The debate over the propriety of Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) priests blessing Russian bombs and weapons of mass destruction (OMP) is heating up.
According to Interfaks, first deputy chief of the synod’s public relations and media department Aleksandr Shchipkov has expressed disagreement with a possible ban on the consecration of certain types of armaments.
Early this month Meduza reported the ROC’s Inter-Council Presence (an advisory body that helps draft church policy) suggested ending the practice of consecrating some conventional weapons and OMP. Its proposal will considered until at least June 1. The Presence argued that consecrating armaments doesn’t reflect the church’s traditions and should be “abolished from pastoral practice.”
The debate on blessing bombs apparently began last summer.
Interfaks reported that the proposed ban would stop the consecration of weapons which can kill “untold numbers of people” as well as “indiscriminate weapons and weapons of mass destruction.”
Priest consecrates mobile ICBM launchers
Shchipkov, however, said:
The essential motive of the document’s text really separates the soldier from his weapon, asserting, figuratively speaking, that it’s possible to bless the armor, but not the sword. But the Church can’t bless the man and his mission halfway . . . . Including the topic of banning the blessing of this or that type of weapon on the political agenda is an indirect blow to the people’s trust in the army and to the country’s sovereignty.
Responding to the biblical call to “turn the other cheek” against violence, Shchipkov said, “We have a right to turn our own cheek, but we are obligated to protect the cheek of those close to us.”
He claimed a ban on consecrating arms will be viewed as a sign of weakness by Russia’s enemies. (Seriously? Does he think blessing them makes the country stronger?)
Addressing nuclear weapons specifically, Shchipkov concluded:
It’s not necessary for us to repent an inclination toward the unjustified use of nuclear forces. It remains for us to say only that our policy of reasonable defense sufficiency lies in the mainstream of Christian principles.
We recall that military duty is highly valued in Orthodoxy. A weapon is sanctified by serving just and noble aims just as is any involuntary use of force. The subject of discussion should be the purposes of bearing and employing arms not blessing them. It’s important precisely who and how a weapon is used and with what intentions, but not specifically what he uses. Arms themselves don’t kill, but the people using them do, therefore it’s absurd to evaluate a weapon by the degree of its “morality.”
Wouldn’t want to spin into debating just war theory, etc. Suffice it to say it’s interesting that the Russians are discussing it. The argument’s been going on in the West since the dawn of the nuclear age.
Nevertheless, the image of Russian Orthodox priests sprinkling holy water on ICBM launchers isn’t a particularly good look for them, the Russian military, or the Kremlin. At least to Western eyes. But the average Ivan probably doesn’t worry about it too much.
Because of the ROC’s traditional subservience to the state, look for the church to go as Vladimir Putin indicates. That means more tanks will get sprinkled.
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4 comments
would you rather it was blessed by homosexuals?
If any weapon of death needs to be ‘blessed’, then
let it be blessed by God alone. Not by a mortal. Mortals are not God.
In the Orthodox Faith the faithful petition/seek/pray for God’s blessing .. That is what the Priest is actually doing. Thru prayer and supplication he asks God to bless the weapons that if they be used it be in a just cause worthy of God’s Blessing.. L:ike I said the same thing is done by the United States. Servicemen do the same things as well. Much to the Chagrin of the Evil ones around us. Perfectly Appropriate.. and Wonderful in that Russia under Communisim was barred from the practice and now has restored it.
It is perfectly appropriate and American Servicemen to this day indeed even American Services at one point did the same thing .. A weapon is but a tool which can be used for good or for evil.. To bless the weapon is to hand it’s usage over to God to ask that it be used for good and not for evil.. That does not mean it must be used or set aside.. It is a prayer and a submission to God that it be used only in a Just Cause..