Saturday, February 7, 2015

Paul Robinson — Russia’s Holy War?


The latest BS about "Orthodox jihad" and why it is BS. Setting the record straight on Orthodox doctrine.
Is Russia waging an ‘Orthodox jihad’ against the West? John Schindler, a former National Security Agency official and professor at the U.S. Naval War College, thinks so. The war in Ukraine, says Schindler, ‘bears more than a little resemblance to Holy War in a Russian and Orthodox variant.’ He attributes to Moscow, ‘a virulent ideology, and explosive amalgam of xenophobia, Chekism, and militant Orthodoxy which justifies the Kremlin’s actions and explains why the West must be opposed at all costs.’ In a second essay Schindler similarly remarks that, ‘The Kremlin now believes that they [sic] are at war with the United States, an Orthodox Holy War’. 
In his blog for The American Conservative, Rod Dreher writes that he finds parts of Schindler’s thesis ‘perceptive’. It isn’t. It reflects a deep misunderstanding of Orthodox theology on the subject of war. Moreover, Schindler cites Ivan Ilyin (whose work I have discussed on this blog here and here) in support of his thesis, calling this ‘holy war’ an example of ‘Ilyinism’. Ilyin’s writings on the subject of violence cannot support that conclusion either. 
Holy war has never achieved the same recognition in Orthodox theology as in that of Catholicism. Orthodox theologians have overwhelmingly tended toward the idea that war is sometimes ‘necessary’ as a lesser evil but can never be considered ‘just’. Father Alexander Webster thus notes that, in contrast to Catholicism, which developed a ‘just war theory’, Orthodoxy developed a ‘justifiable war ethic.’ In a study of mediaeval Church documents and Byzantine military manuals, Father Stanley Harakas concluded that, ‘The Eastern Orthodox Patristic tradition rarely praised war and, to my knowledge, never called it “just” or a moral good.’ A meeting of senior Orthodox theologians in Minsk in 1989 issued a statement proclaiming that:
The Orthodox Church unreservedly condemns war as an evil. Yet it also recognizes that in the defence of the innocent and the protection of one’s people from unjust attack, criminal activity, and the overthrowing of oppression, it is sometimes necessary, with reluctance, to resort to arms. In every case, such a decision must be taken with full consciousness of its tragic dimensions. Consequently, the Greek fathers of the Church have never developed a ‘just war theory’, preferring rather to speak of the blessings of and the preference for peace.
Similarly, in 2000 the Jubilee Council of Russian bishops phrased its views on war in terms solely of occasional necessity, saying: ‘While recognizing war as an evil, the Church does not prohibit her children from participating if at stake is the security of their neighbours and the restoration of trampled justice. Then war is to be considered a necessary though undesirable means.’ 
Whereas the Catholic Church invented the concept of crusades to spread the faith by means of the sword, the Orthodox Church never endorsed a similar idea. Nor did it endorse the belief, supported by Catholicism in the Middle Ages, that death in a holy war leads to the salvation of the soul.…
The same with Putin's "favorite philosopher."
As for Ivan Ilyin, I will examine his writings on the ethics of force in more detail in another post, but for now it is sufficient to point out that although Ilyin was very firm in arguing that it was necessary to wage war against evil, in line with Orthodox theology he made it very clear that it while ‘necessary’ it was not ‘just’. In his essay The Moral Contradiction of War, Ilyin argued that ‘every war without exception is a morally guilty act.’ He developed this theme further in his 1925 bookOn Resistance to Evil by Force, in which he stressed that the use of force cannot be considered ‘just’, merely ‘an unsinful (!) perpetration of injustice’. Writing to fellow émigré I. Demidov, he wrote, ‘All my research proves that the sword is not “holy” and not “just”.’ 
Schindler’s effort to enlist Ilyin as evidence of Russian holy war again displays a profound ignorance.
Nowadays, a blend of liberal democracy, free markets, and human rights has replaced Christianity as the ideology of choice in the West, but the belief that it is ‘just’ to wage war to spread this ideology remains strong. There is, however, no such thing as ‘Holy War in a Russian and Orthodox variant.’
I would add that there is a strong tendency on the part of many Americans that self-identity as Christians to conflate neoliberalism with Christian doctrine. Which is absurd.

Irrussianality
Russia’s Holy War?
Paul Robinson

7 comments:

Matt Franko said...

Well I dont know about "the church" (TIP: metonym and non-scriptural term....) but Paul wrote this about "the sword" to Christians in Romans 13:

"Now you do not want to be fearing the authority. Do good, and you will be having applause from it.
4 For it is God's servant for your good. Now if you should be doing evil, fear, for not feignedly is it wearing the sword. For it is God's servant, an avenger for indignation to him who is committing evil.

Paul here identifying the sword as an earthly implement used by those in authority to avenge evil... Paul doesnt mention earthly wars or warring other than to use it as metaphor...

rsp,

Ignacio said...

Even if you are an atheist Matt?

Anyway, religion is even more destructive than other forms of (political) ideology. Only have to see the perfidious union of the calvinist and wahhabists during the last decades and the chaos they have created in large regions of the globe.

Tom Hickey said...

Capitalism is also a religion that worships material gods, liberalism is its religion, and conventional economics is its theology.

Ignacio said...

Heh, right, and the worshipping zombies are usually those 'calvinists' or christemdom (as put by Matt usually).


Is amusing to see the mental gymnastics some of that people have to do to deal with all their self cognitive biases and belief-system inconsistencies.

Tom Hickey said...

"Is amusing to see the mental gymnastics some of that people have to do to deal with all their self cognitive biases and belief-system inconsistencies."

Especially amazing is to watch, on one hand, the US religious right conflate their views of biblical Christianity, American exceptionalism, and neoliberal capitalism, with some Ayn Rand thrown in — without much attention to either logic or historical evidence. And on the other, the conflation of democracy and neoliberalism into plutonomy based on marginalism and just deserts.

Matt Franko said...

"worships material gods"

Tom, imo that's taking it a bit far Tom ... many there are caught up in pleonexia (more-having),etc.. for sure, but nobody is offering divine service to idol images created to represent "the god of capitalism"...

Paul: "This, then, I am saying and attesting in the Lord: By no means are you still to be walking according as those of the nations also are walking, in the vanity of their mind,
18 their comprehension being darkened, being estranged from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them, because of the callousness of their hearts,
19 who, being past feeling, in greed give themselves up with wantonness to all uncleanness as a vocation."

They are for sure caught up in any or all combinations of the above things (while we all here are not....)

but its not "idolatry" or "worshiping gods", etc.... as they are not offering divine service to any thing as part of what they are doing in all of this...

"idolatry" is "eidololatreias" which means "perceive-whole-divine- service"...

So for "god worship" or "idolatry", there has to be 'divine service' being observed in these people (not present) and the 'idol' has to also be being "perceived whole" vs. how God cannot be being 'perceived whole' at this time...

So imo not as pagan as true "idolatry" right now but what these the disgraced among us are caught up in is still a pretty serious problem for these people no doubt....

rsp,

Tom Hickey said...

"No one can serve two masters; for a slave will either hate the one and love the other, or be devoted to the one and despise the other. You cannot serve God and wealth."

Matthew 6:24