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ADOPTION OF CHRISTIANITY IN RUSSIA
Vor.ru ^ | 11/12/2004 | Tatyana Shvetsova

Posted on 07/07/2005 12:44:30 PM PDT by jb6

Well before Ancient Russia, in the 1st century, Apostle Andrew the First-Called told his disciples as he stood on the Dnieper River:

“You see the mountains? They will witness God's grace in glory and there will stand a great city with many churches…”

And he then climbed up to the top of the mountains, gave his blessings, left a cross, said a prayer and came down and later on there sprang up the city Kiev....

This comes from the Russian Chronicles "The Tale of Bygone Years" by Nestor the Monk.

On the place where Andrew the First-Called said the teachings of Christ they built a church in his honour several centuries later...

Seeds of Christianity, scattered by the first missionaries, starting from Andrew the First-Called, took nearly one thousand years to put forth shoots in the land of our Eastern Slav forefathers. Until the 10th century Eastern Slavs practiced paganism worshipping various gods that stood for forces of nature and honoured the deceased forefathers as patrons. Slavs had no temples or priests. Instead, as the historians argue, they cultivated magi and sorcerers. Open heights served as convenient places to put up statues of deities made of wood or stone with altars before or around them. Sometimes the offerings included human sacrifices.

The first attempt to impart Christian values to our Slav forefathers was made by Saint Equal-to-the-Apostles Princess Olga - we told you of her in the previous program.

A widow after the death of Prince Igor, Olga ran the Ancient Russian state from the position of wisdom and discipline. In 955 (on other estimates in 957) Olga made a long trip to Byzantium, Constantinople, to borrow Christian wisdom and get christened. At the christening the Patriarch of Constantinople told her:

"Blessed are you among Russian women, for out you came of the darkness for the light. And blessed you will be in the hearts of future generations of the Russians and your grandchildren".

The head of the Byzantine church instructed Olga in the values of the religion, the Christian set of rules and prayer conduct and introduced her to the Ten Commandments. In the christening Olga got the name Yelena.

The princess took a priest with her and back home he baptized many of her entourage. And in the wake of her comeback from Byzantium Christian churches were built too.

Olga's most ardent wish was to see her son Svyatoslav a Christian too. But a brave warrior as he was, Svyatoslav remained adamantly against it. I know, he said, that I'd better listen to you, mother. But even if I wanted to get baptized, my people will not follow me. If I adopt the Christian law alone, my boyars and dignitaries will laugh at me. So why should I take up an alien religion that will drive people away from me and leave me in isolation unneeded and unwanted.

That was in the chronicles. But there must have been other reasons too. Along with devotion to his armed force Prince Svyatoslav couldn't accept the idea of salvation or understand the meaning and value of Christian faith to the state.

Princess Olga lived a long life, the last fifteen years of her life - in Christian faith. She died in July 969. 30 years after her death the Princess's relics were retrieved, untouched by decay. In the presence of masses of people the Holy relics were ceremoniously put into a stone coffin and taken to the newly-built Church of the Holy Mother of God in Kiev. That marked the first in Russian history public ritual to pay tribute to a saint.

According to the chronicles, on top of the stone sarcophagus was a small window and when someone with true belief in the sainthood of Princess Olga approached it, the window opened all on its own revealing to the eye the undecayed body of the blessed princess, radiating light like a sun. Many people are said to have become cured of various diseases at the coffin. If approached by a non-believer the window of the stone coffin stayed shut.

What Princess Olga strived so much to prepare Russia for was carried out by her grandson, Prince Vladimir, who made Christianity the official religion in Russia.

Prince Vladimir was Svyatoslav's son, Olga's grandson and Rurik's great-grandson.

Half of his life the Prince was a heathen, belligerent and sly, who had many wives. Even though he as well as his brothers was raised by their grandmother, Princess Olga, he remained deaf to the teachings of Christ and stayed ignorant to the Christian values. More than that, after killing his brother Yaropolk, he seized power and came to reign in Russia.

In all likelihood, the Prince's conscience never left him in peace after the fratricide, for the pagan faith forgave none of such acts either. So, in an attempt to ingratiate himself with the gods, the Prince plunged in earnest worship of the idols to which he brought offerings in large numbers. Vladimir was particularly generous to Perun, the god of thunder and lightning and the patron of prince's power. He made the god's statue with a silver head and gold moustache.

