Alexander Men
Alexander Vladimirovich Men (Russian: Алекса́ндр Влади́мирович Мень, romanized: Aleksandr Vladimirovich Men'; 22 January 1935 – 9 September 1990) was a Soviet Russian Orthodox priest, dissident, theologian, biblical scholar and author of theology, the history of religion, the fundamentals of Christian doctrine, and Orthodox worship.[1] Men wrote dozens of books (including his magnum opus, History of Religion: In Search of the Way, the Truth and the Life (1970 onwards), the seventh volume of which (entitled Son of Man, 1969) served as the introduction to Christianity for thousands of citizens of the Soviet Union); baptized hundreds; founded an Orthodox open university in 1990; opened one of the first Sunday schools in the USSR; and founded a charity group at the Russian Children's Hospital.[2] Men was murdered early on a Sunday morning, on the 9th of September, 1990, by axe-wielding assailant(s) outside his home in Semkhoz in the Sergiyevo-Posadsky District of the Moscow Oblast in Russia. The circumstances of the murder remain unclear.[3] LifeBackgroundMen's father, Volf Gersh-Leibovich (Vladimir Grigoryevich) Men, was born in 1902 in Kiev. Volf attended a religious Jewish school during his childhood, but did not practice religion. He later graduated from two universities and worked as the chief engineer of a textile factory.[4][5] Men's maternal ancestors, originally from Poland, had lived in Russia since the 18th century.[5] His grandmother, Cecilia Vasilevskaya, and grandfather, Odessa resident Semyon (Solomon) Ilyich Tsuperfein, met in Switzerland while studying at the Faculty of Chemistry at the University of Bern.[5] Their daughter Yelena (Alexander's mother) was born in Bern in 1908. After graduating, Semyon, Cecilia, and their daughter lived in Paris. In 1914, during a visit to Russia, Semyon was mobilized, and the family settled in Kharkov.[5] Yelena Semyonovna Men (née Tsuperfein) was drawn to Christianity from a young age.[5] She studied the Orthodox faith at a private gymnasium in Kharkov.[6][5] As a high school student, she moved to Moscow to live with her grandmother Anna Osipovna Vasilevskaya. In 1934, she married Volf.[6] Early lifeMen was born in Moscow to a Jewish family on 22 January 1935. At the age of six months, he was secretly baptized with his mother in Zagorsk by the priest Archimandrite Seraphim (Bityukov) of the banned Catacomb Church, a branch of the Russian Orthodox Church that refused to cooperate with Soviet authorities.[7] When Men was six years old, his father was arrested by the NKVD.[8] His father spent more than a year under guard and then was assigned to labor in the Ural Mountains. Men studied at the Moscow Fur Institute in 1955 and transferred to Irkutsk Agriculture Institute from which he was expelled in 1958 due to his religious beliefs. One month after his expulsion, June 1st, 1958, he was ordained a deacon and sent to the parish of the Intercession of the Most Holy Theotokos in Akulovo. PriesthoodOn September 1, 1960, Men became a priest, graduating from the Leningrad Theological Seminary. His consecration took place at the Donskoy Monastery. Men was appointed second priest in the Church of the Intercession of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Petrovskoye-Alabin , where a year later he became rector of the temple.[9] In 1965, he completed his studies at Moscow Theological Academy.[citation needed] In 1964 and 1965, Men's father was investigated in connection with his acquaintance Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.[10] Men became a leader with considerable influence and a good reputation among Christians both locally and abroad, among Roman Catholics, Protestants, and Orthodox.[citation needed] He served in a series of parishes near Moscow. During the 1960s, Men was a pioneer of Christian “samizdat” (self-publishing).[11] Starting in the early 1970s, Men became a popular figure in Russia's religious community, especially among the intelligentsia.[12] Men was targeted by the KGB for his active missionary and evangelistic efforts. In 1974, Yuri Andropov wrote a letter to the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union about the "ideological struggle of the Vatican against the USSR," where he wrote: "A group of pro-Catholic-minded priests, headed by A. Men (Moscow Oblast), in their theological works pushes through the idea that only Catholicism can be the ideal of church life. These works, illegally exported abroad, are published by the Catholic publishing house Life with God (Belgium) and are then sent for distribution in the USSR."[10] In 1984, Men was interrogated in the case of his student Sergei Marcus ; during these interrogations, Men was threatened with a ban on serving in any of the Moscow parishes.