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TBILISI: We Will Have To Choose Between Orthodoxy And Liberalism

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  • TBILISI: We Will Have To Choose Between Orthodoxy And Liberalism

    WE WILL HAVE TO CHOOSE BETWEEN ORTHODOXY AND LIBERALISM

    Daily Georgian Times
    2010.02.01 13:29

    Community

    As swine flu took hold in the West, many countries reportedly installed
    holy water sterilising machines in Catholic Churches.

    Scientists have not yet explained the miracle of holy water, which
    has unique properties it maintains for a whole year. The question is,
    if a person is so irreligious that he is afraid of catching "Pig Flu"
    from holy water what purpose do his visits to church serve?

    Faith does not obey the laws of reason. Nor does arguing about
    which religion is better than another. This is a matter of belief,
    and you can never explain to anyone else why your belief is better
    than theirs. This is why people of other faiths peacefully co-exist
    with the Orthodox in Georgia.

    In Georgia people did not only uphold their own values but took the
    same attitude towards the values of others. When King David the Builder
    prohibited the slaughtering of pigs in Moslem districts this was not
    a gesture of tolerance. It was an acknowledgment of the legal culture
    and principles of that community. King of Kartli Vakhtang VI included
    the traditional laws of the Jewish, Armenian and Greek inhabitants
    of Georgia in his collection of laws (these had been practiced well
    before the King wrote these laws between 1705 and 1709). This move gave
    Georgians the opportunity to judge cases according to laws appropriate
    to the community offended against by the alleged lawbreaker.

    "We have collected noble books and chosen from them the parts we
    believe are appropriate for the sake of justice," Vakhtang VI stated.

    He added, however, that foreign laws should not likewise extend to
    the people of Kartli as the "rules and behaviour of Georgians are not
    similar to those of other countries." Georgians do not force others
    to live against their beliefs and values and do not do so themselves.

    Today local liberals often talk about the Orthodox Church 'interfering'
    in political life, saying this is inadmissible. They often cite the
    principle of secularism - separating State and Church from each
    another, with neither interfering in the other's affairs. No one
    disputes that this is a valid idea. But despite this no one condemned
    Pope John Paul II when he interfered in the political affairs of Poland
    in support of democracy, although as a direct result of his action
    the public threw their support behind Solidarity and the political
    system there changed. When the West wanted to win, the principle of
    non-interference went out of the window. The same double standard
    was also applied to Georgian nationalism. The West thought this was
    a good thing when it could use it to dismantle the USSR, but building
    an independent state on this basis was declared inadmissible.

    Sometimes it is difficult to understand the aggression Georgian
    liberals show towards "Motherland, Language, Faith", but this is
    another expression of their double standards. They do not condemn the
    State interfering in the affairs of the Georgian Orthodox Church, only
    the other way round. Furthermore they expect the Patriarch to justify
    his actions but not the State. They ask naively, "Do we not have the
    right to ask questions?" Of course, everyone has that right, but no
    liberal questioned the Government's zero tolerance of opposition, or
    indeed valid questions. They did not question how many millions had
    been spent on building the President's residence. They do not question
    the increased number of shootings of young people, why the number of
    prisoners has increased to 30,000, nor the strategic facilities of
    the country being sold off. Where did Kakha Bendukidze disappear to
    during the August 2008 war? He who says he does not know what strategic
    facilities are? If they don't exist why the Government tell us during
    the war that the Russians were deliberately bombing them?

    While they see no need to comment on these issues, they are concerned
    about the Government supporting the Church from the Budget. Not long
    ago a priest told me that when he was studying at the seminary in
    the 1970s he was sitting on the windowsill and saw Patriarch David
    V being driven into the yard and said - His Holiness has come by
    car! The Patriarch called him over during a break and said, "My son,
    consider this and then answer me - if Our Saviour had had a car would
    he have entered Jerusalem on foot?"

