godu_izbirali_agenty_nkgb|url-status=dead}}</ref> | |||
On 13 December 2018 a priest of the church, ], was sentenced in absentia to 6 years of imprisonment for hindering the ] in 2014 during the ].<ref>{{in lang|uk}} , ] (13 December 2018)</ref> In November–December 2018, ] (SBU) carries out raids across the country targeting the UOC churches and priests.<ref>{{cite news |title=Ukraine's security service raids home of Russian-backed monastery head |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-ukraine-church/ukraines-security-service-raids-home-of-russian-backed-monastery-head-idUSKCN1NZ1I1 |publisher=Reuters |date=30 November 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Ukraine raids Orthodox churches with Russia ties |url=https://www.france24.com/en/20181203-ukraine-raids-orthodox-churches-russia-ties-putin-poroshenko-azov-crimea |work=France 24 |date=3 December 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Ukraine set to establish new church, secure split from Russia |url=https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/12/ukraine-set-establish-church-secure-split-russia-181215075840519.html |work=Al-Jazeera |date=15 December 2018}}</ref> | |||
In the week following the creation of the ] on 15 December 2018, several parishes announced they would leave the UOC (MP) and join the new church.<ref>{{in lang|uk}} , ] (23 December 2018)</ref> | |||
On 20 December 2018, the ] (Ukraine's national parliament) passed a legislation to change the UOC's registered name. Ukrainian ] {{Ill|Oleksandr Bryhynets|uk|Бригинець Олександр Михайлович}} described the law as stipulating if "the state is recognized as the aggressor state, the church whose administration is based in the aggressor state must have in its title the full name of the church to which it is subordinate". The law also gave such a church "no right to be represented in ] on the front line".<ref name="unian.info"/> The Russian Orthodox Church is based in Russia, which is considered by Ukraine as an aggressor state following the ]. The UOC was part of the Russian church at that time, but considered to be a "self-governing church with rights of wide autonomy",<ref name="chapter10" /> thus, the UOC argued that its governing center was in Kyiv and it could not be legally renamed on the basis of this law.<ref name="10796912-supreme-court-of-ukraine"/> On 11 December 2019 the ] allowed the Ukrainian Orthodox Church to retain its name.<ref name="10796912-supreme-court-of-ukraine">, ] (16 December 2019)</ref> | |||
The January 2019 establishment of the ] (OCU) by ] ], joined two other churches: the ] (UOC-KP), and the ] (UAOC), along with two bishops who formerly belonged to the UOC-MP.<ref name="defender_2019_05_19_ecfr_eu">Liik, Kadri; Metodiev, Momchil; and Popescu, Nicu: {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220121164420/https://ecfr.eu/publication/defender_of_the_faith_how_ukraines_orthodox_split_threatens_russia/ |date=2022-01-21 }} May 30, 2019, policy brief, ], retrieved January 26, 2022</ref> The remaining UOC-MP hierarchy continued to dismiss Patriarch Bartholomew's actions in Ukraine and remained loyal to the UOC-MP, while the church retained the vast majority of its parishes. A May 2019 report by the ] noted that the Moscow Patriarchate claimed 11,000 churches in Ukraine, while the new OCU claimed 7,000.<ref name="defender_2019_05_19_ecfr_eu" /> | |||
====Russian invasion of Ukraine==== | |||
{{See also|Religion and the 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine}} | |||
] of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in ] destroyed by Russian troops during Russia's failed ] of February – April 2022<ref>{{cite web |url=https://espreso.tv/na-kiivshchini-okupanti-znishchili-starovinnu-derevyanu-tserkvu |title=На Київщині окупанти знищили старовинну дерев'яну церкву |date=2022-03-25 |publisher=Espreso.tv |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220325175955/https://espreso.tv/na-kiivshchini-okupanti-znishchili-starovinnu-derevyanu-tserkvu |archive-date=25 March 2022 |url-status=live |access-date=26 March 2022 }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://ua.interfax.com.ua/news/general/818234.html |title=У результаті обстрілів на Київщині загинуло троє людей, шестеро – постраждали, зруйновано історичну пам'ятку архітектури |date=2022-03-26 |publisher=Interfax |access-date=26 March 2022 |archive-date=26 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220326232904/https://ua.interfax.com.ua/news/general/818234.html }}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://news.church.ua/2022/03/25/u-lukyanivci-znishheno-drevnij-xram-borispilskoji-jeparxiji-upc/ |title =У Лук'янівці знищено древній храм Бориспільської єпархії УПЦ |publisher =Синодальний інформаційно-просвітницький відділ УПЦ |date =2022-03-26 |archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20220326225705/https://news.church.ua/2022/03/25/u-lukyanivci-znishheno-drevnij-xram-borispilskoji-jeparxiji-upc/ |archive-date=2022-03-26 |url-status=live}}</ref>]] | |||
On 24 February 2022, Metropolitan ] stated that the ] was "a repetition of the sin of ], who killed his own brother out of envy. Such a war has no justification either from God or from people."<ref>{{cite news |title=Moscow Patriarch Kirill, Ukrainian Orthodox leaders issue calls for peace |url=https://religionnews.com/2022/02/24/orthodox-patriarch-of-moscow-kirill-calls-on-all-parties-to-avoid-civilian-casualties-in-ukraine/ |work=Religion News Service |date=24 February 2022}}</ref> In April 2022, after the Russian invasion, some UOC parishes signaled their intention to switch allegiance to the ]. The attitude and stance of the head of the ] ] to the war is one of the oft quoted reasons.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.rferl.org/a/russia-patriarch-kirill-dying-ukraine-sins/32052380.html|title=Russian Patriarch Kirill Says Dying In Ukraine 'Washes Away All Sins'|website=]|access-date=April 6, 2023|date=September 26, 2022}}</ref> (At the time the UOC and the ] stated that the church known as the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC) was one of the "self-governing" churches under the jurisdiction of the Moscow Patriarchate, i.e. the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC).<ref name="chapter10"/>) | |||
] monastery complex after Russian shelling on 12 May 2022]] | |||
On 12 May 2022, the synod of the UOC met for the first time since the start of the war and issued a statement of support for Ukraine's armed forces, while condemning the Russian invasion.<ref>{{Cite web |title=UOC Synod: We have always supported Ukraine and called for end to military aggression |url=https://orthochristian.com/146122.html |access-date=2022-05-14|date=27 May 2022|website=orthochristian.com}}</ref> Some critics claim that the church collaborates with Russian clergymen and that the church turns a blind eye towards these collaborators.<ref>, "The enemy within Ukraine's Moscow-affiliated Orthodox church faces scrutiny", ], retrieved 28 April 2023</ref> The same day the church issued another statement in which it insinuated that "the religious policy during the presidency of ] and the destructive ideology of the so-called Orthodox Church of Ukraine" had led to the 24 February 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.<ref name="ukrainianorthodoxchurchmp">, {{ill|Lb.ua|uk|Lb.ua}} (12 May 2022)</ref> | |||
On 27 May 2022 the Ukrainian Orthodox Church held a ] and the same day released a declaration in which it stated "it had adopted relevant additions and changes to the Statute on the Administration of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, which testify to the complete autonomy and independence of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church."<ref name="Ukrainian Orthodox Church-2022">{{Cite web |date=2022-05-27 |title=Resolution of the Council of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of May 27, 2022 |url=https://news.church.ua/2022/05/27/postanova-soboru-ukrajinskoji-pravoslavnoji-cerkvi-vid-27-travnya-2022-roku/ |access-date=2022-05-28 |website=Ukrainian Orthodox Church |language=Ukrainian}}</ref><ref name="orthochristian.com146405"/><ref>{{Cite news |date=2022-05-27 |title=Ukraine's Moscow-backed Orthodox church says cuts ties with Russia |work=Alarabiya News |url=https://english.alarabiya.net/News/world/2022/05/27/Ukraine-s-Moscow-backed-Orthodox-church-says-cuts-ties-with-Russia |access-date=2022-05-27}}</ref><ref name="voa22.10.05">{{cite web |title=Война в Украине и религия |trans-title=War in Ukraine and Religion |publisher=] |language=ru |url=https://www.golosameriki.com/a/religion-and-war/6776957.html |date=2022-10-05 |access-date=2022-10-05}}</ref> An official request for ] (an autocephalous church does not report to any higher-ranking bishop) was not made; the consent of Russian Orthodox Church (for independence) was not sought; neither was sought the approval of (the) other Orthodox churches.<ref name="Lavrapolitika88811"/> The church did not publish its new constitution.<ref name="yevtushenkoUOCMP">{{Cite web|url=https://www.politico.eu/article/ukraine-hunts-collaborators-ukrainian-orthodox-church-moscow-patriarchate-mykola-yevtushenko/|title=Ukraine hunts collaborators in its divided church|website=]|date=9 December 2022|access-date=29 March 2023}}</ref> In an announcement on ], Archpriest Nikolai Danilevich (head of the UOC's Department of External Church Relations) stated: "The UOC disassociated itself from the Moscow Patriarchate and confirmed its independent status, and made appropriate changes to its statutes.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://t.me/MykolayDanylevych/1096|title=Миколай Данилевич|website=Telegram|access-date=Jan 6, 2023|language=Ukrainian}}</ref> All references to the connection of the UOC with the Russian Orthodox Church have been removed from the statutes. In fact, in its content, the UOC statutes are now those of an autocephalous Church."<ref name="orthochristian.com146405">{{Cite web|url=https://orthochristian.com/146405.html|title=Council of UOC strengthens UOC independence, considers making Chrism, expresses disagreement with Patriarch|website=orthochristian.com|access-date=January 6, 2023|date=May 27, 2022}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://t.me/MykolayDanylevych/1096|title=Миколай Данилевич|website=Telegram|access-date=January 6, 2023|date=May 27, 2022}}</ref> In its 27 May 2022 declaration the church first (point was to) condemned the war, its secondly called on both ] and the ] to continue the ] "for a strong and reasonable dialogue that could stop the bloodshed" and it thirdly stated it disagreed with "the position of Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia regarding the war in Ukraine".<ref name="Ukrainian Orthodox Church-2022"/><ref name="orthochristian.com146405"/> In the statement it also expressed its disagreement with the ] to grant autocephaly in January 2019 to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine and it asked for end of the "forcible seizure of churches and the forced transfer of parishes of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church."<ref name="Ukrainian Orthodox Church-2022"/><ref name="orthochristian.com146405"/> Prior to 27 May 2022, more than 400 parishes had left the Moscow Patriarchate as a consequence of the invasion.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2022-05-28 |title=Moscow-led Ukrainian Orthodox Church breaks ties with Russia |language=en |work=Reuters |url=https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/moscow-led-ukrainian-orthodox-church-breaks-ties-with-russia-2022-05-28/ |access-date=2022-05-31}}</ref> | |||
