Serbian priest condemns “examination” of relics in Kyiv Pechersk Lavra

2824
10 April 12:39
216
Serbian priest condemns “examinations” of relics in the Lavra. Photo: UOJ Serbian priest condemns “examinations” of relics in the Lavra. Photo: UOJ

Fr. Siniša Buvač called attempts to “inventory” holy relics a religious crime and urged respect for Church tradition, reminding of the grim fate of those who desecrated sacred objects.

A priest of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Fr. Siniša Buvač, strongly condemned the actions of the commission that arrived at the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra on March 28 to “inventory and inspect” the holy relics. The statement was reported by the Serbian edition of the Union of Orthodox Journalists.

“I was genuinely shocked by this news. I have friends from Kyiv and Montenegro who were there just before the monks were expelled from the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra,” Fr. Siniša shared in an interview with the UOJ.

The priest categorically disagreed with claims that the monastery and its sacred items are state property. “Why expel the monks and attack the Church? I see no reason except political ones. Politics must be separated from the Church, and the Church from politics,” he emphasized.

According to Fr. Siniša, touching relics for the sake of “scientific research” constitutes a religious crime. “It is unacceptable, dear brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus, our Lord, to desecrate God’s sanctity. Empires may exist, but they all come to an end. Everything has an expiration date – except for the Lord Jesus Christ,” he stated.

He compared the situation at the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra to attacks on Serbian Orthodox Church shrines in Montenegro, Republika Srpska, and Kosovo and Metohija. He recalled an incident in Trebinje during the communist era, when an icon of the Most Holy Theotokos was confiscated and began to weep blood. “They examined it and found nothing. The DNA was unknown, and the substance – unidentifiable. No chemical code exists to explain it,” the priest recounted.

The situation at the Lavra is especially painful for Fr. Siniša, who once spent the night in its catacombs. “I was deeply moved, I felt like the disciples of Christ who gathered to pray at the tombs of the righteous. As a clergyman, I cannot justify these actions. Though I belong to the Serbian Orthodox Church, it doesn’t matter whether the voice comes from a Serbian, Greek, or Russian priest – we are all Orthodox Christians. The desecration of relics is a grave sin,” he stressed.

He emphasized that people should not focus on confessional labels, but instead “love their own and respect others.” “Whoever respects their own will never lose their identity,” he added, recalling his own experience defending church property of the Serbian Orthodox Church with the help of people from various faiths.

Fr. Siniša concluded by calling on the faithful to pray to the saints and return sacred objects to their rightful place. “Let us forgive one another, even if someone has wronged us... One should never tamper with relics or sacred things, and no one who desecrated the saints or sacred objects has ever ended well,” the priest concluded.

Previously, the UOJ reported that the monks of Mount Athos had condemned the desecration of relics in the Kyiv Pechersk Lavra.

If you notice an error, select the required text and press Ctrl+Enter or Submit an error to report it to the editors.
If you find an error in the text, select it with the mouse and press Ctrl+Enter or this button If you find an error in the text, highlight it with the mouse and click this button The highlighted text is too long!
Read also