Church Raiding - Broken Families and the Shattered World

A religious dissent of rural communities throughout Ukraine, enforced by Orthodox churches occupants, has sharpened and exposed conflicts that had been resolved in the Church before. Turbulent events in church life pinpointed what has happened and is happening behind the closed doors of farmhouses. In all the parishes of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, where raiders worked, people in one voice say: "families have split up, friends and neighbours do not see eye to eye with one another." Here are a few stories that a schism has caused.

A woman of retirement age is brutally beaten by her husband.
  
It may seem not to relate to the religious conflict. The reason is simple: she has worked as a cashier of an Orthodox parish for many years and gained respect and enhanced her social status in the village due to distinguished service. Her voice is valid among the villagers. For one, she can refute the slanderous attacks on the priest, who is driven out of the church he ministers at- what could be easier for the raiders than to accuse the senior priest of theft? Now this woman is afraid to support her confessor. It is easy to talk about martyrdom, religious asceticism, opposing enemies of faith, if all this is happening to strangers. The woman has to live under the same roof with her husband, who is afraid of losing a share or a rented lake, and pours his fear out, beating the poor women. There is no support from the children either, and bruises for trying to save the church cash haven’t gone yet...

A daughter and her mother are not talking to each other.
  
The situation doesn’t seem to be extraordinary as daughters often do not find the common language with their mothers. However, in this case the misunderstanding is deepened by church raiders of the UOC-KP. A heated interfaith conflict in a small western Ukrainian village led to a mass brawl and cruel militia bashing. The woman, who has raised three daughters, is hiding from his pursuers not at her children’s, but in the nearby monastery. Due to the lack of understanding of what is happening the daughter publicly blames the denomination, which the church and her mother belong to. However, the elderly woman, like the Church, has obviously become a victim of the conflict. Besides, the mother may need a support of her family in such hard times.

Divorce is the last point in a religious dispute.
  
Under normal circumstances, of course, the couple could not come to battered pots, and the husband and wife definitely have other differences, apart from religious views. However, in the dispute, which priest would baptize a newborn baby, the Orthodox side of the family has given way, and the child received the Greek Catholic baptism. The family started to ruin, and in the past tumultuous year it has largely resulted in religious misunderstanding. It made it final: the husband leaves the family, the child undergoes the optional Orthodox rite.

A senior woman is not allowed to attend an Orthodox church service.

Paradoxically, even in the family of the UOC-KP priest who descended to the seizure of a neighbouring church of the UOC, voices in defense of the Orthodox Church are raised. However, the job is done, the public is exposed to all sorts of "support and understanding", but the old woman, unwilling to take a split, is not allowed to attend an Orthodox church service. We may only assume how it all happens.

It’s difficult for agnostics and atheists to accept the phrase "God will punish you." But victims of religious conflicts and hostile takeovers in Ukrainian villages are very well remembered. Remembered are also those converts and patriotic believers who have written denunciations on their neighbours recently- for example, for bringing children to church. Remembered is what happens to a man when he goes against the Church of God.

A village head, taking a delegation of UOC believers, outraged with UOC-KP intrigues, says, crossing himself, that there won’t be their church in the village - and the next day his father dies. Too critical parishioner, who does not disdain gossip and says that she even can’t stand the look of the priest ... loses his sight. It could be explained by the law of probability. But only as long as it does not concern yourself.

Read also

The Kremlin's Archons

After accusing a pan-Orthodox delegation of being “lobbyists for Putin,” it turns out two of the Archons’ own have actually lobbied on behalf of Russian interests.

A Miscarriage of Justice: How the Phanar Betrayed Met. Tychikos

The following article by Fr. Anastasios Gotsopoulos was first published by the UOJ's Greek bureau. It has been edited for an American audience.

The New McCarthyism

Today, a delegation of Orthodox clergy will meet with the White House to plead on behalf of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC). Yet mainstream media outlets like The Hill and politicians like Rep. Joe Wilson are dismissing the effort as a Kremlin psyop. This is offensive to the UOC, and to Orthodox Christians here in the United States.

Zelensky-Style Sanctions: The 'Mindich Case' vs. the 'UOJ Case'

Ten years of sanctions for journalists who criticize the authorities, and three years for corrupt officials who steal millions. A story about whom and how people are punished in modern Ukraine.

Will the Phanar Abandon the OCU?

The Orthodox Times ' plea for a “temporary Exarchate” in Ukraine under Constantinople admits the 2019 Tomos birthed division, not unity. Amid OCU defections, state seizures, and Phanar whispers of a puppet church, the proposal is a white flag for a failed intervention. Of course, it also vindicates Met. Onuphry’s steadfast flock.

The Papacy Is Not a 'Development'—It's a Contradiction

The Holy Canons assert the absolute authority of each bishop within his own diocese. The Ecumenical Councils, while acknowledging the Pope's symbolic primacy, also explicitly checked his attempts to exercise superior authority over the Church, or to place himself above his fellow bishops. And the Church Fathers fleshed out this ecclesiology, affirming the rights of bishops and synods while checking papal ambitions.