On 27 May 2022 the church also decided to open foreign parishes.<ref name="Ukrainian Orthodox Church-2022"/> By April 2023 it had established more than 40 parishes in 15 European countries (], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ]).<ref name="20230421zakordonni-parafiji"/> | |||
On 29 May 2022, Metropolitan Onufriy did not mention Patriarch Kirill during the liturgy as someone who had authority over him (like before), instead he commemorated all heads of churches, similar to primatial divine liturgies. Onufriy also did not commemorate the Ecumenical ], ], Archbishop ] of Athens (Greece), and Archbishop ] - indicating that communion is still interrupted between them.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Met. Onuphry changes how he commemorates—reads diptychs of Orthodox primates |url=https://orthochristian.com/146428.html |website=orthochristian.com}}</ref><ref name="voa22.10.05" /> Despite the removal of direct mentions of the Russian Orthodox Church, the Charter of the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia ] the statute refers to declares the canonical dependence on the ROC. According to a Ukrainian ] {{ill|Oleksandr Sahan|uk|Саган Олександр Назарович}}, the church have done these changes in order to avoid renaming in accordance with the Ukrainian law.<ref>{{Cite news |date=2022-06-06 |title=Theologian on amendments to UOC-MP statute: Moscow's calm about its branch becomes clear as it's not turning its back on Moscow |language=en |work=Spiritual Front of Ukraine |url=https://df.news/en/2022/06/06/theologian-on-amendments-to-uoc-mp-statute-moscow-s-calm-about-its-branch-becomes-clear-as-it-s-not-turning-its-back-on-moscow/ |access-date=2022-12-09}}</ref> | |||
In June 2022 the ] decided to re-transfer Crimea from the Ukrainian Church of the Moscow Patriarchate by creating the ].<ref name="patriarchiaru5934581"/> Since the ] the Ukrainian Orthodox Church had kept control of its eparchies in ].<ref name="religy10mar2015krim"/><ref name="patriarchiaru5934581"/> The UOC continues to list the Crimean eparchies and has not recognized any change to its territorial boundaries based on decisions taken by the ROC.<ref name="church.ua"/> On 27 March 2023, Archbishop Viktor (Kotsaba) said that the territories of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church include the Crimea and Donbas areas of Ukraine.<ref name="Kotsaba" /> | |||
On 30 June 2022 the {{ill|Lviv City Council|uk|Львівська міська рада}} decided to ban the Moscow Patriarchate on the territory of ].<ref name="7397375bannedUOC-MP">{{cite web |title=The UOC-MP was also banned in Volyn|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/news/2023/04/11/7397375/|website=]|date=11 April 2023|access-date=11 April 2023|language=Ukrainian}}</ref> | |||
During the ] Metropolitan of ] and ] Elisey blessed Russian appointed Governor ].<ref name="545248_moskovskiy"/> During the ] Metropolitan of ] Iosif requested that his Metropolitanate would be under direct subordination of the Russian Orthodox Church.<ref name="545248_moskovskiy"/> All ] bishops of the UOC were present at a meeting with the leader of the (a part of Ukraine declared independent by ]) ], ], in the summer of 2022.<ref name="19373Panteleymon"/> Metropolitan Panteleymon of ] and ] was present during the ] ceremony in ], ], on 30 September 2022.<ref name="19373Panteleymon">{{cite web|title=Political and religious drama in occupied Luhansk Region|url=https://en.lb.ua/news/2023/02/14/19373_political_religious_drama.html|date=14 February 2023|access-date=30 March 2023|website={{ill|Lb.ua|uk|Lb.ua}}|lang=en}}</ref> Metropolitan Ilarion of ] and Metropolitan Lazar of ] had received invitations to this ceremony, but declined to go.<ref name="19373Panteleymon"/> Metropolitan Panteleymon refused the possibility that his Metropolitanate would be under direct subordination of the Russian Orthodox Church and he himself does not have ].<ref name="19373Panteleymon"/> Metropolitan Onufriy did not publicly condemn collaborating UOC clergymen, and they were not dismissed from the church.<ref name="Lavrapolitika89496"/><ref name="19373Panteleymon"/><ref name="550462lavra_shcho_dali">{{cite web|title=Lavra. What's next?|url=https://lb.ua/blog/sonya_koshkina/550462_lavra_shcho_dali_.html|date=31 March 2023|access-date=31 March 2023|website={{ill|Lb.ua|uk|Lb.ua}}|lang=uk}}</ref><ref>{{in lang|uk}} , {{ill|Lb.ua|uk|Lb.ua}} (14 February 2023)</ref><ref name="545248_moskovskiy">{{in lang|uk}} , {{ill|Lb.ua|uk|Lb.ua}} (8 February 2023)</ref> Metropolitan Onufriy did ban from the church UOC clergymen that transferred themself to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU).<ref>{{cite web|date=29 March 2023|access-date=29 March 2023|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/news/2023/03/29/7395641/|title=The UOC punished the archimandrite of the Pechersk Lavra, who transferred to the OCU|website=]|language=Ukrainian}}</ref><ref name="550890_mitropolit_onufriy">{{cite web|title=Metropolitan Onufriy replaced the head of the UOC Khmelnytskyi diocese|url=https://lb.ua/society/2023/04/03/550890_mitropolit_onufriy_zminiv_kerivnika.html|date=4 April 2023|access-date=4 April 2023|website={{ill|Lb.ua|uk|Lb.ua}}|lang=uk}}</ref> Following ] Metropolitan Iosif is believed to have fled to Russia, and he was replaced by Metropolitan Roman on 19 October 2022.<ref name="17485ukrainianorthodoxchurchmp">, {{ill|Lb.ua|uk|Lb.ua}} (19 October 2022)</ref> After in the ] Ukraine recaptured Izium (on 10 September 2022) Metropolitan Elisey also went fugitive and he was replaced also.<ref name="17485ukrainianorthodoxchurchmp"/>{{efn|An archpriest of the UOC ] diocese, Oleksandr Svyrydov, who blessed Russian troops during the ] and who also fled to ] when ] was later appointed rector of the Orthodox parish of the Church of St John the Baptist in ] of the ].<ref name="7396387priestSvyrydov">{{cite web |title=Priest of Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Moscow Patriarchate blessed Russian army during Kharkiv Oblast occupation|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2023/04/4/7396387/|website=]|date=4 April 2023|access-date=4 April 2023|language=English}}</ref>}} | |||
By early November 2022 the Security Service of Ukraine had exposed 33 alleged "agents" and alleged unofficial ]s among the UOC priests and ].<ref name="7375467priest"/> It had opened 23 criminal proceedings.<ref name="7375467priest">{{cite web |author=VALENTYNA ROMANENKO|title=Security Service of Ukraine busts priest who turned to be accomplice of Russian occupiers|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2022/11/8/7375467/|website=]|date=8 November 2022|access-date=8 November 2022|language=English}}</ref> This was part of a series of searches conducted by Ukrainian law enforcement at premises of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, over 350 church buildings and 850 persons were investigated.<ref name="7395532UOCMP"/><ref>{{cite web|date=27 March 2023|access-date=28 March 2023|title=Foreign Ministry dismisses UN claim that searches in Moscow-linked churches could be 'discriminatory'|url=https://kyivindependent.com/foreign-ministry-dismisses-un-claim-searches-in-moscow-linked-churches-could-be-discriminatory/|website=]}}</ref> In 2022 in total 52 criminal cases involving 55 UOC clergymen, including 14 bishops, were opened.<ref name="7395532UOCMP">{{cite web|date=29 March 2023|access-date=29 March 2023|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2023/03/29/7395532/|title=Russian-linked church appeals eviction from Kyiv Monastery of the Caves|website=]|language=English}}</ref> 17 UOC clergymen were sanctioned by the ].<ref name="UOCMP7379144">{{cite web|date=3 December 2022|access-date=29 March 2023|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2022/12/3/7379144/|title=Ukraine's Security Service publishes list of sanctioned individuals from Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)|website=]|language=English}}<br>{{cite web|date=11 December 2022|access-date=29 March 2023|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2022/12/11/7380307/|title=Ukraine imposes sanctions on 7 more representatives of Moscow-linked Ukrainian Church|website=]|language=English}}</ref> They were accused of proposing that the dioceses they lead join the Russian Orthodox Church; agreeing to cooperate with the occupation authorities; promoting pro-Russian narratives; and justifying Russia's military aggression in Ukraine.<ref name="UOCMP7379144"/> | |||
On 2 December 2022 Ukrainian President ] entered a bill to the Verkhovna Rada that would officially ban all activities of the UOC in Ukraine.<ref>{{Cite news |last=Santora |first=Marc |date=2022-12-03 |title=Zelensky Proposes Barring Orthodox Church That Answers to Moscow |language=en-US |work=] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2022/12/02/world/europe/zelensky-ukraine-orthodox-church.html |access-date= |issn=0362-4331}}</ref> On the same day, the ] monastery was claimed to be extrajudicially transferred from the UOC to the ] (OCU),<ref>{{Cite web |date=2 December 2022 |title=Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra switches jurisdiction to Orthodox Church of Ukraine |url=https://novayagazeta.eu/articles/2022/12/02/kyiv-pechersk-lavra-switches-jurisdiction-to-orthodox-church-of-ukraine-en-news/ |access-date= |website=]}}</ref> but the UOC refuted this.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2 December 2022 |title=On the fake about the Lavra and the OCU |url=https://news.church.ua/2022/12/02/on-the-fake-about-the-lavra-and-the-ocu/?lang=en |access-date= |website=Ukrainian Orthodox Church}}</ref> | |||