    We are reminded of double standards every day. As the Georgian proverb
    goes: you can put a handle on a pot on whichever side you like. An
    expensive concert is given in Guria "to attract investment", in
    Ukraine a group of Georgian election observers, entirely unqualified
    for this job, behaves lawlessly, farces are held under the name of
    elections which are then declared an indisputable victory for the
    Government, and this all passes without comment. Does all this happen
    by chance? Are these double standards unconscious or wilful? What good
    is a liberalism which allows a narrow circle to do what it wants but
    abuses everyone else?

    Today the phrase "true Orthodox believers" is often used
    sarcastically. Talking about religious fundamentalism and "ignorance"
    as the same thing has become very fashionable in liberal circles.

    People say that reform of the Orthodox Church is inevitable and its
    theology needs to be updated but these statements are purely political,
    they are not the product of a desire to help the Church. In the West
    the Protestant work ethic is regarded as the "machine of capitalism",
    so it is said that if you want to build a capitalist country you should
    adopt Protestant ethics. It is clear that an Orthodox believer cannot
    do this. That is why attempts to "modernise" Orthodoxy do not stop.

    Weber's 'Protestant Work Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism'
    demonstrates that this work ethic leads to an extreme vulgarism
    which will never become part of the Georgian consciousness and cannot
    replace Orthodoxy. A world of extreme social inequalities, desperate
    poverty and excessive luxury, moral relativism, a Darwinist fight
    for survival, sacrificing other people for your own prosperity and
    a complete lack of principle is the monster disguised by the labels
    of Liberalism and Capitalism.

    The complete neglect of national values in the education system is
    another problem and to satisfy the demands for these the Orthodox
    Church is welcoming increasing numbers of people. The Patriarch's
    epistles are increasingly becoming the guidebooks for people who have
    lost everything and are now afraid of losing even their graves. Under
    capitalism, if you are a poor person it is your own fault and not
    the fault of the person who has grabbed your property, and only
    the rich can achieve justice; it is a world where competition must
    be maintained but not the Orthodox principles which should underpin
    social relations and where an aggressive minority sets rules to suit
    itself using the majority's name, thus displaying there is no actual
    good and moral principle they can refer to.

    Some think that religion and faith are purely a means of cultural
    identification. In fact they provide a firm system of values,
    and trying to dismantle this is far more dangerous than changing
    political ideologies. The word 'ideology' has become discredited,
    like many other words, since the collapse of the USSR. When this
    happened people really thought that the era of non-ideology had come
    but in fact one ruling ideology has simply been replaced by another.

    It took us years to realise that Liberalism and Marxism are two
    sides of the same coin, both eroding the historic character of
    nations. In Marxism history is the ultimate arbiter, in Liberalism it
    is the individual. Marxism is openly atheistic, liberalism hides its
    attitude towards religion but also tries as hard as Marxism to oppress
    it. You are allowed to be religious yourself but must not tell anyone
    else about it, 'imposing' its restrictive values in a world where,
    allegedly, anything goes. What is worse - openly declared war or
    pharisaic "freedom" of faith?

    Both Marxism and Liberalism seek to destroy nation states and create a
    global universe. Georgia is a country from the old universe, which has
    restored its state after the collapse of the USSR. Our country cannot
    adjust to either of these two ideologies. Opposing the Orthodox Church
    is an ideological trick which serves to inculcate into this country
    values which are as alien to Georgians as Communism. The difference
    between the two is that we know Communism from experience, but have
    not yet seen what the full flowering of a liberal state will subject
    us to, thus making it appear the lesser evil.

    The saying "an idle mind is the playground of demons" is very well
    known and its truth is manifest in the minds of fundamentalists of
    any ideology. Liberalism absorbed unthinkingly from other models
    during two months in the West is a demon we should immediately resist.

    By Nana Devdariani , translated from the Georgian edition of The
    Georgian Times newspaper 2010.02.01 13:29
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