Reflections on Faith and Freedom
in Romania and
Russia
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Derek H. Davis Vita
As I stood
to speak to the overflow crowd of 800 people attending the November 14
morning worship service at the First Baptist Church of Resita, Romania, I
was overcome with admiration for this faithful group of believers. The
Apostle Paul’s words from 2 Corinthians 12:9 suddenly took on an entirely
new meaning for me: “My grace is sufficient for you, for power is
perfected in weakness.” Those in attendance represented almost the
entire membership of this church, the larger of two Baptist churches in
this city of more than 100,000 people. There were few members’ cars
outside; almost everyone had walked, many several miles, to be in church
that morning. They had not come to hear me speak; I don’t think they
even knew there would be a guest speaker that day. They came faithfully
every Sunday, I was told later—to be renewed, refreshed, encouraged, and
to worship God. As 87% of the Romanian population belongs to the
Romanian Orthodox Church, it is not popular to be affiliated with any
other faith tradition, and it is certainly not popular to be a Baptist.
I was encouraged by the thought that these people were making sacrifices
just to be in church that morning.
As I
scanned the audience, it was obvious that no one had been to Neiman
Marcus that week to buy a new suit or dress. I suspect most of the men
were wearing the only suit they owned, and that most of the women were
wearing perhaps the same dress they had worn the previous Sunday, and the
one before that, and the one before that. I noticed lots of scuffed
shoes, tattered coats, weather-beaten skin, yet many smiles. They were
glad to be there, and I sensed that for many of these Christians,
attending church on Sunday was the highlight of their week. As the
average salary in Resita is about $100 per month, these people had
nothing, yet they had everything. They understood, in a way that I never
had, that God’s grace truly is sufficient, and that weakness is a form of
power.
I felt
completely ill equipped to speak to these people, whom I now looked upon
as a special breed of saints. After all, I am not a preacher, and my
life as an academic and lawyer, specializing in church-state relations
and religious liberty, had seldom brought me into the company of such a
gathering as this. And being an American accustomed to one-hour services,
I was concerned about their stamina. As I rose to speak, they had
already been in this service for two hours—praying, singing, hearing
testimonies, and even hearing a mini-sermon by one of the pastors. And
now they had to listen to me for forty minutes? And there would be more
singing after I finished! Three hours of worship? I was amazed! This
was standard, however, as they later told me. In any case, I proceeded
to talk about the September 11 terrorist attacks on New York City and
Washington, D.C. I talked mainly about Christian attitudes and responses
in light of the attacks—about refusing to succumb to attitudes of hate,
disdain, and revenge but instead adopting attitudes of love, compassion,
and forgiveness, yet without forgetting that there is in God’s program a
place for properly administered justice. As this was obviously a people
who knew the meaning of suffering, I tried to relate the suffering of so
many people as a result of the terrorist attacks, and how those who know
Christ are finding that God’s grace is indeed sufficient for them, just
as it is for this group of Baptists in Resita who face their own brand of
suffering every day. I hope they were helped by what I said.
I was in
Resita at the invitation of Daniel Barnut, the 36-year-old co-pastor of
this very special church. We had become acquaintances over the Internet
earlier in the year. As part of my work as director of the J.M. Dawson
Institute of Church-State Studies at Baylor University, I planned in
November to go to Bucharest, Romania to meet with some government
officials, then to Russia for a religious liberty conference. When the
Bucharest meeting was canceled, since I did not care to waste my plane
ticket to Romania, I contacted Daniel about perhaps coming to meet him.
He was enthusiastic about it and within days had arranged for me to spend
three days in Romania speaking not only to his church, but also to a
church in nearby Timisoara, universities in Resita and Timisoara, and
some student groups. I knew immediately that this was a remarkable, get
things done kind of person. After meeting Daniel and getting to know him
and his wife, Dorina, and two sons, Emanuel and Filip, I was impressed
beyond words. A graduate of the Baptist Seminary in Bucharest, Daniel
has been pastoring this church for about five years. Under his guidance
the church has grown considerably in numbers and has begun a number of
outreach ministries. I was most impressed by their “Humanitas Pro Deo”
program, which feeds lunch daily to about 100 children who live in
poverty in Resita.
I was also
impressed by the Christian Baptist High School the church started under
Daniel’s leadership. Among his many responsibilities he manages to find
time to teach every day in the school. Daniel’s dream for years has been
to have a school for all ages, but there was always inadequate money and
space to do it. One day the mayor of Resita came to Daniel and offered
to let the church use rent-free a vacant 20,000 square foot building.