On 14 December 2022 Ukraine handed over a UOC priest to Russia in a prisoner exchange.<ref name="7380775UOCMP">{{cite web |author=Evgeny Kizilov|title=During the exchange, Ukraine handed over a UOC MP priest to Russia - intelligence|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/news/2022/12/14/7380775/|website=]|date=14 December 2022|access-date=14 December 2022|language=English}}</ref> The priest had been sentenced for treason in Ukraine.<ref name="7380775UOCMP"/>{{efn|In an interview dated 21 April 2023 the ] of the ] ] claimed that Ukraine had exchanged one priests of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate (accused of collaborating with the Russian Federation) for 28 Ukrainian servicemen.<ref name="7398894exchanged">{{cite web |title=Ukraine exchanged one priest from Moscow-linked church for 28 Ukrainian soldiers|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2023/04/21/7398894/|website=]|date=21 April 2023|access-date=21 April 2023|language=English}}</ref>}} | |||
On 27 December 2022 the ] recognized as in accordance with the ] the 20 December 2018 law to change the UOC-MP's registered name to indicate affiliation with Russia.<ref name="7382561UCConc"/> The court also upheld the law that restricted access to the ] and other military formations of Ukraine to clergy from a church "from outside Ukraine" "which carried out military aggression against Ukraine."<ref name="7382561UCConc"/> | |||
Although the UOC-MP in a press conference on 31 December 2022 again stated that ‘any provisions that at least somehow hinted at or indicated the connection with ] were excluded’, the Russian Orthodox Church ignored this and continued to include UOC-MP clerics in various commissions or working groups despite these individuals not agreeing to this.<ref name="32207628ROC"/> For instances: late December 2022 UOC-MP ] Volodymyr Savelyev was against his knowing included in the ROC Publishing Council for the period 2023–2026, after finding this out he demanded to be expelled from the council (while simultaneously condemning "the aggressive war waged by Russia against my homeland — Ukraine").<ref name="32207628ROC"/> | |||
In January 2023 13 representatives of the UOC-MP were deprived of their ], including two ]s.<ref name="546119UOC-MP"/> In February 2023 five UOC-MP (either) metropolitans, ]s and ] were deprived of their Ukrainian citizenship (Metropolitan Feodosiy Platon was banned from entering Ukraine).<ref name="546119UOC-MP">{{in lang|uk}} , {{ill|Lb.ua|uk|Lb.ua}} (16 February 2023)</ref> | |||
The religious buildings and other property of the ] {{ill|Cultural Reserve|uk|Національний Києво-Печерський історико-культурний заповідник}} (although state property) have been used for decades by the UOC-MP free of charge.<ref name="7393889PavloLebid">{{cite web|date=17 March 2023|access-date=17 March 2023|title=Kremlin says Ukrainian authorities' decision on Ukrainian Orthodox Church of Moscow Patriarchate justifies "special operation"|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2023/03/17/7393889/|website=]|language=English}}</ref> On 10 March 2023, the Reserve announced that the 2013 agreement on the free use of churches by the religious organisation would be terminated (on the grounds that the church had violated their lease by making alterations to the historic site, and other technical infractions<ref name="PBSNewsHourOrthodox leader">{{cite web|date=1 April 2023|access-date=6 April 2023|title=Orthodox leader in Kyiv ordered under house arrest by Ukrainian court|url=https://www.pbs.org/newshour/world/orthodox-leader-in-kyiv-ordered-under-house-arrest-by-ukrainian-court|website=]|language=English}}</ref>) and the UOC-MP was ordered to leave the territory by 29 March.<ref name="7393889PavloLebid"/> The UOC-MP answered back that there were no legal grounds for the eviction and called it "a whim of officials from the ]."<ref name="7393889PavloLebid"/> On 17 March 2023 the ] for Russian President ] ] stated that the decision of the Ukrainian authorities not to extend this lease to representatives of the UOC-MP "confirms the correctness" of the (24 February 2022) Russian invasion of Ukraine.<ref name="7393889PavloLebid"/> The UOC-MP did not fully leave Kyiv Pechersk Lavra following 29 March 2023.<ref name="epiphany-urges-calm">{{cite web|date=6 April 2023|access-date=6 April 2023|title=Metropolitan Epiphany urges calm after arrest of abbot|url=https://www.churchtimes.co.uk/articles/2023/6-april/news/world/metropolitan-epiphany-urges-calm-after-arrest-of-abbot|website=]|language=English}}</ref><ref name="550462lavra_shcho_dali"/> | |||
On 7 April 2023 '']'' reported that their research had uncovered that several high ranking UOC-MP clergymen, including Metropolitan Onufriy, had obtained a ].<ref name="Metropolitan7396917Onufri">{{Cite web|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2023/04/7/7396917/|title=Russian passports found on Metropolitan Onufrii and over 20 other priests of Moscow-linked church|website=]|date=7 April 2023|access-date=7 April 2023}}</ref> The UOC-MP denied that its clergymen and its leader, Metropolitan Onufrii, had ].<ref name="MetropolitanOnufri7397038">{{Cite web|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2023/04/8/7397038/|title=Moscow-linked church denies that its leader and other priests hold Russian passports|website=]|date=8 April 2023|access-date=8 April 2023}}</ref> Metropolitan Onufriy did not deny he used to have it, but claimed he had obtained a Russian passport to fulfill his desire of living out his last days in the ], but that he did not have this ambition anymore.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/news/2023/04/8/7397054/|title=Onufriy assures that he has already gotten rid of his Russian passport, but does not say when|website=]|date=8 April 2023|access-date=9 April 2023|language=Ukrainian}}</ref> | |||
On 10 April 2023 the ] voted to ban the activities of the UOC in ].<ref name="7397375bannedUOC-MP"/> The following day the ] banned the activities of the church in ].<ref name="7397375bannedUOC-MP"/> | |||
On 10 April 2023 registration data ] company {{ill|Opendatabot|uk|Opendatabot}} stated that 277 parishes had left the Moscow Patriarchate since the February 2022 Russian invasion, of those 227 parishes 63 had done so in (the first three months of) 2023.<ref name="leavingUOC-MP7397375">{{cite web |title=Since the beginning of the year, 63 churches have transferred to the OCU, another 8,500 remain in the UOC MP|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/news/2023/04/10/7397195/|website=]|date=10 April 2023|access-date=11 April 2023|language=Ukrainian}}</ref> Opendatabot concluded that on 10 April 2023, 8,505 churches were subordinate to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Ukraine.<ref name="leavingUOC-MP7397375"/> | |||
] after Russian shelling in the Easter night, 16 April 2023.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2023-04-16 |script-title=uk:На Запоріжжі російські ракети зруйнували церкву, де мала відбутися Великодня служба |trans-title=In Zaporizhzhia, Russian rockets destroyed the church where the Easter service was to be held |url=https://www.ukrinform.ua/rubric-regions/3696559-na-zaporizzi-rosijski-raketi-zrujnuvali-cerkvu-de-mala-vidbutisa-velikodna-sluzba.html |access-date=2023-06-29 |website=] |language=uk}}</ref> Visible is the icon of ].]] | |||
On 13 April 2023, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church consecrated ] in Kyiv, for the first time in 110 years.<ref name="chrism">{{cite web|date=13 April 2023|access-date=13 April 2023|title=Блаженніший Митрополит Онуфрій звершив освячення мира у Феофанії|url=https://news.church.ua/2023/04/13/blazhennishij-mitropolit-onufrij-zvershiv-osvyachennya-mira-u-feofaniji/|website=Ukrainian Orthodox Church|language=Ukrainian}}</ref> | |||
On 27 April 2023 the ] voted to ban the activities of the church in ].<ref name="7399690bannedUOC-MP">{{cite web | url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/news/2023/04/27/7399690/|website=] | title=The UOC-MP was banned in Zhytomyr Oblast| date=27 April 2023|language=Ukrainian }}</ref> | |||
On 28 April 2023 the ] terminated all land lease contracts of the church in ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Vinnytsia terminated land lease agreements with the UOC MP|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/news/2023/04/28/7399838/|website=]|date=28 April 2023|access-date=28 April 2023|language=Ukrainian}}</ref> | |||
] in Kyiv, 8 May 2016]] | |||
In December 2017 ] published classified documents revealing that the ] of the USSR and its units in the Union and autonomous republics, territories and regions were engaged in the selection of candidates for participation in the 1945 council that elected ] from the representatives of the clergy and the laity. This included "persons who have religious authority among the clergy and believers, and at the same time checked for civic or patriotic work". A letter sent in September 1944 and signed by the head of the 2nd Directorate of the NKGB of the USSR Fedotov and the head of the Fifth Division 2nd Directorate of Karpov stated that "it is important to ensure that the number of nominated candidates is dominated by the agents of the NKGB, capable of holding the line that we need at the Council."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://espreso.tv/news/2017/12/10/moskovskyy_patriarkhat_stvoryuvaly_agenty_nkvs_svidchat_rozskerecheni_sbu_dokumenty|title=Московський патріархат створювали агенти НКВС, - свідчать розсекречені СБУ документи|website=espreso.tv}}</ref><ref></ref> | |||
On 3 May 2024 Opendatabot concluded that 8,097 churches were subordinate to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Ukraine.<ref name="mpUopendatabot301372"/> | |||
On 13 December 2018 a priest of the church, Volodymyr Maretsky, was sentenced in absentia to 6 years of imprisonment for hindering the ] in 2014 during the ].<ref>{{uk icon}} , ] (13 December 2018)</ref> In November–December 2018, ] (SBU) carries out raids across the country targeting the UOC (MP) churches and priests.<ref>{{cite news |title=Ukraine's security service raids home of Russian-backed monastery head |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-ukraine-church/ukraines-security-service-raids-home-of-russian-backed-monastery-head-idUSKCN1NZ1I1 |publisher=Reuters |date=30 November 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Ukraine raids Orthodox churches with Russia ties |url=https://www.france24.com/en/20181203-ukraine-raids-orthodox-churches-russia-ties-putin-poroshenko-azov-crimea |work=France 24 |date=3 December 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=Ukraine set to establish new church, secure split from Russia |url=https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2018/12/ukraine-set-establish-church-secure-split-russia-181215075840519.html |work=Al-Jazeera |date=15 December 2018}}</ref> | |||
On 25 June 2024 Ukraine handed over a UOC priest to Russia in a prisoner exchange.<ref name="UOCMP7462660">{{cite web |author=Alona Mazurenko|title=Ukraine hands over to Russia one of Russian-linked church priests as part of recent prisoner swap|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2024/06/26/7462660/|website=]|date=26 June 2024|access-date=26 June 2024|language=English}}</ref> The priest had been sentenced to 5 years in prison "for justifying Russian armed aggression."<ref name="UOCMP7462660"/> On 26 June 2024 this priest, Metropolitan Ionafan, was met by the head of the ] ] who awarded Ionafan with the {{ill|Order of St. Sergius of Radonezh|wikidata|Q3355529}}, first class.<ref name="UOCMP7462660"/> | |||
