Abstract

With the rise of new computer technologies, scholars of religion and media came to raise questions of how digital communication affects institutional forms of authority. In the digital realm, a number of alternative platforms emerged that empower religious communities to partake in the production of religious narratives outside organized religion. Ahilla.ru is a recent example of such an alternative place facilitated by digital technology. Founded by a former Russian Orthodox priest in February 2017, the website is a response to the politics and official rhetoric of Orthodox Church hierarchs who appeared ever more comfortable in conflating religion and politics and presenting themselves as the moral voice of the nation. Since his enthronement in 2009, Patriarch Kirill has centralized and hierarchized the Church, widening the gap between the episcopate and the low-level clergy and laity. Criticism of institutional religious authority that provides space for the articulation of alternative views of Orthodox faith and identity is at the core of Ahilla.ru. Ahilla.ru merits special attention, as it emerged not outside but within the Russian Orthodox Church and poses a challenge, via digital media space, to the dominant discourse articulated by Orthodox Church authorities and Russian mainstream media. This article seeks to answer the question of how online communication enhances media non-professionals to reflect upon their experiences within institutional religious settings and makes these experiences—previously unmediated and unknown—part of the media discourse.

Highlights

  • After decades of relentless persecutions and marginalization during the Soviet era, the Rus- [1] sian Orthodox Church has emerged as a powerful public actor and a vigorous social institution (Agadjanian 2014; Burgess 2017)

  • Projects like Ahilla.ru use the digital media sphere to articulate their alternative views of Russian Orthodoxy and to challenge the rhetoric put forward by the Church hierarchy

  • The online media sphere turns into a battlefield between various interpretations of Russian Orthodoxy

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Summary

Hanna Staehle

ଈ୪ഌഝ೶ଈ୽ഝ With the rise of new computer technologies, scholars of religion and media came to raise questions of how digital communication affects institutional forms of authority. Founded by a former Russian Orthodox priest in February 2017, the website is a response to the politics and official rhetoric of Orthodox Church hierarchs who appeared ever more comfortable in conflating religion and politics and presenting themselves as the moral voice of the nation. Since his enthronement in 2009, Patriarch Kirill has centralized and hierarchized the Church, widening the gap between the episcopate and the low-level clergy and laity. ౖ஥൰ൠಧ೶ஐഌ Russian Orthodox Church, Moscow Patriarchate, Patriarch Kirill, religious authority, Ahilla.ru

Introduction
Challenging Orthodox Church Authority
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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