[13] An article published in the Trud newspaper in the spring of 1986 accused him of attempting to create an "anti-Soviet underground" under the auspices of Archpriest John Meyendorff; organizing "illegal religious matinees"; and personally voicing "slide films of a religious propaganda nature, which he illegally distributed among believers."[14] On May 11, 1988, Men's first public lecture took place in the hall of the Institute of Steel and Alloys. As Alexander Kravetsky noted, "the organizers were completely amazed that a church theme could attract a full hall without any advertising."[15] In the late 1980s, he utilized mass media to proselytize and was offered to host a nationally televised program on religion.[12] Men was one of the founders of the Russian Bible Society in 1990; that same year he founded the Open Orthodox University and "The World of the Bible" journal.[7] His efforts in educating the Russian populace about the Orthodox faith has garnered him the labeling by the Soviet newspaper Sotsialisticheskaya Industriya as a modern-day apostle to the Soviet intelligentsia. However, some representatives of Orthodox Christianity have voiced their opinion that several of Men's views were not sufficiently “orthodox” and even advised against using his books as an introduction to Orthodoxy. Men actively supported charitable activities, attending the founding of the Mercy Group at the Russian Children's Clinical Hospital, which was later named after him.[16] MurderOn Sunday morning, 9 September 1990, Men was murdered while walking along the wooded path from his home in the Russian village of Semkhoz (near Moscow) to the local train platform. He was on his way to catch the train to Novaya Derevnya to celebrate the Divine Liturgy. Men had served at the parish in Novaya Derevnya for 20 years. His assailant or assailants used an axe. The murder occurred around the time of the dissolution of the Soviet Union, and despite orders from within the Soviet (and later the Russian) government that the case be further investigated, the murder remains unsolved. His funeral was held on the day in the Orthodox calendar which commemorates the beheading of John the Baptist.[citation needed] According to Lieutenant General of Police Vyacheslav Pankin :
Views and thoughtAccording to Men, "the history of world religiosity begins not with Christianity, but much earlier. Christianity is the highest point in the development of religious experience."[18] Men positioned his attitude towards antiquity and paganism as Christian: "even in paganism you will find a presentiment and anticipation of the Good News. It is not for nothing that the Apostle Paul made the altar of the 'Unknown God' the starting point of his sermon in Athens. However, this kind of dialogue will often be replaced by a compromise with aspects of ancient beliefs that are alien to the Gospel."[19] WorksMen's greatest work is his History of Religion, published in seven volumes under the title In Search of the Way, the Truth, and the Life (volumes 1–6, Brussels, 1970–1983; 2nd edition Moscow, 1991–1992) in which the author examines the history of non-Christian religions as a way for Christians in the struggle of Magiism and Monotheism. Also including as the seventh volume his most famous work, Son of Man (Brussels, 1969; 2nd edition Moscow, 1991). Because of the persecution in the Soviet Union at the time, the Brussels editions were published under a pseudonym. An English translation of Son of Man by Mormon author Samuel Brown was completed in 1998, but is now out of print, as are several other works in English translation. In 2014, a new project was commenced by Alastair Macnaughton (1954–2017), an Anglican priest and Russian scholar, to translate the entire History of Religion into the English language for the first time. Volume 1 was published in 2018. An abridged version of the entire History of Religion in Two Volumes was also translated into English in 2021 (which additionally includes the history of Christianity of the first millennium). Recent works of Men in English translation include:
Many other works by Men have been published in Russian, most notably:
