All-Ukrainian Council of Churches stands up for traditional values

On July 4, a meeting of members of the Ukrainian Council of Churches and Religious Organizations with Prime Minister Vladimir Groysman was held, reports the Information-Education Department of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church.

With the blessing of His Beatitude Metropolitan Onufry, vicar bishop of Kiev Varsonofy of Borodiansk and deputy chairman of the Department for External Church Relations of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church Archpriest Nikolai Danilevich participated in the meeting.

During the meeting, the various sides discussed a number of issues touching upon Church-state relations, in particular, issues of family and moral values. The representatives of the Ukrainian religious organizations unanimously reaffirmed their opposition to the possibility of adopting the Instanbul Convention, which introduces new terms, foreign to the Ukrainian legal world, including the terms “gender,” “gender identity,” “gender sensitivity,” “sexual orientation,” which go beyond what is acceptable in Ukrainian society and distort the understanding of gender equality as equal rights for men and women.

Participants also raised the issue of legal regulations in the sphere of defense, chaplaincy, and mobilization. In particular, Bp. Varsanuphy expressed concern about the limitation of the chaplaincy ministry of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in the Ukrainian National Guard. According to the primate’s statistics, at least a third of military personnel in law enforcement agencies are members of the canonical Ukrainian Orthodox, and therefore the limits placed on the Church’s ministry are discriminatory. The prime minister promised to deal with the situation.

At the end of the meeting, it was agreed to maintain permanent dialogue between the council and the government to solve current issues in the field of Church-state relations.

Read also

Trump to Meet Putin in Alaska for Talks on Ending Ukraine War

Summit set for Aug. 15 could mark first direct U.S.-Russia meeting since 2021, but peace prospects remain uncertain

Court Revives Indiana Teacher’s Religious Rights Lawsuit Over Transgender Name Policy

Appeals court says school failed to show last-name-only approach caused disruption.

Syria: Bomb Attack on Church in Tartus Foiled

Two individuals have been arrested who, according to authorities, were on their way to carry out a terrorist attack.

Trump Brokers Peace Between Armenia and Azerbaijan

The agreement bring an end to a conflict that has been raging for over three decades. The heads of both countries jointly proposed nominating Trump for a Nobel Peace Prize.

Estonian Parliament Refuses to Review Law Targeting the Orthodox Church

The Estonian Parliament (or Riigikogu) declined to revisit the recent law targeting the canonical Church, despite protests by Estonia's president.

Met. Tikhon to Concelebrate with Primate of Macedonian Orthodox Church

The service will mark the OCA’s formal recognition of the Macedonian Orthodox Church, the world’s newest autocephalous Orthodox Church.