Head of Archdiocese of W. Europe: Phanar's goal is not missionary work

Metropolitan John (Renneteau) of Dubna. Photo: cathedrale-orthodoxe.com

His Eminence Metropolitan John of Dubna, the ruling hierarch of the Archdiocese of Russian Churches of Western Europe, could not accept the Patriarchate of Constantinople’s dissolution of the Exarchate in late 2018 because that would have meant abandoning the Archdiocese’s pan-Orthodox history of missionary work, as he explained in a recent interview with the portal “Pravoslavie.ru”.

“It was extremely difficult for us to accept that the Archdiocese should disappear and its mission should dissolve. Each separate parish would have had to become part of a Metropolis whose spirit does not correspond to our own,” Met. John explained.

According to Met. John, the parishes of the Archdiocese have always been engaged in missionary work throughout Europe.

“This is our Church mission—to gather the Orthodox. We are very open about language: We have parishes with French, parishes with Russian, and parishes that use 3 or 4 languages. We have communities that live on the old calendar, and there are those that live on the new calendar. And when we unite at meetings of the clergy, it gives us a very joyful atmosphere, an atmosphere of mission: We are here to testify that the Orthodox Church is an open Church, a living Church, a Church that is able to receive all those people who want to live in the Spirit, in the Orthodox Tradition, and participate in the Orthodox Liturgy,” explained the ruling hierarch of the Archdiocese of Russian Churches of Western Europe.

The Phanar, on the other hand, considered the West European Exarchate as an institution serving diaspora Greeks, he noted.

“It was extremely difficult for us to accept that the Archdiocese should disappear and its mission should dissolve. Each separate parish would have had to become part of a Metropolis whose spirit does not correspond to our own,” Met. John explained.

This difference in spirit was explicitly stated to him many times over the years, he testified: “I must tell you that when I visited the residence of the Patriarch of Constantinople in Istanbul, I was always told that we are not here to do missionary work: We are here to deal with the Christians of the Greek tradition.”

“This was their leitmotif, and there was no question of a mission,” he added.

“From the very beginning, the Archdiocese had a missionary vocation, and we wanted to follow it. And that’s why we didn't want to destroy our Archdiocese legally. We wanted to preserve its integrity, and it remains so today (in the Moscow Patriarchate – Ed.),” the hierarch affirmed.

He also notes that many in the Archdiocese disapproved of Constantinople’s actions in Ukraine.

Earlier, Metropolitan John drew public attention to the fact that the Western European Archdiocese chose the path of life when it decided to reunite with the Russian Orthodox Church.

Read also

Serbian media: Ukrainian authorities fail to "cancel" Christmas on January 7

Serbian "Politika" reported that the festive services of the UOC at the Kyiv-Pechersk Lavra and throughout the country gathered thousands of believers despite state pressure.

U.S. military chaplains greet Orthodox believers on Christmas on January 7

American military chaplains have published a festive Christmas message to Orthodox Christians.

DESS: Almost 1,400 parishes "transferred" from UOC to OCU over past 3 years

The State Service for Ethnopolitics reported how many religious communities were taken from the UOC in 2022–2025.

Young UOC parishioners of Buhryn sing Christmas carols at closed church

Young parishioners of the Ascension Church of the Rivne Eparchy glorified the Nativity of Christ at the gate of their locked church.

Metropolitan Victor prays with persecuted UOC parish in Starokostiantyniv

The hierarch of the Khmelnytskyi Eparchy led the festal service on the day of the Synaxis of the Most Holy Theotokos.

Met Theodosiy serves Liturgy on Christmas for first time since his illness

The ruling hierarch of the Cherkasy Eparchy celebrated his first service after illness together with the clergy and faithful.