In the week following the creation of the ] on 15 December 2018 several parishes announced they would leave the UOC (MP) and join the new church.<ref>{{uk icon}} , ] (23 December 2018)</ref> | |||
==== Outlawing of "religious organizations to operate under the control of a state that carries out aggression against Ukraine"==== | |||
On 20 December 2018, the ] passed a legislation to change the UOC-MP's registered name. Ukrainian ] ] described the law as stipulating if "the state is recognized as the aggressor state, the church whose administration is based in the aggressor state must have in its title the full name of the church to which it is subordinate". The Russian Orthodox Church, which the UOC-MP is part of, is based in Russia, which is considered by Ukraine as an aggressor state following the ]. The law also gave it "no right to be represented in ] on the front line".<ref name="unian.info"/> | |||
{{See also|Law of Ukraine "On the Protection of the Constitutional Order in the Field of Activities of Religious Organizations"}} | |||
On 20 August 2024, the ] (the national parliament of Ukraine) adopted the ],<ref>{{Cite news |last=Service |first=RFE/RL's Ukrainian |title=Ukrainian Lawmakers Approve Law Banning Religious Groups Tied To Russian Orthodox Church |url=https://www.rferl.org/a/ukrainian-orthodox-church-moscvow-patriarchate-legislation/33085600.html |access-date=2024-08-20 |work=RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2024-08-20 |title=Ukraine's parliament passes law banning Russian Orthodox Church |url=https://news.liga.net/en/politics/news/ukraines-parliament-passes-law-banning-russian-orthodox-church-in-ukraine |access-date=2024-08-20 |website=LIGA |language=en}}</ref> introducing the possibility of banning Ukrainian religious organizations affiliated with the Russian Orthodox Church nine months from the moment the {{Ill|State Service of Ukraine for Ethnopolicy and Freedom of Conscience|uk|Державна служба України з етнополітики та свободи совісті}} issues the order, if this religious organization does not sever relations with the Russian Orthodox Church in accordance with ].<ref>{{Cite web |title=Ukrainian Parliament bans Russian-linked religious organizations, targets UOC-MP |url=https://english.nv.ua/nation/verkovna-rada-adopts-a-draft-bill-and-therefore-bans-all-moscow-ruled-religious-organizations-50444399.html |access-date=2024-08-20 |website=english.nv.ua |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Parliament passes law banning religious organisations linked to Russia |url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2024/08/20/7471107/ |access-date=2024-08-20 |website=Ukrainska Pravda |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2024-08-20 |title=The Ukrainian Parliament supported the draft law on banning the UOC MP |url=https://babel.ua/en/news/110038-the-ukrainian-parliament-supported-the-draft-law-on-banning-the-uoc-mp |access-date=2024-08-20 |website=babel.ua |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |date=2024-08-20 |title=Ukrainian Lawmakers Pass Bill Aiming to Ban Russian-Aligned Church|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2024/08/20/world/europe/ukraine-orthodox-church-russia.html|website=]|language=en}}</ref> On 24 August 2024, ], President ] signed the law.<ref name="7471681prohibitionraro"/> The same day law was also published in ], the law came into force on the day following this publication.<ref name="7471681prohibitionraro">{{cite news|date=24 August 2024|title=Zelenskyy signs law on prohibition of Russian-affiliated religious organisations|work=]|url=https://www.pravda.com.ua/eng/news/2024/08/24/7471681/|access-date=24 August 2024|language=English}}</ref> | |||
==Administrative divisions== | ==Administrative divisions== | ||
{{further|Eparchies and Metropolitanates of the Russian Orthodox Church#Ukraine}} | |||
] | ] | ||
{{more|Eparchies and Metropolitanates of the Russian Orthodox Church#Ukraine}} | |||
In October 2014 the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine was subdivided into 53 ] (]s) led by bishops. Also there were 25 ]s (]s). | In October 2014 the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine was subdivided into 53 ] (]s) led by bishops. Also there were 25 ]s (]s). | ||
In 2008 the Church had 42 eparchies, with 58 bishops (eparchial - 42; vicar - 12; retired - 4; with them being classified as: ]s - 10; ]s - 21; or ] - 26). There were also 8,516 ]s, and 443 ]s.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://orthodox.org.ua/eng/node/227|title=Statistical data| |
In 2008 the Church had 42 eparchies, with 58 bishops (eparchial - 42; vicar - 12; retired - 4; with them being classified as: ]s - 10; ]s - 21; or ] - 26). There were also 8,516 ]s, and 443 ]s.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://orthodox.org.ua/eng/node/227|title=Statistical data|access-date=2008-01-12|work=Ukrainian Orthodox Church|language=uk|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081013064245/http://orthodox.org.ua/eng/node/227|archive-date=2008-10-13}}</ref> Technically each Orthodox parish is an individual legal entity.<ref name="Lavrapolitika89496"/> | ||
Notwithstanding the ] the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) kept control of its eparchies in ].<ref name="religy10mar2015krim"/> In January 2019 the head of the Information and Educational Department of the UOC-MP, Archbishop Clement, stated that "from the point of view of the ] and the church system, Crimea is Ukrainian territory."<ref name="7204019Clement">{{ |
Notwithstanding the ] the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) kept control of its eparchies in ] until June 2022.<ref name="religy10mar2015krim"/><ref name="patriarchiaru5934581"/> In January 2019 the head of the Information and Educational Department of the UOC-MP, Archbishop Clement, stated that "from the point of view of the ] and the church system, Crimea is Ukrainian territory."<ref name="7204019Clement">{{in lang|uk}} , ] (16 January 2019)</ref> | ||
In June 2022 the ] decided to re-transfer Crimea from the Ukrainian Church of the Moscow Patriarchate.<ref name="patriarchiaru5934581"/> They did this by creating the ].<ref name="patriarchiaru5934581"/> The UOC continues to list the Crimean eparchies and has not recognized any change to its territorial boundaries based on decisions taken by the ROC.<ref name="church.ua"/> On 27 March 2023, Archbishop Viktor (Kotsaba) said that the territories of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church include the Crimea and Donbas areas of Ukraine.<ref name="Kotsaba" /> | |||
Following the ] the church opened more than 40 parishes in 15 European countries (], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ]).<ref name="Ukrainian Orthodox Church-2022"/><ref name="20230421zakordonni-parafiji">{{Cite web |date=2023-04-21 |title=Foreign parishes of the UOC celebrated Easter for the first time|url=https://news.church.ua/2023/04/21/zakordonni-parafiji-upc-vpershe-vidsvyatkuvali-velikden/|access-date=2023-04-21 |website=Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patrirachate) |language=Ukrainian}}</ref> | |||
== List of Primates == | == List of Primates == | ||
Line 185: | Line 273: | ||
| image3 = Иоасаф Кроковский.jpg| caption3 = Metropolitan Joasaph | | image3 = Иоасаф Кроковский.jpg| caption3 = Metropolitan Joasaph | ||
| image4 = Варлаам (Вонатович).jpg| caption4 = Archbishop Varlaam | | image4 = Варлаам (Вонатович).jpg| caption4 = Archbishop Varlaam | ||
| image5 = |
| image5 = Рафаїл_(Заборовський).jpg| caption5 = Metropolitan ] | ||
| image6 = |
| image6 = Тимофей_(Щербацкий).jpg| caption6 = Metropolitan Timothy | ||
| image7 = Арсений (Могилянский).jpg| caption7 = Metropolitan Arseniy | | image7 = Арсений (Могилянский).jpg| caption7 = Metropolitan Arseniy | ||
| image8 = Портрет митрополита Антония (Храповицкого).jpg| caption8 = Metropolitan ] | | image8 = Портрет митрополита Антония (Храповицкого).jpg| caption8 = Metropolitan ] | ||
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| image10= Митрополит Константин (Дьяков).jpg| caption10= Metropolitan Constantine | | image10= Митрополит Константин (Дьяков).jpg| caption10= Metropolitan Constantine | ||
| image11= Епископ_Николай_(Ярушевич).jpg| caption11= Metropolitan ] | | image11= Епископ_Николай_(Ярушевич).jpg| caption11= Metropolitan ] | ||
| image12= |
| image12= Aleksy hromadśkyj.jpg| caption12= Metropolitan ] | ||
| image13= Соколов-РПЦ.jpg| caption13= Metropolitan John | | image13= Соколов-РПЦ.jpg| caption13= Metropolitan John | ||
| image14= Joasaph (Lelyukhin).jpg| caption14= Metropolitan ] | | image14= Joasaph (Lelyukhin).jpg| caption14= Metropolitan ] | ||
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}} | }} | ||
|} | |} | ||
{{See also|List of Metropolitans and Patriarchs of |
{{See also|List of Metropolitans and Patriarchs of Kyiv}} | ||
===Metropolitan of Kyiv, |
===Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galich, and all Little Russia=== | ||
* Metropolitan ] 1685–1690, the first Metropolitan of Kyiv of the ], until 1688 was titled as the Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galicia, and all Ruthenia | * Metropolitan ] 1685–1690, the first Metropolitan of Kyiv of the ], until 1688 was titled as the Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galicia, and all Ruthenia | ||
* Metropolitan Varlaam 1690–1707 | * Metropolitan Varlaam 1690–1707 | ||
* Metropolitan Ioasaph 1707–1718 | * Metropolitan Ioasaph 1707–1718 | ||
Line 222: | Line 310: | ||
===Metropolitan of Volyn and Lutsk, Exarch of West Ukraine and Belarus=== | ===Metropolitan of Volyn and Lutsk, Exarch of West Ukraine and Belarus=== | ||
{{further|Territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet Union}}On canonical territory of the ] of the recently annexed territories of ] and ] | |||
* Metropolitan ] 1940–1941 | * Metropolitan ] 1940–1941 | ||
Line 228: | Line 316: | ||
* Metropolitan ] 1941–1944 | * Metropolitan ] 1941–1944 | ||
** During ] on the occupied by Nazi Germany |
** During ], on the territories of Ukraine occupied by Nazi Germany, Metropolitan Aleksiy organized the ] that considered itself part of the Russian Orthodox Church. | ||
* Metropolitan John (Sokolov) 1944–1964 | * Metropolitan John (Sokolov) 1944–1964 | ||
* Metropolitan ] 1964–1966 | * Metropolitan ] 1964–1966 | ||
Line 241: | Line 329: | ||
== See also == | == See also == | ||
*] | *] | ||
*] | *] | ||
*] | *] | ||
*] | |||
== Notes == | |||
{{notelist}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
