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Peter Mogila

 
Biography: Peter Mogila

The Russian Orthodox churchman and theologian Peter Mogila (1596-1646) is known for his restoration of Orthodox institutions.

Peter Mogila was born in Moldavia, now part of Romania, the son of Symeon, head of an aristocratic family. Political turmoil forced Symeon to flee to Poland, where his family had numerous and influential ties with the nobility. Peter studied there and then in Holland and in Paris. He served as an officer in the Polish army but at the age of 30 decided to become a monk at the famous Pechersky Lavra Monastery. He received minor orders and made his vows in 1627. Ordained a priest sometime later, he became archimandrite and in 1632 metropolitan of Kiev.

Peter's first interests lay with the fortunes of the Orthodox Church, then under strong social and economic pressure from Catholic nobility and clergy. Political and social pressures were violent. His first achievement was to take possession of Kiev's St. Sophia Cathedral and thus oust the Catholics. He restored it and the Pechersky Lavra, the monastery of Vydubetsky, and numerous other monasteries and churches, including the famous "Tenpart Church," which contained the tomb of St. Vladimir. Peter's main distinction, and the source of his difficulties, was his knowledge and appreciation of the West and of the Latin Church. He had a deep knowledge of Latin and of the Western system of seminary and university education. As an archimandrite at Pechersky Lavra, he had founded a school where Slavic and Greek studies were poorly represented. The school's academic program was fashioned on Western models, Latin being the predominant language taught there. This mixture of Western elements did not sit well with his coreligionists. He himself had been schooled in his early years at Lvov Brotherhoods School. As archimandrite, he had united the Brotherhoods School with his own at Pechersky Lavra. When he became metropolitan, he renamed this school the Collegium. Some 15 years later the Collegium became an educational and intellectual center for the Ukraine and Poland.

The writings of Peter were very important. In 1637 he published an exegetical edition of the Four Gospels. In 1646 he revised and published Orthodox Church ritual in his Evlogion, known also as the Great Trebnik. He authored, about the same time, Short Scientific Essays about Points of the Faith. He planned an edition of the Bible and a Lives of the Saints, but he died on Dec. 31, 1646, at Kiev.

Peter's greatest work was the Orthodox Confession of the Catholic and Apostolic Eastern Church. He wrote it to counteract the work of the Jesuits and the Reformers, both of whom were struggling for victory in Poland. It had great success, being approved by the provincial Synod of Kiev in 1640. In 1672, after his death, it was adopted as the Orthodox Standard Catechism by the Synod of Jerusalem. It was not merely a manual of instruction; it was much more a vindication of Orthodox primacy in doctrine and Church jurisdiction, in opposition to the claims of both Reformers and Counter Reformers. Because of its handy form and clarity, the Confession was never superseded.

Further Reading

There is scant material on Mogila in English. A good biographical sketch is in George Vernadsky, A History of Russia, vol. 5 (1969). For general historical background see the classic study by V. O. Kliuchevsky, A Course in Russian History: The Seventeenth Century (trans. 1968).

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Wikipedia: Peter Mogila
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Peter Mogila
Metropolitan of Kiev and Halych
Born December 21, 1596(1596-12-21), Moldavia, Romania
Died December 22, 1646 (aged 50), Kiev, Ukraine
Venerated in Ukrainian Orthodox Church, Romanian Orthodox Church, Polish Orthodox Church
Feast January 1, but also October 5

Petro Mohyla (Ukrainian: Петро Могила; Romanian: Petru Movilă; December 21, 1596 – December 22, 1646) was a Metropolitan of Kyiv, Halych and All-Rus' from 1633 until his death. He was born into a Moldavian boyar family — the Movileşti — one that gave Moldavia and Wallachia several rulers, including his father, Ieremia Movilă. His mother, Margareta, was a Hungarian noble lady.

Contents

Life

Petro Mohyla was an important political figure of his time and a profoundly influential theologian in the Eastern Orthodox Christianity, managing to reconcile the religious thesis of three of the most important East Orthodox churches: Constantinople Patriarchate, Russian/Ukrainian and Moldavian-Wallachian ones.

Ukrainian stamp

Mohyla initiated the foundation of the Kyiv-Mohyla Academy in Kyiv, one of the oldest and most distinguished academic and theological schools in Eastern Europe. He also fought successfully for the consecration of the Orthodox Church inside the Polish kingdom and the scholasticity and the academism of the Orthodox religious education, along with the setting of a network of printing presses and education institutions. Mogila believed that the future of Orthodoxy in Ukraine depended on accommodation of Ukraine within the Polish Commonwealth as an equal partner and tried to undermine pro-Russian forces within the Church.[1] Being loyal to the Commonwealth and inspired by its culture, he made Latin widely used in schools despite criticism from the Rus’ Church.[2]

Sainthood

Mohyla was also Archimandrite of the Kyiv Caves Lavra, and while archimandrite, glorified as saints all 125 Venerable Fathers and 61 Venerable Myrrh-bearing Heads of the Kyiv Caves Lavra.

He is venerated as a saint in the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, the Romanian Orthodox Church and the Polish Orthodox Church. His feastday is January 1, but is also commemorated October 5 together with the other sainted Metropolitans of Kyiv.

Honours

References

Inline:
  1. ^ Magoscy, R. (1996). A History of Ukraine. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. 
  2. ^ We need to learn: The cathedra of metropolitan Petro Mohyla by Klara GUDZYK, The Day Weekly Digest #4, Tuesday, 5 February 2008
General:
Preceded by
Isaia Kopynsky
Metropolitan of Kyiv, Galychyna and All-Rus'
1633–1646
Succeeded by
Sylvester Kosiv


 
 
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Mogila (disambiguation)
Greek Orthodoxy (history 1450-1789)
St Volodymyr's Cathedral ownership controversy

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