In 983, after another of his military successes, Prince Vladimir and his army thought it necessary to sacrifice human lives to the gods. A lot was cast and it fell on a youth, Ioann by name, the son of a Christian, Fyodor. His father stood firmly against his son being sacrificed to the idols. More than that, he tried to show the pagans the futility of their faith:

“Your gods are just plain wood: it is here now but it may rot into oblivion tomorrow; your gods neither eat, nor drink, nor talk and are made by human hand from wood; whereas there is only one God - He is worshipped by Greeks and He created heaven and earth; and your gods? They have created nothing, for they have been created themselves; never will I give my son to the devils!”

An open abuse of the deities, to which most of our forefathers bowed in reverence in those times, triggered widespread indignation. Rampant crowds killed the Christian Fyodor and his son Ioann. Later on, after the overall christening of Russia, people came to regard them as the first Christian martyrs in Russia and the Orthodox Church set a day to commemorate them - July 25th.

Immediately after the murder of Fyodor and Ioann Ancient Russia saw persecutions against Christians, many of which had to escape or conceal their belief. Churches stood ripped....

However, Prince Vladimir mused over the incident long after, and not in the last place, for political considerations too. The chronicles have it that different preachers came to the Prince, each offering a particular faith. Vladimir spoke to Muslims, Catholics, Jews but for different reasons rejected all the religions. Finally, a Greek philosopher told the prince of the Old and New Testaments and presented him with a canvas depicting Doomsday. When he learned of what the unrepentant were in for, Prince Vladimir went numb with horror and after a short pause said with a sigh: “Blessed are the good doers and damned are the evil!”

The Greek philosopher walked off with numerous gifts and honours. In 987 Prince Vladimir summoned boyars and city elders seeking counsel on all proposals from the religious emissaries. The boyars and elders pronounced the following judgment:

“Do remember, Your Honour, that each naturally praised his own religion. Should You want to find what each religion really is, send your men to different countries and let them tell you of how different peoples serve God.”

And out did the prince send his men to different countries...

The ambassador returned each with his own story. But no other religion had impressed them as much as the Greek.

“And we stepped on the Greek soil,” they recalled, “and they showed us their place of worship. And we knew not whether it's heaven or earth, for nowhere had we seen such a beauty, and we know not even how to speak of it. We knew only that God was there with people and that their service was better than anywhere. The beauty we've seen there will now never go, for never will you take the bitter if you've tasted the sweet. Likewise, no longer can we practice paganism.”

The story is narrated by Saint Nestor in "The Tale of Bygone Years", where he described the Prince's men as people of wisdom, who revealed such a profound understanding of Orthodoxy. The boyars provided the following argumentation:

“If the Greek religion were unworthy, Your grandmother, Princess Olga, the wisest of women, would have never adopted it.”

After learning thereby of various beliefs and getting repeated counseling from the boyars and the elders, Vladimir resolved to take the Greek religion. But he was too proud to address Byzantium in person for fear of being looked upon as a beggar.

In 988, after conquering the rich Greek city of Hersonissos Prince Vladimir sent ambassadors to Byzantine Emperors Vasily and Konstantin to announce that he wanted to marry their sister, Princess Anna. In case of refusal he threatened to take Constantinople. So the emperors had to concede. But a Christian cannot marry a pagan, even if he is the prince of a powerful and prosperous state. Vladimir had to be baptized and let go of his four wives and numerous concubines. And he promised to do so.

Princess Anna escorted by religious figures and civil officials set out to Hersonissos by sea. The chronicles say Prince Vladimir had eye trouble at the time and couldn't see anything. The princess convinced him of the urgency of his being baptized. As soon as the priest laid his hand on the prince his vision returned to him and the boyars, stunned by the miracle, got baptized in the same Saint Vasily Church on Hersonissos's city square. The surviving foundation of the church is now shown to tourists and pilgrims who arrive in the Crimea, which is now the territory of the Ukraine.