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== External links == | == External links == | ||
{{Commons category}} | |||
*{{cite web|url=http://church.ua/en/|title=Official network of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)| |
*{{cite web|url=http://church.ua/en/|title=Official network of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)|access-date=2016-11-05|work=church.ua/en/|language=en, uk, ru}} | ||
*{{cite web|url=http://orthodox.org.ua/eng/node|title=Official English site of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church| |
*{{cite web|url=http://orthodox.org.ua/eng/node|title=Official English site of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church|access-date=2008-01-12|work=orthodox.org.ua/eng/node|language=en, uk, ru}} | ||
*{{cite web|url=http://orthodoxy.org.ua/|title=Open Orthodox University/Orthodoxy in Ukraine: site of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church| |
*{{cite web|url=http://orthodoxy.org.ua/|title=Open Orthodox University/Orthodoxy in Ukraine: site of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church|access-date=2008-01-12|work=Pravoslavie v Ukraini|language=uk, ru}} | ||
{{All-Ukrainian Council of Churches and Religious Organizations}} | {{All-Ukrainian Council of Churches and Religious Organizations}} | ||
{{Eparchies of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)}} | |||
{{Orthodox Churches in Ukraine}} | {{Orthodox Churches in Ukraine}} | ||
{{Eastern Orthodox Church footer}} | {{Eastern Orthodox Church footer}} | ||
{{Christianity footer}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
{{coord missing|Ukraine}} | {{coord missing|Ukraine}} | ||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | |||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] | ] | ||
] |
Latest revision as of 15:47, 26 December 2024
Church in Ukraine under disputed jurisdiction of Russian Orthodox church This article is about a disputed branch of the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine. Not to be confused with Orthodox Church of Ukraine. For a more comprehensive list, see Ukrainian Orthodox Church (disambiguation).Ukrainian Orthodox Church Moscow Patriarchate (disputed) | |
---|---|
Emblem | |
Type | Eastern Orthodox |
Orientation | Slavic Orthodox |
Primate | Metropolitan Onufriy |
Bishops | 114 (53 governing) |
Clerics | 12,551 (2022) |
Nuns | 2,727 |
Parishes | 8,097 (May 2024) |
Monastics | 4,620 (2022) |
Monasteries | 161 (2022) |
Language | Church Slavonic, Ukrainian, Romanian |
Liturgy | Byzantine Rite |
Territory | Ukraine |
Origin | 988 establishment of the Metropolitanate of Kyiv 1990 (self-rule within the Moscow Patriarchate) |
Recognition | 27 May 2022 24 March 2023 |
Members | 6% of the Ukrainian Orthodox population |
Official website | church uoc-news |
The Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC), commonly referred to by the exonym Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate (UOC-MP), is an Eastern Orthodox church in Ukraine.
The Ukrainian Orthodox Church was officially formed in 1990 in place of the Ukrainian Exarchate of the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC), under the leadership of Metropolitan Filaret, as the Ukrainian branch of the Russian Orthodox Church.
On 27 May 2022, following a church-wide council in Kyiv, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church announced its full independence and autonomy from the Moscow Patriarchate. The council made this decision in protest of the February 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine, and particularly in response to Russian Orthodox Church head Patriarch Kirill's support for the invasion. The UOC (did not and) has never declared full autocephaly from the Russian Orthodox Church.
The UOC is the largest Eastern Orthodox ecclesiastical body in modern Ukraine, alongside the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU). Since the Unification Council on 15 December 2018 which formed the OCU, the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople has disputed the claims by the Moscow Patriarchate of its ecclesiastical jurisdiction over the territory of Ukraine.
The Russian Orthodox Church does not currently recognize a change in their relationship to the UOC. However, in June 2023 ROC hierarch Metropolitan Leonid (Gorbachev) of Klin, scorned the UOC's decision to separate from the Moscow Patriarchate, saying, "When the opportunity presented itself to get out from under the wing of Moscow, they did it," and declared that the ROC would absorb the UOC's dioceses in Russian occupied areas of Ukraine.
On 20 August 2024, the Verkhovna Rada banned the Russian Orthodox Church by adopting the Law of Ukraine "On the Protection of the Constitutional Order in the Field of Activities of Religious Organizations". Ukrainian religious organizations affiliated with the ROC will have nine months to break off its relations with the Patriarchate of Moscow in accordance with the Canon law of the Eastern Orthodox Church.
Name
The Ukrainian Orthodox Church insists on its name being just the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, stating that it is the sole canonical body of Orthodox Christians in the country, a Ukrainian "local church" (Ukrainian: Помісна Церква). The church rejects being labeled "Russian" or "Moscow."
It is also the name that it is registered with the State Committee of Religious Affairs in Ukraine.
It is often referred to as the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) or UOC (MP) in order to distinguish between the two rival churches contesting the name of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church.
Following the creation of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, on 20 December 2018, the Ukrainian parliament voted to force the UOC-MP to rename itself in its mandatory state registration, its new name must have "the full name of the church to which it is subordinated". This was protested by UOC-MP adherents. On 11 December 2019 the Supreme Court of Ukraine allowed the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC) to retain its name. The UOC had argued that their governing center is in Ukraine's capital, Kyiv, not in Russia's capital, Moscow, and therefore it should not be renamed.
On 27 December 2022 the Constitutional Court of Ukraine ordered the UOC to change its name and indicate its affiliation with Russia. It took into account the verdict of the European Court of Human Rights in the case "Ilin and others against Ukraine" that stated Ukrainian law could force "religious organization, wishing to be registered, to take a name which makes it impossible to mislead the faithful and society as a whole and which makes it possible to distinguish it from existing organizations."
In May 2024 of the 8,097 UOC parishes 22 of them directly indicated their affiliation in their name.
Relationship with the Russian Orthodox Church
Prior to the February 2022 full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine the church stated that it was one of the "self-governing" churches under the jurisdiction of the Moscow Patriarchate, i.e. the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC). (In the terminology of the current Statute of the ROC, a "self-governing Church" is distinguished from an "autonomous Church").
The UOC claims since May 2022 that 'any provisions that at least somehow hinted at or indicated the connection with Moscow were excluded'; since then it is a matter of dispute as to whether the Church is under the ecclesiastical jurisdiction of the Russian Orthodox Church. Despite claims that the church did not publish its new statute, the new statute is publicly available on government, news, and official church websites.
The ROC defines the UOC-MP as a "self-governing church with rights of wide autonomy". It has also ignored all UOC-MP's declarations of it not being connected with it anymore and continues to include UOC-MP clerics in various commissions or working groups.
According to the Russian Orthodox Church, the Primate of the UOC-MP is the most senior permanent member of the ROC's Holy Synod and thus has a say in its decision-making in respect of the rest of the ROC throughout the world.
Despite the de facto annexation of Crimea by the Russian Federation in 2014, the eparchies of the UOC in Crimea have continued to be administered by the UOC. In June 2022 the Moscow Patriarchate claimed to transfer Crimea from the Ukrainian Orthodox Church to the Moscow Patriarchate. The UOC continues to list the Crimean eparchies as its own, and has not recognized any change to its territorial boundaries based on decisions taken by the ROC. On 27 March 2023, Archbishop Viktor (Kotsaba) said that the territories of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church include the Crimea and Donbas areas of Ukraine.
On 21 June 2023, Metropolitan Leonid (Gorbachev) of Klin, a hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church, decried the Ukrainian Orthodox Church's decision to separate from the Moscow Patriarchate and declared that the Russian Orthodox Church would absorb UOC dioceses in areas of Ukraine occupied by Russia.
In a Patriarchal calendar for 2024 released by the Russian Orthodox Church in December 2023 all the then bishops of the (designated itself as not connected to Russia) UOC were listed as bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church. In response, Archbishop Jonah (Cherepanov) of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church said that the UOC does not recognize any of the ROC's attempts to make decisions affecting Ukrainian dioceses. Later, the UOC's official website stated the following: "In order not to become an object of manipulation, everybody wishing to obtain official information about the UOC and its episcopate should refer solely to official sources of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church. This pertains also to information included in church calendars."
The UOC publicly distended itself from the World Russian People's Council headed and led by ROC head Patriarch Kirill of Moscow of late March 2024. During this Congress a document was approved that stated that the Russian invasion of Ukraine was a "Holy War." The document also stated that following the war "the entire territory of modern Ukraine should enter the zone of Russia's exclusive influence". This was to be done so "The possibility of the existence of a Russophobic political regime hostile to Russia and its people on this territory, as well as a political regime controlled from an external center hostile to Russia, should be completely excluded." The document also made reference to the "triunity of the Russian people" and it claimed that Belarusians and Ukrainians "should be recognised only as sub-ethnic groups of the Russians". The UOC stated on 28 March 2024 that they "dissociates itself from the ideology of the Russian world."
