Spiritual Christianity

Spiritual Christianity (духовное христианство) is the group of belief systems held by so-called folk Protestants (narodnye protestanty), including non-Eastern Orthodox indigenous faith tribes and new religious movements that emerged in the Russian Empire. Their origins are varied: some from Protestant movements imported from Europe to Russia by missionaries, travelers and workers; some due to disgust of the behavior (absenteeism, alcoholism, profiteering) of Orthodox priests; and, some from the Bezpopovtsy Raskolniks. These influences mixed with folk traditions, resulting in communities collectively called sektanty (sectarians). These communities were typically documented by Russian Orthodox clergy with a label that described their heresy: not fasting, meeting on Saturday (sabbatarians), rejecting the spirit (spirit wrestlers), body mutilation (castigators), self-flagellation, suicide, and more.

These heterodox (non-orthodox) groups “rejected ritual and outward observances, believing instead in the direct revelation of God to the inner man”. Adherents are called Spiritual Christians (Russian: духовные христиане) or, less accurately, malakan in the Former Soviet Union, and “Molokans” in the United States, often confused with “Doukhobors” in Canada. Molokane proper constituted the largest and most organized of many Spiritual Christian groups in the Russian Empire.

History

Historian Pavel Milyukov traced the origins of Spiritual Christianity to the Doukhobors, who were first recorded in the 1800s but originated earlier. Milyukov believed the movement reflected developments among Russian peasants similar to those underlying the German Peasants’ War in the German Reformation of the 1500s. Many Spiritual Christians embraced egalitarian and pacifist beliefs, which were considered politically radical views by the Imperial government.

The Russian government deported some groups to internal exile in Central Asia. About one percent escaped suppression by emigrating (1898–1930s) to North America forming a diaspora which divided into many sub-groups.

Resurrection Of Jesus Christ Painting Iconography

Resurrection Of Jesus Christ, Iconography

Beliefs

Spiritual Christians believe that the validity of an individual’s observance of God’s Law was suppressed and prohibited as Israel became politicized; they believe that Jesus Christ promoted the New Covenant of Jeremiah by sacrificing his life to initiate the Messianic Era. The religion of the Spiritual Christians encourages individual spiritual interpretation and substitute observances of Biblical Law, with individual approaches to be understood and respected by all. Spiritual Christians have taken an inclusive approach to Christianity; they embrace all relevant aspects of the collective human experience which can be related to timeless Biblical themes.

Rejecting bureaucratic church hierarchy, they considered their religious organization as a homogeneous community, without division into laymen and clergy with respect to all but practical understanding of the Biblical tradition. Because of their rejection of hierarchy and authority, the Imperial government considered them suspect. In the modern era, some Spiritual Christian churches hardened their own doctrine and practices, reducing the flexibility first found in this sect.

Sects

Among the sects considered to practice Spiritual Christianity are the Doukhobors, Maksimisty, Molokans, Subbotniks, Pryguny (Jumpers), Khlysts, Skoptsy, Ikonobortsy (Icon-fighters, “Iconoclasts”) and Zhidovstvuyushchiye (Жидовствующие: Judaizers). These sects often have radically different notions of “spirituality” and practices. Their common denominator is that they sought God in “Spirit and Truth” (Gospel of John 4:24) rather than in the Church of official Orthodoxy or ancient rites of Popovtsy. Their saying was “The church is not within logs, but within ribs”. The movement was popular with intellectuals such as Tolstoy. Nikolai Leskov was also drawn to Spiritual Christianity after visiting Protestant Europe in 1875.

Separate from Spiritual Christianity were other strands of Russian sektanstvo (“sectarianism” in the sense “splitting into sects” rather than “sectarian bigotry”) including the Popovtsy and “Evangelical Christianity”.

Adapted from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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