After the christening Prince Vladimir became Vasily. He built a new church in Hersonissos and returned the city to the Byzantine emperors. He took no prisoners. Instead, he invited with him several priests and in place of contribution took church vessels and the relics of saint Clement and his disciple Fim.

After getting enlightened through the Holy Gospels Prince Vladimir was keen on his subjects to follow suit too. For a start he ordered the destruction of all idols, which were dumped in rivers, cut with axes or burnt.

When all pagan shrines were destroyed Vladimir ordered all people to be baptized in the Dnieper and other rivers. Orthodox cathedrals rose up where heathen temples used to stand.

Prince Vladimir built a wooden church in Kiev in honour of Saint Vasily, his heavenly patron. Ironically, the church was built on the very place where the idol of the deity Perun had once stood.

From Constantinople the Prince called skillful architects to build a stone church in honour of the Holy Mother of God on the place where the Christians Fyodor and his son Ioann fell victim to the pagans in 983. By the year 996 the church was completed and Prince Vladimir gave it the crosses and vessels he had brought from Hersonissos. He also ordered that all services in the church be conducted by priests from Hersonissos. And he gave one tenth of his income for the maintenance of this establishment. After the Prince and Princess died, the church housed the marble shrine of Prince Vladimir and the sepulchre of Princess Anna.

The christening caused a profound transformation in Prince Vladimir changing his thoughts and looks. Nothing reminded of his pagan past. He was terrified of hurting anyone and took up arms only when it was necessary to defend his Motherland.

The Prince ordered schools to be built to teach Slavic alphabet and the Bible to the youngsters. He was helpful to the poor and sick and threw feasts for ordinary folks in cities and villages.

Vladimir's faith in Christianity took deep roots in him. He did whatever he could to live up to the honour of being called a Christian and became both a wise ruler and a spiritual leader to his people, who lovingly called him Vladimir the Red Sun. The church ordained the Prince in sainthood and made him Equal-to-the-Apostles. Russia's Orthodox believers mark July 28th as Commemoration Day for the Saint Equal-to-the-Apostles Grand Prince Vladimir.

Christianity took roots in Russia gradually, in continuous struggle with paganism. Even so, schools for future clergymen from among the Russians opened all the same and the Russian Orthodox Church came into being.

Christening marked a turning point in the lives of Russian people. Under the influence of the church pagan traditions vanished and enlightenment and culture arrived accompanied by rich literature translated from Greek, exquisite architecture and icon painting. The christening expanded Ancient Russia's ties with the rest of the Christian world.

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TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: christianity; churchhistory; history; russia; russianorthodox
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1 posted on 07/07/2005 12:44:42 PM PDT by jb6
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To: jb6

A nice article. Thank you for posting it.


2 posted on 07/07/2005 1:18:10 PM PDT by paudio (Four More Years..... Let's Use Them Wisely...)
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To: jb6
After Prince Vladimir, that most ambitious prince of the Kievan Rus, we have his son, Prince Yaroslav "The Wise" who caused to be built by Byzantine craftsmen the beautiful church of St. Sophia in Kiev.

Yaroslav also began the Kievan renaissance, promoting education, literacy and trade in his kingdom.

St. Sophia still stands in Kiev with most of its ancient mosaics intact. It is a most beautiful church and even though it is now a museum, you can feel the power of the faith that built it still.

YKPAINA!

3 posted on 07/07/2005 1:41:36 PM PDT by Jimmy Valentine (DemocRATS - when they speak, they lie; when they are silent, they are stealing the American Dream)
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To: Agrarian

Slava Bogu!


4 posted on 07/07/2005 1:45:22 PM PDT by Rytwyng
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To: Agrarian
Didn't I mention this yesterday?

“And we stepped on the Greek soil,” they recalled, “and they showed us their place of worship. And we knew not whether it's heaven or earth, for nowhere had we seen such a beauty, and we know not even how to speak of it. We knew only that God was there with people and that their service was better than anywhere. The beauty we've seen there will now never go, for never will you take the bitter if you've tasted the sweet. Likewise, no longer can we practice paganism

5 posted on 07/07/2005 1:47:56 PM PDT by Rytwyng
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To: jb6; All

What do you mean Christianity in Russia? There isn't any -- Didn't you know Evangelicals are sending missionaries there to spread the Gospel?