The building was a hangout for gangs, thus the mayor, a member of the
Orthodox Church, told Daniel that he was impressed with what he had done
with the high school and wanted him to have the building to begin an
all-grades school, even though it would be controversial in the community
to extend such a favor to Baptists. While the church has virtually no
money to renovate the building, church members are donating their time
and talents to achieve a complete renovation. They do what they can with
what they have, and they hope that God will supply enough money for them
to renovate enough space that they can open the school sometime in 2002.
For anyone looking for a good place to give some money, please pray about
assisting this school. Just write Daniel at
Barnut_d@cs.ro if you would like more information.
In my talks
to university and student groups I focused on religious liberty,
attempting to give them a sense of how much remains to be done globally
before we can even begin to make the claim that religious liberty is
recognized as a fundamental human right. This was a theme they were
keenly interested in. As Romania is an emerging democracy, they are
struggling with questions about the proper role of religion in their
culture, but especially about the political role of religion. Romania
has been largely an Orthodox region since at least the fourth century,
and its history is one of political support of Orthodoxy and active
suppression of other religions. This pattern was interrupted, of course,
during the Soviet occupation of Romania that began after WW II and lasted
until 1989, a period of active hostility toward all religions, even
Orthodoxy. The year 1989 is well known, of course, as the year in which
communism was overthrown throughout most of the Soviet empire, and
interestingly, that revolution actually began, by some accounts, at the
city square in Timisoara, a mere stone’s throw from where I gave one of
my lectures. Since the revolution, Romania has been attempting to
implement a democratic order, with free elections, free enterprise, and
religious freedom. But old habits do not die easily. Presently, the
Orthodox Church, perceived as the standard bearer of faith and morals in
Romania, is still privileged over other religions in many ways. They
receive substantial governmental support, financial and otherwise,
although active persecution of other religions is now a thing of the
past. I would like to see Romania move toward making all religions equal
before the law, favoring none, thus giving maximum freedom to the people
to choose their own religions free of governmental influence. This is
the modern way, and if Romania is to become a part of the European Union
and otherwise join the community of nations that uphold freedom and human
rights, this is the course they should chart.
My
three-day trip now at an end, I was ready to fly to Moscow where I would
take part in an important religious liberty conference. I left Romania
reluctantly, because I had grown fond of Resita and Timisoara and the
people I met there. I consider Daniel a real friend, and I expect we
will maintain communication for many years to come. Already I have on my
desk a portion of the dissertation he is writing toward his doctoral
degree, which I gladly will review per his request. I would be remiss
not to mention Alexandru Neagoe, the pastor of the Emmanuel Baptist
Church in Timisoara, who hosted me while I was there. He is a
marvelously effective and faithful pastor who shepherds a vibrant and
committed congregation of about 1400 people. Daniel and Alex, themselves
good friends and former seminary classmates, are highly talented
individuals. They both could leave Romania for greener pastures and make
more money and bigger names for themselves. But they are native
Romanians, love their country despite its current economic and political
difficulties, and intend to stay there to make a better Romania. I am
sure they will be successful.
When I
arrived at the Sheremetyevo Airport in Moscow, Misha Guskov, who works
for the Institute of Religion and Law, met me. The Institute is mostly a
group of lawyers, operating within a Christian framework, that work
strenuously for religious freedom in the new Russia. They were
co-sponsoring, with the Russian Academy of Sciences, a leading university
and research center in Russia, a conference examining the progress of
religious freedom in Russia since the demise of communism in 1990. I
planned to present a paper at the conference dealing with President
Bush’s initiative to provide substantial government support to American
churches and other faith-based institutions to administer social service
programs. I wanted to explain the controversy surrounding this
initiative, and try to suggest some ways in which the issues surrounding
the initiative are relevant to Russia’s current quest to map its own
course for church-state relations and religious freedom.
