Greetings Fr. Joseph!
I'm not here to discuss Milan, believe it or not. Neither did I just happen to sign on, believe it or not. I was wondering, though, if a new thread could be started with your last post on the subject of such prophecies as the one that you posted from Staretz Lavrenty of Chernigov. It would be interesting to discuss his prophecy more completely, and specifically in the context of prophecies from other Russian and Greek saints and elders concerning the future of Russian and the Last Days. In particular, what you provided stated:
"The time will come," said Fr. Lavrenty, "when they will renovate even the closed churches, and fix them up not only outside but also inside. They wilt gild the cupolas of both churches and belfries. But when this is finished, it will usher in the reign of antichrist. Pray that the Lord grant us an extension of time that we might strengthen ourselves, because a frightful time awaits us. Do you see bow craftily everything is being prepared? All the churches will be absolutely magnificent, as never before, but one must not go into those churches.The rest of Staretz Lavrenty's words refer to the time of the Antichrist. He clearly says that the "official churches" that have been renovated and beautified, once this renovation and beautification is complete, will be "taken over" by the Antichrist, that the gatherings in these churches will be "satanic" and that they will be "devoid of grace". Unless I am misstaken, you provided this quote in application to the present-day MP, perhaps to suggest that this quote indicates the absence of grace in the present MP, or perhaps advocating that we have nothing to do with the MP precisely because all of these renovated and newly built churches will eventually belong to the Antichrist when he comes to reign.
While this is true, according to the prophecies I have read, that the "official churches" will likely be taken over by the Antichrist and be "devoid of grace" and "satanic", the Antichrist to my knowledge has not yet been crowned in Jerusalem, as Staretz Lavrenty states will occur. What about the official churches before the Antichrist. In particular, what do we make about the prophecies of the restoration of Orthodoxy in Russia and throughout the world, the crowning of a last Orthodox Tsar, a final flowering of Orthodoxy before the end? Those who have accepted this reunion of ROCOR and the MP have done so precisely because they see the fall of communism and the building of thousands of churches and hundreds of monasteries as the beginning of this renewal and resurrection. True, this restoration is not yet "complete" but is rather at its very beginning, according to this understanding. In the context of these prophecies concerning this restoration of Orthodoxy, then, I would be interested in the thoughts of you and others on how these prophecies might relate to what we see occurring today in Russia. If this is not the beginning of the restoration of Orthodoxy in Russia, how do you expect it to occur otherwise?
Here are a few prophecies concerning this restoration:
Starets Anatole the Younger of Optina, in the very first days of the Revolution, in February 1917, made a prophecy in the form of a vivid picture of the future of Russia: “There will be a storm. And the Russian ship will be smashed to pieces. But people can be saved even on splinters and fragments. And not everyone will perish. One must pray, everyone must repent and pray fervently. And what happens after a storm? ...There will be a calm.’ At this everyone said: ‘But there is no more ship, it is shattered to pieces; it has perished, everything has perished.’ ‘It is not so,’ said Batiushka. ‘A great miracle of God will be manifested. And all the splinters and fragments, by the will of God and His power, will come together and be united, and the ship will be rebuilt in its beauty and will go on its own way as foreordained by God. And this will be a miracle evident to everyone.” [Orthodox Russia, 1970, no. 1, p. 9].
Elder Barnabas of the Gethsemane Skete spoke before the Revolution of the disaster coming upon Russia and the cruel persecutions against the Orthodox Faith. He said: “Persecutions against the faith will constantly increase. There will be unheard-of grief and darkness, and almost all the churches will be closed. But when it will seem to people that it is impossible to endure any longer, then deliverance will come. There will be a flowering. Churches will even begin to be built. But this will be a flowering before the end” [private letter from N. Kieter].
Elder Nectarius of Optina in the 1920’s prophesied: “Russia will arise, and materially it will not be wealthy. But in spirit it will be wealthy, and in Optina there will yet be seven luminaries, seven pillars” [I.M. Kontzevich, Optina Monastery and its Epoch, Jordanville, 1973, p.538].
Archbishop Theophan of Poltava summed up in the 1930’s the prophecies which he had received from such elders as these: “You ask me about the near future and about the last times. I do not speak on my own, but give the revelation of the Elders: The coming of Antichrist draws nigh and is very near. The time separating us from him should be counted a matter of years and at most a matter of some decades. But before the coming of Antichrist Russia must yet be restored — to be sure, for a short time. And in Russia there must be a Tsar forechosen by the Lord Himself. He will be a man of burning faith, great mind and iron will. This much has been revealed about him. We shall await the fulfillment of what has been revealed. Judging by many signs it is drawing nigh, unless because of our sins the Lord God shall revoke, shall alter what has been promised. According to the witness of the word of God, this also happens” [The Orthodox Word, 1969, no. 4, p. 194].
Well, you have a good point about the Russian prophecies on the surface, which is why many traditionalists (including myself) do not consider the current Russian Federation to be "Russia" per se. There is no Tsar currently, furthermore.
Certainly we are not going to try to argue that the RF today is "spiritually, but not materially wealthy". Exactly the opposite is true.
My concern is that the prophecies pertaining to the reign of the Antichrist do not cause us to overlook the prophesied restoration of Orthodoxy which is to precede this time. In doing so, we could inadvertently "blaspheme the Holy Spirit" by attributing this work of restoring Orthodoxy to the Evil One rather than to God.
I wish I had access to a lot of the old prophecies collected; as I understood it, some were in fact "either/or" propositions-- that if Russia did not repent, for example, that this would speed the coming of the end. Actually, the last one above does so at its final line: "Judging by many signs it is drawing nigh, unless because of our sins the Lord God shall revoke, shall alter what has been promised. According to the witness of the word of God, this also happens".
But I would think from a traditional Orthodox, and even just a logical perspective, there is no reason to go even this far. Before this flowering of Orthodoxy you have correctly mention, we both agree there is persecution. Now, most pro-MP folks would argue that the persecution has ended. This unfortunately only works if you believe the MP is the legitimate Church of Russia. More importantly, there is no real substantial difference one can note between the persecution of the late 80's (which was by then really not overt) and what is finally being reverted to now (which is slowly becoming more visible). If you look at it politically, or economically, there is freedom, just as there is in China, for example, but now you are free to be part of the Moscow Patriarchate in Russia. Well, that's not freedom. The Soviets had open churches for a while in Russia, which the believers had to stay away from (but as an officially atheist state, would still subject you to mockery).
So has that flowering of faith come yet? Is there still a required repentance on the part of Russia? Yes. So if any good comes out of arguing these prophecies it was a useful reminder, that maybe we still have a few days yet to repent, thank God! But not many. When God moves, He can be very swift. Or, if the evil of the people is too much, we'll skip right to the worst part, which can happen too. I am somewhat more pessimistic. But I am pretty sure I am not blaspheming when I say the Moscow Patriarchate is not the fulfillment of the restored Church of Russia.