Filaret: Personally, I am not satisfied with the Statute of OCU

"Honorary Patriarch" Filaret (Denisenko)

The current Statute of the OCU has certain drawbacks and, therefore, it must be changed at the next Local Council, said “honorary patriarch” of the OCU Filaret Denisenko to “Glavkom”.

“Personally, I am not satisfied with the Statute. And, therefore, we should hold a meeting at the next Local Council and adopt the Statute of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, not of the Kiev Metropolis as part of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, because we now use this Statute, the Greek Statute. We, as an autocephalous Church, must have our own Ukrainian Statute, which we must approve at the Local Council. Therefore, we are looking forward to convening the UOC Council, where the Statute of our Church should be adopted” said Filaret.

Among the shortcomings of the current statute of the PCU, Filaret called the procedure for appointing permanent members of the Synod.

“The most important thing is to change the number of permanent members of the Synod. We don’t need three, as now, but more, about 12. Others could have the opportunity to be temporary members of the Synod successively,” he said.

“Permanent members of the Synod should be authoritative bishops from different regions so that all Ukraine will be represented in the Synod by permanent members, that is, as we have had until now in the Kiev Patriarchate. And so, by the way, it was in the Ukrainian Church before the division, just such were the order and tradition that are not new to us,” added Filaret (Denisenko).

Therefore, Filaret proposes to first convene a Local Council, at which participants will adopt the Statute, and then elect the Synod on the basis of the new Statute.

Filaret (Denisenko) also expressed confidence that the Patriarchate of Constantinople would not object to these initiatives.

“They told us the following: for the time being, adopt the Statute that we offer to you, and when you receive the Tomos, you are the autocephalous church and you adopt such a statute that you need,” the “honorary patriarch” stressed.

We recall that the text of the Tomos granted to the OCU clearly states that there will be no permanent members of the Synod in this structure, they will change annually: “… which is convened annually from the Bishops invited in turn according to their seniority, from among those that have eparchies within the geographical borders of Ukraine”.

It also says that the Statute of the OCU must comply with the provisions of the Tomos: “…must comply with the provisions of this Patriarchal and Synodal Tomos in all”, and only “on all these conditions our Holy Great Church of Christ blesses and proclaims the Autocephalous Orthodox Church in Ukraine”.

Read also

Petition Warns Canada’s Hate Speech Law Could Criminalize Scripture

Thousands of Canadians have signed a petition urging the Liberal government to drop proposed hate-speech changes that critics warn could criminalize quoting the Bible and other religious texts.

JD Vance: Criticizing Israel Is Not Antisemitism

Vice President JD Vance said opposing Israeli policies is not the same as antisemitism, sparking debate over where criticism of Israel ends and hatred of Jews begins.

First Orthodox Prayer Book Published in Indonesian Language

The first Orthodox prayer book in Indonesian has been published and presented in Bekasi, providing local faithful and new converts with a vital resource for prayer and liturgical life.

OCA Joins Legal Challenge to Illinois Abortion Referral Law

Amicus brief argues mandate violates religious freedom and compels pro-life providers to contradict their faith.

EXCLUSIVE: Leaked Ukrainian Memo Says Religious Freedom is ‘Achilles Heel’

In an emergency strategy meeting held in response to the Society of St. John's Day of Action, D.C.-based Ukrainian lobbyists acknowledged the weight of the religious freedom issue as it pertains to the Ukrainian government’s public perception.

Historic $2.9 Million Bequest Strengthens Greek Orthodox Foundation

The Greek Orthodox Metropolis of Chicago Foundation has received a record $2.9 million bequest from the late Andy Efthim, a devoted layman whose faith-filled generosity will support the Church’s mission for generations.