History
See also: History of Christianity in UkraineUnder the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople
Metropolises in Moscow, Lithuania and Galicia
The Ukrainian Orthodox Church considers itself the sole descendant in modern Ukraine of the Metropolis of Kiev and all Rus' that was established in the 10th century following the baptism of Kievan Rus'. Due to the Mongol invasion of Rus' in the 13th century, the metropolitan seat was moved to Vladimir and later to Moscow. In the Kingdom of Galicia and Volhynia to the south-west, a separate metropolis was erected - the Metropolis of Halych. Similarly, in the north-west, another metropolis was erected at the behest of Algirdas, the Grand Duke of Lithuania - the Metropolis of Lithuania.
Revival
In 1596, the Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galich and all Rus' Michael Rohoza accepted the Union of Brest transforming dioceses of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople into the Ukrainian Greek Catholic Church under the Holy See's jurisdiction. In 1620, the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople Cyril Lucaris reestablished Orthodox dioceses for the Orthodox population of what was then the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth — under the Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galicia, and all Russia Job Boretsky as the Patriarchal Exarch.
Merger into the Moscow Patriarchate
Main article: Metropolis of Kiev (Patriarchate of Moscow)Following the transfer of the Cossack Hetmanate under the sovereignty of the Tsardom of Russia in 1654, the Kyivan metropolis in 1686 was transferred by the Patriarch Dionysius IV under the jurisdiction of the Moscow Patriarchate, following the election of Gedeon Svyatopolk-Chetvertynsky as the Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galicia, and all Russia with the help of the Hetman of Zaporizhian Host Ivan Samoylovych. In late 2018, the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople indicated that information about that it transferred jurisdiction over Ukraine to the Moscow Patriarchate was inaccurate as Constantinople temporarily provided Moscow with stewardship over the Ukrainian church. The Russian Orthodox Church immediately rejected that statement and called for further discussion and revision of historical archives.
Soon, Gedeon gradually lost control of the dioceses which had been under the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan of Kyiv. In January 1688, Gedeon's title was changed by Moscow to the ″Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galich, and Little Russia″. Gedeon's successors were effectively mere diocesan bishops under the Moscow Patriarchate and later Russia's Most Holy Synod.
Before the Battle of Poltava, when Ivan Mazepa sided with Carl XII, the new Metropolitan Ioasaf along with bishops of Chernigov and Pereyaslav was summoned by Peter the Great to Hlukhiv where they were ordered to declare an anathema onto Mazepa. After the battle of Poltava, in 1709 Metropolitan Ioasaf was exiled to Tver and in 1710 a church censorship was introduced to the Kyiv metropolia. In 1718 Metropolitan Ioasaf was arrested and dispatched to Saint Petersburg for interrogation where he died.
From 1718 to 1722, the Metropolitan See in Kyiv was vacant and ruled by the Kyiv Spiritual Consistory (under the authority of the Most Holy Synod); in 1722 it was occupied by Archbishop Varlaam.
Synodal period
In 1730, Archbishop Varlaam with all members of the Kyiv Spiritual Consistory were put on trial by the Privy Chancellery. After being convicted, Varlaam as a simple monk was exiled to the Kirillo-Belozersky Monastery in Vologda region where he served a sentence of imprisonment of 10 years. After the death of the Russian Empress Anna in 1740, Varlaam was allowed to return and recovered all his Archiereus titles. He however refused to accept back those titles and, after asked to be left in peace, moved to the Tikhvin Assumption Monastery. In 1750 Varlaam accepted the Great Schema under the name of Vasili and soon died in 1751.
In 1743, the title of Metropolitan was re-instated for Archbishop Raphael Zaborovsky.
On 2 April 1767, the Empress of Russia Catherine the Great issued an edict stripping the title of the Kyivan Metropolitan of the style "and all Little Russia".
Fall of monarchy in Russia and Exarchate
See also: Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox ChurchMetropolitan Vladimir Bogoyavlensky chaired the All-Ukrainian Church Council that took a break between its sessions on 18 January 1918 and was to be resumed in May 1918. On 23–24 January 1918, the Red Guards of Reingold Berzin occupied Kyiv (see Ukrainian–Soviet War). In the evening of 25 January 1918, Metropolitan Vladimir was found dead between walls of the Old Pechersk Fortress beyond the Gates of All Saints, having been killed by unknown people.
In May 1918, the Metropolitan of Kyiv and Galich Antony Khrapovitsky was appointed to the Kyiv eparchy, a former candidate to become the Patriarch of Moscow at the Russian Local Council of 1917 and losing it to the Patriarch Tikhon. In July 1918 Metropolitan Antony became the head of the All-Ukrainian Church Council. Eventually he sided with the Russian White movement supporting the forces of Anton Denikin's of South Russian entity, while keeping the title of Metropolitan of Kyiv and Halych. After the defeat of the Whites and the exile of Antony, in 1919-21 the metropolitan seat was temporarily held by the bishop of Cherkasy Nazariy (also the native of Kazan). After the arrest of Nazariy by the Soviet authorities in 1921, the seat was provisionally held by the bishop of Grodno and newly elected Exarch of Ukraine Mikhail, a member of the Russian Black Hundreds nationalistic movement. After his arrest in 1923, the Kyiv eparchy was provisionally headed by various bishops of neighboring eparchies until 1927. After his return in 1927 Mikhail became the Metropolitan of Kyiv and Exarch of Ukraine until his death in 1929.
In 1945, after the integration of Zakarpattia Oblast into the USSR, eastern parts of the Eparchy of Mukačevo and Prešov were transferred from the supreme jurisdiction of the Serbian Orthodox Church to the jurisdiction of the Exarchate of Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine, and a new Eparchy of Mukachevo and Uzhgorod was formed.
Dissolution of the Soviet Union and self rule
On 28 October 1990, the Moscow Patriarchate granted the Ukrainian Exarchate a status of a self–governing church under the jurisdiction of the ROC (but not the full autonomy as is understood in the ROC legal terminology). However, the Ukrainian branch remained crucial to the Moscow Patriarchate, because of historical and traditional roots in Kyiv and Ukraine, and because nearly a third of the Moscow Patriarchate's 36,000 congregations were in Ukraine.
Metropolitan Vladimir (Sabodan), who succeeded Filaret (Denysenko), was enthroned in 1992 as the Primate of the UOC under the title Metropolitan of Kyiv and all Ukraine, with the official residency in the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra, which also houses all of the Church's administration.
The UOC-MP, prior to 2019, was believed to be the largest religious body in Ukraine with the greatest number of parish churches and communities counting up to half of the total in Ukraine and totaling over 10,000. The UOC also claimed to have up to 75 percent of the Ukrainian population. Independent surveys showed significant variance. According to Stratfor, in 2008, more than 50 percent of Ukrainian population belonged to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church under the Moscow Patriarch. Razumkov Centre survey results, however, tended to show greater adherence to the rival Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Kyivan Patriarchate.
Many Orthodox Ukrainians do not clearly identify with a particular Orthodox jurisdiction and, sometimes, are even unaware of the affiliation of the parish they attend as well as of the controversy itself, which indicates the difficulty of using survey numbers as an indicator of a relative strength of the church. Additionally, the geographical factor plays a major role in the number of adherents, as the Ukrainian population tends to be more churchgoing in the western part of the country rather than in the UOC-MP's heartland in southern and eastern Ukraine. Politically, many in Ukraine see the UOC-MP as merely a puppet of the ROC and consequently a geopolitical tool of Russia, which have stridently opposed the consolidation and recognition of the independent OCU.
Russo-Ukrainian War and changing allegiances of parishes
See also: 2018 Moscow–Constantinople schism and Russo-Ukrainian WarSince 2014, the church has come under attack for perceived anti-Ukrainian and pro-Russian actions by its clergymen.
In spring 2014, Ukraine lost control over Crimea, which was unilaterally annexed by Russia in March 2014. The Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) Metropolitan of Feodosia and Kerch Platon Udovenko, and other Ukrainian Orthodox Church priests, blessed Russian weapons and met with representatives of (the then formed Russian administrative unit) Republic of Crimea. Notwithstanding this Russian annexation of Crimea, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) kept control of its eparchies in Crimea until June 2022.
Continuing during the spring of 2014 in the Donbas region of eastern Ukraine, pro-Russian protests escalated into an armed separatist insurgency. Early in April 2014, masked gunmen took control of several of the region's government buildings and towns. This action led to the creation of the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic and Luhansk People's Republic. This further resulted in an armed conflict between Russian Separatist forces in Donbas and the Ukrainian Army. Instances were recorded of Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) clergymen supporting the Donetsk People's Republic and Luhansk People's Republic. On 14 September 2015, the church urged the pro-Russian separatists to lay down their arms and take advantage of the amnesty promised to them in the Minsk II agreement.
From 2014 until 2018 around 60 Moscow Patriarchate parishes switched to the Kyivan Patriarchate in transfers the leadership. The Moscow patriarchate says these changes were illegal. According to the Razumkov Center, among the 27.8 million Ukrainian members of Orthodox churches, allegiance to the Kyiv Patriarchate grew from 12 percent in 2000, to 25 percent in 2016—and much of the growth came from believers who previously did not associate with either patriarchate. In April 2018, the Moscow patriarchate had 12,300 parishes and the Kyivan Patriarchate 5,100 parishes.
In 2017, Ukraine passed laws which the Moscow Patriarchate interpreted as discriminatory.
Greater autonomy from the ROC
From 29 November to 2 December 2017, the Russian Orthodox Church Bishops’ Council met to consider the matter of autonomy to the UOC-MP. The members decided to write a separate chapter of the ROC Statute to confirm the status of UOC-MP which contained the following provisions:
- The Ukrainian Orthodox Church is granted independence and self-governance according to the Resolution of the Bishops’ Council of the Russian Orthodox Church which took place on 25–27 October 1990.
- The Ukrainian Orthodox Church is an independent and self-governed Church with broad autonomy rights.
- In her life and work the Ukrainian Orthodox Church is guided by the Resolution of the 1990 Bishops’ Council of the Russian Orthodox Church on the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, the 1990 Deed of the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia and the Statute on the governance of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church.
In December 2017, the Security Service of Ukraine published classified documents revealing that the NKGB of the USSR and its units in the Union and autonomous republics, territories and regions were engaged in the selection of candidates for participation in the 1945 council that elected Patriarch Alexy I of Moscow from the representatives of the clergy and the laity. This included "persons who have religious authority among the clergy and believers, and at the same time checked for civic or patriotic work". A letter sent in September 1944 and signed by the head of the 2nd Directorate of the NKGB of the USSR Fedotov and the head of the Fifth Division 2nd Directorate of Karpov stated that "it is important to ensure that the number of nominated candidates is dominated by the agents of the NKGB, capable of holding the line that we need at the Council."
