“God is one”: OCU scratches head over Turkey’s decision on Hagia Sophia
Both Christians and Muslims give praise to God alone, the OCU recalled. Photo: © Global Look Press / Yasin Akgul
God is one, and the conversion of the once main Christian temple into a mosque is not a manifestation of the great faith of the "children of the Living God". This is how Ivan Sidor, referent-secretary of the Kyiv Metropolis of the OCU and assistant to Epiphany, commented on the situation around Hagia Sophia in Istanbul on his Facebook page.
"God is one. <...> Both the Christian world and the Islamic world call for praise to God alone. Both Christians and Muslims turn to the Creator of the whole world in their prayers,” said the representative of the OCU.
He told the story how a few years ago, “a man who professes Islam invited me and my priest friends to come round to sing a Christmas carol: we caroled and glorified God. And this man, a Muslim, repeated: ‘Glory to the Creator’."
“Isn’t it easier to multiply what we have acquired over the centuries, because we are all children of the Living God. In the Qur'an we read the following sura: ‘There is no compulsion in religion’ (2, 256). Therefore, the conversion of the once main Christian temple into a mosque is not a manifestation of great faith or confession. Most likely, this is someone’s strategic step we may comprehend with our minds someday. In the meantime ... all this does not fit in my head,” the assistant head of the OCU summed up.
As reported by the UOJ, on July 10, 2020, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan signed a decree on changing the status of Hagia Sophia in Istanbul and said that on July 24 the shrine would open for Islamic worship.
Read also
At the Zimne Monastery, an event was held in support of families of fallen soldiers
The Holy Dormition Monastery in Volhynia hosted an event to support mothers and loved ones of servicemen killed in the war.
Great schema tonsure performed in Mohyliv-Podilskyi Eparchy
The rite of tonsure into the great schema at St. Paraskeva Church in Mohyliv-Podilskyi was performed by the secretary of the Vinnytsia Eparchy.
UOC’s Myltsi monastery brethren appeal to U.S. authorities for protection
The monks of the St. Nicholas Monastery in Volhynia are asking J.D. Vance and Anna Paulina Luna to defend their rights and help prevent their possible eviction.
Teen who set fire to synagogue sentenced in Kryvyi Rih
A court sentenced a minor to two years of probation supervision after he admitted guilt and compensated for damages caused by the arson of a synagogue building.
"KyivPride" organizers announced dates for holding LGBT march in capital
Activists plan to hold mass events in June 2026.
Monastic tonsures performed at Kyiv Theological Academy
The Rector of the Kyiv Theological Schools, Archbishop Sylvester, tonsured four students of the academy and seminary into monasticism.