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Quick to Listen

What American Christians Can Learn about Religious Freedom from Russia

Quick to Listen

Christianity Today

Religion, Christianity, Religion & Spirituality

4.3622 Ratings

🗓️ 30 March 2017

⏱️ 44 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Last year, the government passed a number of laws making it harder to share one’s faith. The legislation required missionaries to have permits, made house churches illegal, and limited religious activity to registered church buildings, effectively restricting Christians from evangelizing outside of their churches. (The jury’s still out on whether the legislation will hold up in court.) Earlier this year, the Russian government took another step in its decade-long crackdown against Jehovah’s Witnesses. From CT’s report: The Justice Ministry submitted a Supreme Court case to label the Jehovah’s Witnesses headquarters an extremist group. This would allow Russia to enact a countrywide ban on its activity, dissolving its organization and criminalizing its worship. The ban would impact about 175,000 followers in 2,000 congregations nationwide. “Without any exaggeration, it would put us back to the dark days of persecution for faith.” Jehovah’s Witnesses make up a tiny percentage of the country’s population--but their unpopularity has made it awkward for Russian Protestants who “don’t consider themselves as extreme—or as annoying—as the Witnesses, and they aren’t too eager to speak out against the recent case against them.” One key group contributing to this complicated environment is the Russian Orthodox Church which staunchly believes that faith should have a “robust communal dimension,” — not confined to a private relationship between a person and God, says Andrey Shirin, who moved to the US from Russia more than 25 years ago and currently works as an assistant professor of divinity at John Leland Center for Theological Studies. “The notion that people should be free to exercise their faith or not to exercise any is really uncontroversial,” said Shirin. “It all depends on how this is interpreted.” Shirin joined Morgan and Mark this week on Quick to Listen discuss Putin’s popularity among American evangelicals, whether the country’s evangelicals should be concerned about their future, and how the Orthodox Church kept its credibility after the Communist era. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

This episode is brought to you in part by The Apologetics Guy Show, the podcast that helps you find clear answers to tough questions about Christianity.

0:11.0

Learn to explain your faith with courage and compassion.

0:14.5

Join Moody Bible Institute professor Dr. Mikhail del Rosario at Apologeticsky.com.

0:30.0

Music Michael Del Rosario at Apologeticsguy.com. You're listening to Quick to Listen.

0:32.1

Each week we go be on hashtags and hot takes and set aside time to explore the reality

0:36.4

behind a major cultural event.

0:38.4

Today we're talking about religious freedom in Russia.

0:42.1

So I'm Morgan Lee and I'm assistant editor at Christianity today and I'm joined by Mark,

0:47.1

who is also an expert on Russia. Isn't that true, Mark?

0:49.8

Sort of. I have Russia in my blood. Not so to speak, but in fact, I come from a mother who is

0:57.2

Russian, whose family came over to the United States in the 1920s. Cool. I hope you get to talk

1:01.8

about that a little bit today on the show. Who is our guest today? Our guest is Andre Sharon,

1:07.0

who's an assistant professor of divinity and director of transformational leadership

1:11.0

at John Leland Center for Theological Studies, which is in Arlington, Virginia. We're just really glad

1:17.1

he could join us because I think he has some really wise things to say about the situation

1:21.1

over there. Welcome, Andre. Good morning. Thank you for having me. It's great to have you here. How long

1:26.0

have you lived in the States, Andre? Oh, about 25 years. I came originally for my theological studies back in 1991.

1:34.9

That's an interesting year to come over here. Nothing was going on in the USSR at that time,

1:40.0

was it? Well, I came just three weeks before the August. Wow. And was that timed at all,

1:46.1

or that just was a coincidence? That was a coincidence. But that Augustco was a lot more fun to watch

1:51.5

from over here than been there at that time. Man, really, what an interesting time, though,

1:57.3

to come across for everyone who is unfamiliar. I hope people aren't unfamiliar with

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