On 13 December 2018 a priest of the church, Volodymyr Maretsky, was sentenced in absentia to 6 years of imprisonment for hindering the Armed Forces of Ukraine in 2014 during the Russo-Ukrainian War. In November–December 2018, Security Service of Ukraine (SBU) carries out raids across the country targeting the UOC churches and priests.
In the week following the creation of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine on 15 December 2018, several parishes announced they would leave the UOC (MP) and join the new church.
On 20 December 2018, the Verkhovna Rada (Ukraine's national parliament) passed a legislation to change the UOC's registered name. Ukrainian deputy Oleksandr Bryhynets [uk] described the law as stipulating if "the state is recognized as the aggressor state, the church whose administration is based in the aggressor state must have in its title the full name of the church to which it is subordinate". The law also gave such a church "no right to be represented in military units on the front line". The Russian Orthodox Church is based in Russia, which is considered by Ukraine as an aggressor state following the 2014 Russian military intervention in Ukraine. The UOC was part of the Russian church at that time, but considered to be a "self-governing church with rights of wide autonomy", thus, the UOC argued that its governing center was in Kyiv and it could not be legally renamed on the basis of this law. On 11 December 2019 the Supreme Court of Ukraine allowed the Ukrainian Orthodox Church to retain its name.
The January 2019 establishment of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU) by Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople, joined two other churches: the Ukrainian Orthodox Church – Kyiv Patriarchate (UOC-KP), and the Ukrainian Autocephalous Orthodox Church (UAOC), along with two bishops who formerly belonged to the UOC-MP. The remaining UOC-MP hierarchy continued to dismiss Patriarch Bartholomew's actions in Ukraine and remained loyal to the UOC-MP, while the church retained the vast majority of its parishes. A May 2019 report by the European Council on Foreign Relations noted that the Moscow Patriarchate claimed 11,000 churches in Ukraine, while the new OCU claimed 7,000.
Russian invasion of Ukraine
See also: Religion and the 2022 Russian invasion of UkraineOn 24 February 2022, Metropolitan Onufriy stated that the large scale Russian invasion of Ukraine on that day was "a repetition of the sin of Cain, who killed his own brother out of envy. Such a war has no justification either from God or from people." In April 2022, after the Russian invasion, some UOC parishes signaled their intention to switch allegiance to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine. The attitude and stance of the head of the Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill of Moscow to the war is one of the oft quoted reasons. (At the time the UOC and the other Orthodox churches stated that the church known as the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC) was one of the "self-governing" churches under the jurisdiction of the Moscow Patriarchate, i.e. the Russian Orthodox Church (ROC).)
On 12 May 2022, the synod of the UOC met for the first time since the start of the war and issued a statement of support for Ukraine's armed forces, while condemning the Russian invasion. Some critics claim that the church collaborates with Russian clergymen and that the church turns a blind eye towards these collaborators. The same day the church issued another statement in which it insinuated that "the religious policy during the presidency of P.O. Poroshenko and the destructive ideology of the so-called Orthodox Church of Ukraine" had led to the 24 February 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.
On 27 May 2022 the Ukrainian Orthodox Church held a synod and the same day released a declaration in which it stated "it had adopted relevant additions and changes to the Statute on the Administration of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, which testify to the complete autonomy and independence of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church." An official request for autocephaly (an autocephalous church does not report to any higher-ranking bishop) was not made; the consent of Russian Orthodox Church (for independence) was not sought; neither was sought the approval of (the) other Orthodox churches. The church did not publish its new constitution. In an announcement on Telegram, Archpriest Nikolai Danilevich (head of the UOC's Department of External Church Relations) stated: "The UOC disassociated itself from the Moscow Patriarchate and confirmed its independent status, and made appropriate changes to its statutes. All references to the connection of the UOC with the Russian Orthodox Church have been removed from the statutes. In fact, in its content, the UOC statutes are now those of an autocephalous Church." In its 27 May 2022 declaration the church first (point was to) condemned the war, its secondly called on both Ukraine and the Russian Federation to continue the peace negotiations "for a strong and reasonable dialogue that could stop the bloodshed" and it thirdly stated it disagreed with "the position of Patriarch Kirill of Moscow and All Russia regarding the war in Ukraine". In the statement it also expressed its disagreement with the Patriarch of Constantinople to grant autocephaly in January 2019 to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine and it asked for end of the "forcible seizure of churches and the forced transfer of parishes of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church." Prior to 27 May 2022, more than 400 parishes had left the Moscow Patriarchate as a consequence of the invasion.
On 27 May 2022 the church also decided to open foreign parishes. By April 2023 it had established more than 40 parishes in 15 European countries (Austria, Belgium, Great Britain, Denmark, Italy, Spain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Germany, Norway, Portugal, Hungary, France, Switzerland, Sweden).
On 29 May 2022, Metropolitan Onufriy did not mention Patriarch Kirill during the liturgy as someone who had authority over him (like before), instead he commemorated all heads of churches, similar to primatial divine liturgies. Onufriy also did not commemorate the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I of Constantinople, Patriarch Theodoros II of Alexandria, Archbishop Ieronymos II of Athens (Greece), and Archbishop Chrysostomos II of Cyprus - indicating that communion is still interrupted between them. Despite the removal of direct mentions of the Russian Orthodox Church, the Charter of the Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia Alexy II the statute refers to declares the canonical dependence on the ROC. According to a Ukrainian theologian Oleksandr Sahan [uk], the church have done these changes in order to avoid renaming in accordance with the Ukrainian law.
In June 2022 the Moscow Patriarchate decided to re-transfer Crimea from the Ukrainian Church of the Moscow Patriarchate by creating the Metropolitanate of Crimea. Since the 2014 Russian annexation of Crimea the Ukrainian Orthodox Church had kept control of its eparchies in Crimea. The UOC continues to list the Crimean eparchies and has not recognized any change to its territorial boundaries based on decisions taken by the ROC. On 27 March 2023, Archbishop Viktor (Kotsaba) said that the territories of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church include the Crimea and Donbas areas of Ukraine.
On 30 June 2022 the Lviv City Council [uk] decided to ban the Moscow Patriarchate on the territory of Lviv.
During the Russian occupation of Kharkiv Oblast Metropolitan of Izium and Kupiansk Elisey blessed Russian appointed Governor Vitaly Ganchev. During the Russian occupation of Sumy Oblast Metropolitan of Romny Iosif requested that his Metropolitanate would be under direct subordination of the Russian Orthodox Church. All Luhansk Oblast bishops of the UOC were present at a meeting with the leader of the (a part of Ukraine declared independent by pro-Russian forces in 2014) Luhansk People's Republic, Leonid Pasechnik, in the summer of 2022. Metropolitan Panteleymon of Luhansk and Alchevsk was present during the annexation of Donetsk, Kherson, Luhansk and Zaporizhzhia oblasts ceremony in Moscow, Russia, on 30 September 2022. Metropolitan Ilarion of Donetsk and Metropolitan Lazar of Crimea had received invitations to this ceremony, but declined to go. Metropolitan Panteleymon refused the possibility that his Metropolitanate would be under direct subordination of the Russian Orthodox Church and he himself does not have Russian citizenship. Metropolitan Onufriy did not publicly condemn collaborating UOC clergymen, and they were not dismissed from the church. Metropolitan Onufriy did ban from the church UOC clergymen that transferred themself to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU). Following the liberation of Romny on 4 April 2022 Metropolitan Iosif is believed to have fled to Russia, and he was replaced by Metropolitan Roman on 19 October 2022. After in the 2022 Kharkiv counteroffensive Ukraine recaptured Izium (on 10 September 2022) Metropolitan Elisey also went fugitive and he was replaced also.
By early November 2022 the Security Service of Ukraine had exposed 33 alleged "agents" and alleged unofficial artillery observers among the UOC priests and clergy. It had opened 23 criminal proceedings. This was part of a series of searches conducted by Ukrainian law enforcement at premises of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, over 350 church buildings and 850 persons were investigated. In 2022 in total 52 criminal cases involving 55 UOC clergymen, including 14 bishops, were opened. 17 UOC clergymen were sanctioned by the National Security and Defence Council of Ukraine. They were accused of proposing that the dioceses they lead join the Russian Orthodox Church; agreeing to cooperate with the occupation authorities; promoting pro-Russian narratives; and justifying Russia's military aggression in Ukraine.
On 2 December 2022 Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy entered a bill to the Verkhovna Rada that would officially ban all activities of the UOC in Ukraine. On the same day, the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra monastery was claimed to be extrajudicially transferred from the UOC to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine (OCU), but the UOC refuted this.
On 14 December 2022 Ukraine handed over a UOC priest to Russia in a prisoner exchange. The priest had been sentenced for treason in Ukraine.
On 27 December 2022 the Constitutional Court of Ukraine recognized as in accordance with the Constitution of Ukraine the 20 December 2018 law to change the UOC-MP's registered name to indicate affiliation with Russia. The court also upheld the law that restricted access to the Armed Forces of Ukraine and other military formations of Ukraine to clergy from a church "from outside Ukraine" "which carried out military aggression against Ukraine."
Although the UOC-MP in a press conference on 31 December 2022 again stated that ‘any provisions that at least somehow hinted at or indicated the connection with Moscow were excluded’, the Russian Orthodox Church ignored this and continued to include UOC-MP clerics in various commissions or working groups despite these individuals not agreeing to this. For instances: late December 2022 UOC-MP Archpriest Volodymyr Savelyev was against his knowing included in the ROC Publishing Council for the period 2023–2026, after finding this out he demanded to be expelled from the council (while simultaneously condemning "the aggressive war waged by Russia against my homeland — Ukraine").
In January 2023 13 representatives of the UOC-MP were deprived of their Ukrainian citizenship, including two metropolitans. In February 2023 five UOC-MP (either) metropolitans, archbishops and bishops were deprived of their Ukrainian citizenship (Metropolitan Feodosiy Platon was banned from entering Ukraine).
