July 25, 2013
Moscow: Message of His Holiness Kyrill, Patriarch of Moscow and All
Russia, on the Occasion of the 1025th Anniversary of the Baptism of
Rus’
This document was adopted at a regular session of the Holy Synod of
the Russian Orthodox Church on July 16, 2013 (DECR #69).
Beloved in the Lord Your Graces the archpastors, all-honorable
presbyters and deacons,
God-loving monks and nuns, dear brothers
and sisters!
This
year, we commemorate a significant event – the 1025th anniversary of
the Baptism of Rus’. In the distant tenth century, Rus’, through the
labors of the Holy Equal-of-the-Apostles Prince Vladimir, adopted
the Christian faith and culture, making a choice of religion and
civilization which defined the vector of the historical development
of our peoples.
As Metropolitan Hilarion of Kiev said, "Faith, replete with grace,
has spread throughout the world and has come to our Russian people…
Our beneficent God has had mercy upon all lands and has not despised
us; He desired it, and we were saved, and He has brought us to the
reason of Truth."
The past 1,025 years have seen both glorious and tragic events.
Faith in Christ was inculcated in our forefathers and brought forth
abundant fruit, yet it happened in the most difficult of
circumstances. Many have tried to deflect the peoples of Rus’ away
from Orthodoxy. This was the goal of those who wanted to enslave us,
coming from the West and the East. This was the wish of those
wanting to build the ‘ideal’ society without God, going against his
eternal law. Yet the nation that adopted the Christian faith has
repeatedly shown its fidelity to Christ. It was able to return to
him even after the apostasies imposed by those who cruelly
persecuted it. Despite the ‘weak endeavors’ of the latter, the
hearts and souls of many of our compatriots have been sanctified by
Christ’s truth. It is our duty and spiritual imperative to preserve
this truth and build our private and public lives upon its
foundations.
We must learn the lessons of the past. And the main lesson is this:
the edifice of our civilization cannot exist without the Gospel
foundation upon which it was raised up. Today many again are
proposing that we build up our lives without God. Freedom is often
understood as the pursuit of all kinds of desires, including those
imposed upon the human person from without. This understanding of
freedom may be broadened to the extent that it will begin to
threaten our natural moral instinct, our duty to our neighbors and
ultimately the very possibility of speaking the truth and acting
according to conscience.
Nations that have lost the morality of self-limitation and ministry
to God, the Fatherland, and neighbor lose their spiritual strength
and become weak and vulnerable, thus bringing the threat of
extinction and the sad prospect of conceding their place to others
spiritually stronger. We have to understand this clearly and not
pursue the path leading to destruction, recalling the words of the
prophet: "Thus saith the Lord: Stand ye in the ways, and see, and
ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein, and
ye shall find rest for your souls" (Jeremiah 6:16).
The modern world encounters many afflictions: crime, terrorism, the
increasing number of suicides and abortions, the collapse of the
family, alcoholism and drug addiction, the destruction of the
environment and social injustice, the loneliness and suffering of
the souls of many people. These calamities can be overcome by
embarking on the path of the revival of faith in God who is ready to
grant forgiveness of sins and his gracious aid for a new life to
both individuals and whole nations. The Baptism of Rus’ is the
life-creating fount which sustains us to the present day and which
gives strength to build up the lives of the lands that are the
inheritors of historical Rus’ on the basis of the eternal values
which they have received from God and which unite and bind us
spiritually. These values and the world view which they have
influenced are reflected externally in the culture of our peoples,
including art, architecture, literature, education, our domestic way
of life, and the way we order our economy, our relationship with
nature and many other things, forming a commonality of a single
spiritual expanse of the inheritors of Holy Russia.
It
was a quarter of a century ago that that the rebirth of the Russian
Church began. During these years, tens of thousands of churches and
hundreds of monasteries have been restored and built, the Church’s
mission has been put on a sure footing in many spheres. A powerful
spiritual and moral factor in the life of our peoples – the Orthodox
Faith ‒ has become the heritage of millions of people. With humility
it is to be noted world history has not known such a great and swift
religious revival as that which has occurred throughout the
territory of historical Rus’ over the past twenty-five years. We
render our sincere thanks to God, who is the Lord of history, for
the mercy which he has shown to our peoples. From our hearts we
thank all those who have through their labors responded to this
compelling divine grace and made all of this possible.
However, there is still much to be accomplished, for the Lord awaits
from us new fruits. And the main fruit must be the uniting of faith
and life, the affirmation of Gospel truth in the words and deeds of
our compatriots.
We recall that, throughout history, the destinies of the peoples who
were spiritually born in the baptismal font of Kiev have played out
in various ways. In the past, they lived in a single country
extending from the Baltic Sea to the Black Sea, from Galicia to the
Volga River. At other periods, some of these peoples found
themselves under foreign dominion and formed part of other
countries. Yet our spiritual unity, preserved by the gracious power
of God and the common moral ideal preached and guarded by the
Russian Orthodox Church, has existed and still exists immutably.
The peoples in whom the holy Orthodox Faith has taken root are
called upon, as St. Sergius of Radonezh teaches, "to overcome the
divisions of this world in contemplation of the Holy Trinity," being
an example of brotherhood and mutual aid for mankind. Holy Russia
will live as long as it remains faithful to the choice made by St.
Vladimir, as long as it preserves its spiritual unity, as long as it
remembers and prayerfully venerates our common saints. And, if we
preserve this single heritage and spiritual affinity, then we have a
future.
May God, through the prayers of the saints who have shone forth in
the Land of Rus’, grant that we may be confirmed in the truth upon
which the life of our peoples has been built and, we believe, will
be built.
Translated by the Media Office of the Eastern American Diocese