In recent
years I have taken a considerable interest in Russia because I consider
it something of a laboratory in which we can investigate the feasibility
of implementing a framework for protecting religious freedom that
overcomes cultural prejudices and takes seriously individual freedom as a
ruling tenet of political discourse and practice. Like Romania, Russia’s
past is dominated by Christian Orthodoxy. In 986, Vladimer, the “Grand
Prince of Rus,” invited missionaries from all over the world to come to
Russia and present the merits of their own religions. Vladimer was
searching for the religion that would best fit Russia and serve as the
foundation for social order for the entire country. He chose the
Byzantine form of Christianity (Eastern Orthodoxy), which served as the
national faith until the Soviet era, and provided the social glue for
Russia that Vladimer had hoped for. Until the 18th century it
was commonplace for nations to adopt a single religion for their entire
populations, believing that social solidarity depended upon a common
faith. The United States was the first to formally break from this
pattern and implement a system of separation of church and state. The
American founding Fathers were astute readers of history and were
convinced that separating religion and government would produce more
freedom by permitting individuals to choose their own faith without fear
of reprisal or repression by government. Like all nations of history,
they believed that cultivating morality was essential to national
success, but they decided to locate moral training in churches, families,
and other private institutions rather than in government. They were
convinced that government-sponsored religion did more harm than good, and
the European history of inquisitions, persecution, pogroms, and religious
wars was proof enough for them. The American tradition of religious
pluralism and church-state separation has been successful in maximizing
personal freedom, but many are wondering today if there is adequate
cultivation of morality when the government is prohibited from using
religion as a basis for moral training. Whether these critics are
correct that perhaps we have gone too far in adopting Enlightenment
principles of freedom is a question that today looms large in American
discussions about the state’s role in promoting morality.
Russia
experienced no European Enlightenment, thus the older tradition of
government–sponsored religion lasted until the Soviet era. Many in
Russia today, including my friends at the Institute for Religion and Law,
seek to transport Western ideas of church-state separation to Russia, but
Russia has virtually no experience with widespread religious pluralism,
thus it is difficult to implement because most Russians are more
comfortable with reverting to the pre-Soviet era framework of official
Orthodoxy as the national faith. The new Russian constitution (1993) and
a comprehensive law regulating religion (1997) reveal an attempt to adopt
both philosophies, which of course is impossible in practice. This kind
of political schizophrenia is to be expected, given Russia’s past and its
efforts to vault itself into the modern world of democratic order.
Exactly what Russia will do in terms of framing its relationship between
religion and government is still uncertain, which makes it a very
interesting place to observe and study for persons like myself.
But the
university I represent wants to do more than just observe and study. We
would like to make a contribution to Russia’s future, thus we do what we
can to inform and work closely with Russian leaders. So, after leaving
Russia, I returned two weeks later to give a series of university
lectures and to attend another conference sponsored by the Institute of
Law and Religion. This was a conference attended by lawyers from every
part of Russia. They represented mostly minority religions, and were
concerned with ongoing attempts by religious and political elites in
Russia to limit religious freedom. I suggested in my own presentation
that they should be creative in making legal arguments for religious
freedom, drawing from Russian history and practice rather than always
pointing to modern Western models. I tried to give some concrete
examples of how this could be done based on my own understanding of
Russian history. I was deeply impressed with the seriousness,
intelligence, and commitment of the lawyers attending. With such people
at the forefront of Russia’s fight for religious freedom, their chance of
success is greatly enhanced.
I should mention a few other
ways in which the Russians have impressed me. I grew up during the Cold
War era. My generation was taught that the Soviet empire was evil,
anti-American, anti-God, and a threat to world peace and stability. This
is a false picture of Soviet ideology, especially from the perspective of
most Soviets. They were not evil, they were not particularly
anti-American except to the extent they saw us a threat to the advance of
universal truth, most of them never bought into atheism, and they saw
themselves as the globe’s greatest hope for peace. I was also taught
that the Soviets stifled human freedom and sought to make everyone equal,
with no ability for anyone to advance beyond his/her peers through
effort, work, discipline, etc. Thus all Soviets worked for the state and
everyone made approximately the same amount of money. We saw this as an
oppressive system, but it did produce some human qualities that I find
admirable. I find most Russians who grew up in this system to be very
genuine, unpretentious, and down-to-earth people, unlike many Americans
who grow up in our highly competitive culture that places excessive
emphasis on popularity, prestige, and wealth. Moreover, I find that most
Soviets did not become atheists (today, however, still 30% are) in spite
of the official atheistic ideology. Many of them today remain quite open
to spiritual matters, which is all the more reason that we should do what
we can to encourage Russia to adopt a system of religious freedom that
does not impose excessive restrictions on different religious groups in
Russia. I have always believed that the Christian message, competing on
equal terms with other faiths, will rise to the top. Thus, a
church-state model of separation rather than preference will facilitate,
I believe, the advance of Christianity in Russia.
Romania and
Russia are newly emerging democracies seeking to recover from the
ravaging effects of communism. Both nations are full of beautiful,
caring people who are active in rebuilding their countries and improving
the lives of their fellow citizens. We should pray that God would honor
their efforts and also do what we can to help them.
Dr.
Derek H. Davis is director of the J.M. Dawson Institute of Church-State
Studies at Baylor University and editor of Journal of Church and
State.