The religious buildings and other property of the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra Cultural Reserve [uk] (although state property) have been used for decades by the UOC-MP free of charge. On 10 March 2023, the Reserve announced that the 2013 agreement on the free use of churches by the religious organisation would be terminated (on the grounds that the church had violated their lease by making alterations to the historic site, and other technical infractions) and the UOC-MP was ordered to leave the territory by 29 March. The UOC-MP answered back that there were no legal grounds for the eviction and called it "a whim of officials from the Ministry of Culture." On 17 March 2023 the press secretary for Russian President Vladimir Putin Dmitry Peskov stated that the decision of the Ukrainian authorities not to extend this lease to representatives of the UOC-MP "confirms the correctness" of the (24 February 2022) Russian invasion of Ukraine. The UOC-MP did not fully leave Kyiv Pechersk Lavra following 29 March 2023.
On 7 April 2023 Ukrainska Pravda reported that their research had uncovered that several high ranking UOC-MP clergymen, including Metropolitan Onufriy, had obtained a Russian passport. The UOC-MP denied that its clergymen and its leader, Metropolitan Onufrii, had Russian citizenship. Metropolitan Onufriy did not deny he used to have it, but claimed he had obtained a Russian passport to fulfill his desire of living out his last days in the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius, but that he did not have this ambition anymore.
On 10 April 2023 the Rivne Oblast Council voted to ban the activities of the UOC in Rivne Oblast. The following day the Volyn Oblast Council banned the activities of the church in Volyn Oblast.
On 10 April 2023 registration data analyser company Opendatabot [uk] stated that 277 parishes had left the Moscow Patriarchate since the February 2022 Russian invasion, of those 227 parishes 63 had done so in (the first three months of) 2023. Opendatabot concluded that on 10 April 2023, 8,505 churches were subordinate to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Ukraine.
On 13 April 2023, the Ukrainian Orthodox Church consecrated Holy Chrism in Kyiv, for the first time in 110 years.
On 27 April 2023 the Zhytomyr Oblast Council voted to ban the activities of the church in Zhytomyr Oblast.
On 28 April 2023 the Vinnytsia Oblast Council terminated all land lease contracts of the church in Vinnytsia Oblast.
On 3 May 2024 Opendatabot concluded that 8,097 churches were subordinate to the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in Ukraine.
On 25 June 2024 Ukraine handed over a UOC priest to Russia in a prisoner exchange. The priest had been sentenced to 5 years in prison "for justifying Russian armed aggression." On 26 June 2024 this priest, Metropolitan Ionafan, was met by the head of the Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill of Moscow who awarded Ionafan with the Order of St. Sergius of Radonezh [wikidata], first class.
Outlawing of "religious organizations to operate under the control of a state that carries out aggression against Ukraine"
See also: Law of Ukraine "On the Protection of the Constitutional Order in the Field of Activities of Religious Organizations"On 20 August 2024, the Verkhovna Rada (the national parliament of Ukraine) adopted the Law of Ukraine "On the Protection of the Constitutional Order in the Sphere of Activities of Religious Organizations", introducing the possibility of banning Ukrainian religious organizations affiliated with the Russian Orthodox Church nine months from the moment the State Service of Ukraine for Ethnopolicy and Freedom of Conscience [uk] issues the order, if this religious organization does not sever relations with the Russian Orthodox Church in accordance with Orthodox canon law. On 24 August 2024, Independence Day of Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelenskyy signed the law. The same day law was also published in Holos Ukrainy, the law came into force on the day following this publication.
Administrative divisions
Further information: Eparchies and Metropolitanates of the Russian Orthodox Church § UkraineIn October 2014 the Russian Orthodox Church in Ukraine was subdivided into 53 eparchies (dioceses) led by bishops. Also there were 25 vicars (suffragan bishops).
In 2008 the Church had 42 eparchies, with 58 bishops (eparchial - 42; vicar - 12; retired - 4; with them being classified as: metropolitans - 10; archbishops - 21; or bishops - 26). There were also 8,516 priests, and 443 deacons. Technically each Orthodox parish is an individual legal entity.
Notwithstanding the 2014 Russian annexation of Crimea the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate) kept control of its eparchies in Crimea until June 2022. In January 2019 the head of the Information and Educational Department of the UOC-MP, Archbishop Clement, stated that "from the point of view of the church canon and the church system, Crimea is Ukrainian territory."
In June 2022 the Moscow Patriarchate decided to re-transfer Crimea from the Ukrainian Church of the Moscow Patriarchate. They did this by creating the Metropolitanate of Crimea. The UOC continues to list the Crimean eparchies and has not recognized any change to its territorial boundaries based on decisions taken by the ROC. On 27 March 2023, Archbishop Viktor (Kotsaba) said that the territories of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church include the Crimea and Donbas areas of Ukraine.
Following the February 2022 full-scale Russian invasion of Ukraine the church opened more than 40 parishes in 15 European countries (Austria, Belgium, Great Britain, Denmark, Italy, Spain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Germany, Norway, Portugal, Hungary, France, Switzerland, Sweden).
List of Primates
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Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galich, and all Little Russia
- Metropolitan Gedeon Svyatopolk-Chetvertynsky 1685–1690, the first Metropolitan of Kyiv of the Russian Orthodox Church, until 1688 was titled as the Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galicia, and all Ruthenia
- Metropolitan Varlaam 1690–1707
- Metropolitan Ioasaph 1707–1718
- none 1718–1722
- Archbishop Varlaam 1722–1730
- Metropolitan Raphael 1731–1747, until 1743 as Archbishop
- Metropolitan Timothy 1748–1757
- Metropolitan Arseniy 1757–1770, in 1767 Metropolitan Arseniy became Metropolitan of Kyiv and Halych
Note: in 1770 the office's jurisdiction was reduced to a diocese's administration as Metropolitan of Kyiv and Galicia. The autonomy was liquidated and the church was merged to the Russian Orthodox Church.
Exarch of Ukraine
Due to emigration of Metropolitan Antony in 1919, until World War II Kyiv eparchy was often administered by provisional bishops. Also because of political situation in Ukraine, the Russian Orthodox Church introduced a new title in its history as the Exarch of Ukraine that until 1941 was not necessary associated with the title of Metropolitan of Kyiv and Halych.
- Metropolitan Mikhail (Yermakov) 1921–1929 (Bishop of Grodno and Brest, 1905–1921; Archbishop of Tobolsk, 1925; and Metropolitan of Kyiv, 1927–1929)
- Metropolitan Konstantin (Dyakov) 1929–1937 (Metropolitan of Kharkiv and Okhtyrka, 1927–1934 and Metropolitan of Kyiv 1934–1937)
- none 1937–1941, exarch was not appointed
Metropolitan of Volyn and Lutsk, Exarch of West Ukraine and Belarus
Further information: Territories of Poland annexed by the Soviet UnionOn canonical territory of the Polish Orthodox Church of the recently annexed territories of western Ukraine and western Belarus
- Metropolitan Nicholas (Yarushevich) 1940–1941
Metropolitan of Kyiv and Halych, Exarch of Ukraine
- Metropolitan Nicholas (Yarushevich) 1941–1944
- During World War II, on the territories of Ukraine occupied by Nazi Germany, Metropolitan Aleksiy organized the Ukrainian Autonomous Orthodox Church that considered itself part of the Russian Orthodox Church.
- Metropolitan John (Sokolov) 1944–1964
- Metropolitan Joasaph (Leliukhin) 1964–1966
- Metropolitan Filaret (Denysenko) 1966–1990
Metropolitan of Kyiv and all Ukraine
- Metropolitan Filaret (Denysenko) 1990–1992
- Metropolitan Volodymyr (Sabodan) 1992–2014
- Metropolitan Onuphrius (Berezovsky) 2014–Present
See also
- Autocephaly of the Orthodox Church of Ukraine
- 2018 Moscow–Constantinople schism
- List of monasteries of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)
- Transition of church communities to OCU
Notes
- On 27 May 2022 the church claimed it had amended its status to "testify to the full independence and autonomy of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church". Recognized by the Patriarchate of Constantinople as part of the Russian Orthodox Church.
- Recognized by Patriarch Ilia II of Georgia as separate from the Russian Orthodox Church on 24 March 2023.
- March 2022, study by Info Sapiens; 4% of the entire population of Ukraine.
- Ukrainian: Українська православна церква, УПЦ, romanized: Ukrainska pravoslavna tserkva, UPTs; Russian: Украинская православная церковь, УПЦ, romanized: Ukrainskaya pravoslavnaya tserkov', UPTs
- Russian: Украинская православная церковь Московского патриархата, УПЦ-МП, romanized: Ukrainskaya pravoslavnaya tserkov' Moskovskovo patriarkhata, UPTs-MP
- The status of the Crimea and of the city of Sevastopol is currently under dispute between Russia and Ukraine; Ukraine and the majority of the international community consider the Crimea to be an autonomous republic of Ukraine and Sevastopol to be one of Ukraine's cities with special status, while Russia, on the other hand, considers the Crimea to be a federal subject of Russia and Sevastopol to be one of Russia's three federal cities.
- An archpriest of the UOC Izium diocese, Oleksandr Svyrydov, who blessed Russian troops during the Russian occupation of Kharkiv Oblast and who also fled to Russia when Kharkiv Oblast was largely liberated was later appointed rector of the Orthodox parish of the Church of St John the Baptist in Diocese of Tver of the Russian Orthodox Church.
- In an interview dated 21 April 2023 the head of the Security Service of Ukraine Vasyl Malyuk claimed that Ukraine had exchanged one priests of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate (accused of collaborating with the Russian Federation) for 28 Ukrainian servicemen.
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Sources
- Tomos for Ukraine: rocking the Moscow foundation
- Russian Orthodox Church severs ties with Ecumenical Patriarchate
External links
- "Official network of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)". church.ua/en/ (in English, Ukrainian, and Russian). Retrieved 2016-11-05.
- "Official English site of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church". orthodox.org.ua/eng/node (in English, Ukrainian, and Russian). Retrieved 2008-01-12.
- "Open Orthodox University/Orthodoxy in Ukraine: site of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church". Pravoslavie v Ukraini (in Ukrainian and Russian). Retrieved 2008-01-12.
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