(sneer)


6 posted on 07/07/2005 2:14:02 PM PDT by 1stFreedom (1)
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To: jb6
One major problem: Kievan Rus is not Russia but today's Ukraine. Another example how Russians and propagandists are trying to steal Ukrainian culture, religion and history. Rus is not Russia, Kiev is ancient capital of Ukraine not Russia. Russians - Muscovites are far remote from European Slavs.
More disinformation by our Russian "brothers" and their FR rep. JB6.
7 posted on 07/07/2005 2:29:25 PM PDT by Leo Carpathian (FReeeePeee!)
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To: Leo Carpathian

"One major problem: Kievan Rus is not Russia but today's Ukraine. Another example how Russians and propagandists are trying to steal Ukrainian culture, religion and history. Rus is not Russia, Kiev is ancient capital of Ukraine not Russia. Russians - Muscovites are far remote from European Slavs."

Worth repeating. I thought there were rules against using .ru sources. No reputable western source would promote this Kremlin propaganda.

Whats next - the roots of Russian industry in East Berlin? Or the ancient Russian oil fields of South Viet Nam?


8 posted on 07/07/2005 2:58:21 PM PDT by spanalot
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To: Rytwyng

A most beautiful story, isn't it? And thanks so much for the ping.

We have many visitors to our Orthodox Church, and they visit for many reasons. Some become Orthodox, some become a part of our "pack" of regular long-time visitors and fellow-travellers (they are like a part of the parish family), and others don't come back.

A common theme, however, is the way they talk about how beautiful our services are. We don't have the best choir, the smoothest chanting priest, the nicest icons, etc... Pretty average. But the services themselves shine through, no matter how humble the setting...

Thanks again for the ping.


9 posted on 07/07/2005 4:15:56 PM PDT by Agrarian
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Comment #10 Removed by Moderator

To: Agrarian
A common theme, however, is the way they talk about how beautiful our services are.

Yes, the Eastern Rite (Byzantine Catholic, Greco-Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Ukrainian Orthodox, Russian Orthodox, etc.) church services are the most beautiful. This is why kniaz Volodymyr when searching for the religion to accept chose just that. But for Russians to claim that it is "their" service is like saying Stalin was a saint :-)

11 posted on 07/07/2005 6:18:29 PM PDT by Leo Carpathian (FReeeePeee!)
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To: Leo Carpathian; RussianBoor; RusIvan; Romanov; A. Pole; Destro; sergey1973; MarMema; FormerLib; ...
Kievan Rus is not Russia but today's Ukraine.

Not your revisionist crap again. Yes, in that day, Ukraine refered to modern day Belaruss, which was the edge of civilization. Funny, Kieven Rus' original capital was Novograd (where is that city?) Then it became the second main city. And what was the first? Oh yes, that was Vladimer. And where is Vladimer located? Why it's located rather well EAST of Moscow. Keep trying with your revisionism, it'll still never stick.

As for what is modern day Ukraine, half of that was Greek (the south coastal) or empty steppe.

Rus is not Russia, Kiev is ancient capital of Ukraine not Russia. Russians - Muscovites are far remote from European Slavs.

One of your stupidest statements yet. Moscow was a small city in Kieven Rus, so who the bloody hell built it? The Japanese? Pskov? Smolensk? Ryzan? Semenov? Yaroslav? Nizni Novograd?

How can you post such stupidity?

Hay bright light, try to spot where Moscow is on this map of Kieven Rus. What? It's not even on the eastern edge but near the center???? No, not according to your lies.

Do you actually believe your own lies? Or do you think you can play on people's ignorance and that no one will come around and show you for the liar you are?


12 posted on 07/08/2005 12:20:37 AM PDT by jb6 ( Free Haghai Sophia! Crusade!)
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To: Leo Carpathian
But for Russians to claim that it is "their" service is like saying Stalin was a saint :-)

May your tongue show the serpent's split that your soul displays.

13 posted on 07/08/2005 12:21:44 AM PDT by jb6 ( Free Haghai Sophia! Crusade!)
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To: Agrarian
Leo Carpathian is a notorious revisionist and liar. The worst part is his lies are so dumb that they can easily be disproved by dozens of historical maps and sites, but he tries to do it anyways.