LegacySince his death, Men's works and ideas have been seen as controversial among the conservative faction of the Russian Orthodox Church, citing his strong tendencies towards ecumenism, which his books advocate. Nevertheless, Men has a considerable number of supporters, some of whom argue for his canonization. His lectures are regularly broadcast over Russian radio.[citation needed] His books are no longer restricted from print in Russia, whereas during his lifetime, they had to be printed abroad, mainly in Brussels, Belgium, by the publishing house Foyer Chrétien Oriental and circulated in secret.[citation needed] Several key Russian Orthodox parishes encourage following his example as one who faithfully followed Christ.[20] Two Russian Orthodox churches have been built on the site of his assassination, and a growing number of believers in both Russia and abroad consider him a martyr.[21][22] In December 1990, the Alexander Men Foundation was founded in Riga.[23] Men was canonized by the Apostolic Orthodox Church in 2004.[24] In conjunction with the 25th year Commemoration of Memory, the Moscow Patriarchate Izdatel'stvo publishing house has begun a project to publish Fr. Men's "Collected Works" in a series of 15 volumes.[citation needed] Men's son, Mikhail Men, is a Russian political figure who from 2005 to 2013 served as the Governor of Ivanovo Oblast and subsequently as Minister of Construction Industry, Housing and Utilities Sector in Dmitry Medvedev's Cabinet. He is also a musician known outside Russia for the Michael Men Project.[citation needed] Views on Men's workPositiveMany Orthodox people positively evaluate the activities and works of Men. Arkady Mahler noted in 2010: "The number of people who came to the Russian Orthodox Church of the Moscow Patriarchate thanks to the sermons of Father Alexander Men is always greater than we can imagine. Many of them now admit, in a half-whisper, "in fact, it was Men who brought me to the Church from the very beginning," and look away, as if apologizing for something. Moreover, we are talking not only about the "intelligentsia" - Father Alexander was a real people's preacher, quite ordinary people from all over the Soviet empire sought him out, because it was from his texts, randomly found among acquaintances of their acquaintances, that they first learned about God."[25] Archpriest Andrei Tkachev positively assessed the work of Men: "Men was great: he took on the heaviest burden - working with atheistic intellectuals."[26] In February 2021, Metropolitan Hilarion (Alfeev) allowed the canonization of Men: "Father Alexander Men was an outstanding preacher, catechist, and missionary of his time. His death was tragic, and I think that if it is proven that it was martyrdom, he can be canonized as a martyr."[27] CriticismAt the same time, many representatives of the Russian Orthodox Church argue that some of Men's statements contradict the fundamentals of Orthodox teaching; his ecumenical views were criticized. He was also accused of sympathizing with Catholicism. Orthodox theologian Alexei Osipov and Protodeacon Andrey Kuraev did not recommend the books of Men for getting acquainted with Orthodoxy.[28]
In an open letter to Men, allegedly written by Metropolitan Anthony (Melnikov) , it is written: "You are not new to the church, Father Alexander <...> This means that, in your interpretation, when you combine the One God of Christians and Ancient Israel with the "god" of modern Judaism, the devil, you are doing this deliberately, deliberately mixing light with darkness."[30] Priest Daniel Sysoev was sharply critical of Men. In 2002, he identified 9 points in his creed that he considered heretical: "Manichaeism — the doctrine of the complicity of Satan in the creation of the world, the result of which was the supposed evolution that took place", "the doctrine of man as a transfigured ape", "the rejection of the inspiration of the Holy Scriptures", "the rejection of original sin and the postulation of the independence of death from human sin", "the rejection of the existence of a personal Adam and the introduction of the Kabbalistic doctrine of Adam Kadmon", "the rejection of the authorship of almost all Old Testament books", "acceptance of branch theory", "syncretism", "encouragement of magic and extrasensory perception".[31] Metropolitan Hilarion (Alfeyev), on the air of the Church and the World program, aired on the Russia-24 channel on 13 February 2021, stated that in Men's works there are views that are controversial, but that this is not an obstacle to Men's canonization:
Men's views on himself In spite of the controversial image Men had surrounding him, he seemed to view himself and his work in a simple and humble manner. In a letter to a friend he penned shortly before his death, Men wrote, “I work now as I have always worked: with my face into the wind. . . I’m only an instrument that God is using for the moment. Afterwards, things will be as God wants them.” See alsoLiterature
References
External linksWikimedia Commons has media related to Alexander Men. Wikiquote has quotations related to Alexander Men.
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