(CP) Pope Francis has expressed concern over a newly passed law in Ukraine that bans groups with historic ties to the Russian Orthodox Church, seeing it as an attack on religious freedom.
In official remarks on Sunday, the top of the Roman Catholic Church said he was “serious about the laws recently adopted in Ukraine” regarding Orthodox churches.
“I fear for the liberty of those that pray, because those that truly pray at all times pray for all,” said Francis. “An individual doesn’t commit evil due to praying.”
“If someone commits evil against his people, he shall be guilty for it, but he cannot have committed evil because he prayed. So let those that wish to pray be allowed to wish in what they consider their Church. Please, let no Christian Church be abolished directly or not directly. Churches should not to be touched!”
On Saturday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky signed a law banning groups that had ties to Russia, claiming that it’s a part of a national security measure.
The law effectively bans the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, which has historic ties to the Moscow patriarch but announced that it was severing those ties in May 2022 in opposition to the war.
The latest ban doesn’t apply to the Orthodox Church of Ukraine, which was officially recognized by most global Orthodox Church leadership in 2019 and is independent of Russian influence.
“Ukrainian orthodoxy today is taking a step toward liberation from the devils of Moscow,” stated Zelensky in an address made Saturday evening, in line with CNN.
The latest law will give entities just like the UOC nine months to sever ties with Russia or be shut down. While the UOC already technically did so in 2022, Ukrainian authorities claim that the links remain.
Since Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine in 2022, multiple allegations have surfaced of UOC-affiliated clergy and facilities helping spread pro-Russian propaganda.
Last week, the Verkhovna Rada, Ukraine’s Legislature, passed the bill, with lawmaker Iryna Herashchenko calling it “a historic vote” that “bans a branch of the aggressor country in Ukraine.”
Wesley J. Smith, chair of the Discovery Institute’s Center on Human Exceptionalism, contends that the brand new law violates the religious freedom of churches that wish to remain with the UOC.
“The dispute about whether the Ukrainian Orthodox Church or the Orthodox Church of Ukraine legitimately represents Ukrainian Orthodoxy is a matter for the Orthodox Church to work out,” wrote Smith for National Review.
“But the federal government of Ukraine shouldn’t resolve which church is ‘legitimate’ and which just isn’t, which might operate openly and which must be suppressed.”