He is also a huge supporter of the socialist Yushchenko and his communist/revolutionary prime minister who have managed to ruin Ukraine's economy in 7 months.

14 posted on 07/08/2005 12:23:17 AM PDT by jb6 ( Free Haghai Sophia! Crusade!)
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Comment #15 Removed by Moderator

To: Leo Carpathian
They attack anything that reports on positive aspects of soviet empire falling apart and progress of the old satellites. Admin obviously gives blessing to it, while any retorts are taken off as "personal attacks". IS FR being hijacked by the commies?

Aren't you just the liar. Oh and it's funny, I don't see you so vocal on your home boy Socialist Yushchenko. What's the matter, government price controls, welfare programs, tax raises, etc not something you want anyone to notice? You spent months attacking us and defending RED Socialists and you call yourself a conservative?

16 posted on 07/08/2005 12:29:11 AM PDT by jb6 ( Free Haghai Sophia! Crusade!)
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To: jb6

Actually, today's Russia, Belarus and Ukraine are descendants of Kievan Rus. Just before the Mongol invasion the state broke for many principalities and no prince was supreme, even in theory, after Prince Andrey Bogoliubski of Vladimir and Suzdal' captured and burned Kiev in 1169.

After Mongol's invasion the Rus's prinicipalities were damaged that badly that there were only 100 houses in Kiev a century after it was taken by the Mongols.

The land was colonised by Luthuanians and Polish, who used their chance and only East-Northern Prince of Moscow could restore sovereignity in 1480. Lithuania, Poland-Lithuania some time after, and Russia (Moscow) competed for the lands of former Kievan Rus.

Practically once single nation broke for the three parts because they lived in different states. As for the Ukrainian part, some Polish settlers also participated in creation of Ukrainian ethnicity.

There is also a big difference between the Western Part of today's Ukraine which was a part of Polish-Ukrainian Commonwealth for long time (up the end of 18th century) and Eastern part which was acquired by Russia in the middle of 17th century.

Ukrainian, Russian and Belorussian languages are that close to each other, that a person of one ethnicity can read in a language of another two without consulting a dictionary. Oral communication is easy too - you understand you're understood.


17 posted on 07/08/2005 3:15:18 AM PDT by Freelance Warrior
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To: Leo Carpathian; jb6; spanalot; sergey1973

One major problem: Kievan Rus is not Russia but today's Ukraine. ==

Funny:)))

Leo do you expel from Kiev Rus the town Novgorod? Or Suzdal or Smolensk with Tver?
All those ancient towns with history more then 1000 years was included in Kiev Rus. BUT there are NOT in the limits of tiday's Ukraine.
How so if Kiev Rus is today' Ukraine as you said?:)))

BTW do you expel from Kiev Rus the lands and town of today's Belorus too?:)))) You refuse russians I understand but WHY you refuse beloruses. Are they guilty of something before you?:))

The problem of west-ukranian "historiographers" that they inflate the role of Karpatian Rus and dimished all others parts of same Kiev Rus.
Kiev Rus was biggest state of Europe of ancient times but you cut it up and dimishes her role.


18 posted on 07/08/2005 4:37:39 AM PDT by RusIvan
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To: spanalot; jb6

I thought there were rules against using .ru sources. No reputable western source would promote this Kremlin propaganda. ==

SO now it "Kremlin propaganda"?:)) Just few weeks ago as I recall you told someting about "soviet\russian propaganda":)).
When they prove to you that Stalin wasn't russian you changed.
I see progress. Sense comming up to you bit by bit:)).

Just one question. Does all .ru sites (about 1 million and so) constitute Kremlin propaganda or not?
Fllow up: how many people has Kramlin propaganda outlet to fill up 1 mln of web sites and how many money spent on it?
:))))))))


19 posted on 07/08/2005 4:43:22 AM PDT by RusIvan
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To: 1stFreedom

The fact that someone is sending missionaries to a certain place doesn't mean there'is no Christian faith in the place. Those two statements have no logical connection between each other...


20 posted on 07/08/2005 4:43:53 AM PDT by Freelance Warrior
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