We will not worship other gods, – President of Ukraine

President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko in the Verkhovna Rada

Ukrainians will not worship other gods. This was stated by the President of Ukraine Petro Poroshenko in his Address to the Verkhovna Rada on September 20, reports the press service of the President.

"As the Holy Scripture reads, we definitely will not worship other gods," said the President. "And the state will not interfere in the internal affairs of the church, especially the foreign state. Why are they struggling for this? Because the empire loses one of the last levers of influence. The Tomos is actually another Act of Declaration of Ukraine's Independence."

According to the Head of State, the importance of the Tomos goes far beyond the borders of Ukraine.

"For us, our own Church is a guarantee of spiritual freedom. <...> This is the fall of the Third Rome as Moscow's oldest conceptual claim to world hegemony. Here, in our territories, the future of the Eastern Orthodoxy is also being solved. We and Russians understand it in absolutely different ways, and this is one of the reasons why we are not going the same way with Russians. Their church is a so-called “bond” of the authoritarian regime. And we, as the largest Orthodox country in Europe, will demonstrate how Eastern Christianity and democracy get along in one national organism," Poroshenko said.

Previously, Peter Poroshenko said that after receiving the Tomos, the state will respect the choice of those who decide to remain in the church structure maintaining unity with the Russian Orthodox Church and prevent any provocations. 

On September 17, the President of Ukraine held a meeting with the exarchs of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, Archbishop Daniel of Pamphylia and Bishop Hilarion of Edmonton.

Read also

Thousands in Ghana Enter Canonical Orthodox Church After Year-Long Catechism

Major growth for Patriarchate of Alexandria as former independent group unites with Orthodox Church.

Antiochian Archdiocese to Celebrate Sunday of All Saints of Antioch With Patriarchate of Antioch for First Time

The feast, established in 2023, highlights the enduring witness and legacy of the Church of Antioch.

Church of Cyprus Defrocks Priest Amid Mounting Ecclesiastical Tensions

Fr. Dimos Serkelidis removed from clerical office following Synodal Court decision; controversy grows over internal Church governance

OCU Holds Service in Seized Cherkasy Church—But Nobody Came

Photos reveal nearly deserted worship in St. Andrew’s Church after its seizure from the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (UOC)

Romanian Orthodox Hierarchs Propose Five Women for Canonization

Canonization effort highlights upcoming Commemorative Year of Holy Women in 2026.

St. Olga of Alaska Officially Glorified in Her Hometown of Kwethluk

First North American female saint honored in historic vigil attended by hundreds of pilgrims and hierarchs.