Braiding

Tulchin diocese. The Tulchin diocese of the UOC commented on the “grand scandal” in Bershad. Excerpt characterizing the Tulchin diocese

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Today is Metropolitan Jonathan of Yeletsky
released a new autobiography
with a list of those entrusted to him (beloved)
"insignia":

"BRIEF BIOGRAPHY OF METROPOLITAN JONAFAN OF TULCHINSK AND BRATSLAV (TO THE 68TH ANNIVERSARY OF BIRTH)

Metropolitan Jonathan (Eletskikh) - hierarch of the Russian Orthodox Church, born in 1949 in Russia, Russian, candidate of theology; in 1989 he was ordained as a bishop, since August 28, 2014 - metropolitan; member of the Patriarchal Council for Culture (MP), member of the commission of the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church for interaction with Old Believer parishes of the Russian Orthodox Church and the Old Believers, member of the Synodal Theological and Canonical Commission of the UOC, author of liturgical translations, articles, poems, spiritual composer

Marks of Excellence

1) Awarded: by His Holiness Patriarch Alexy II the Order of St. book Daniel of Moscow (ROC),

2) By His Holiness Elected Patriarch Kirill (Decree No. - Order of St. Sergius of Radonezh, second degree,

3) the Primate of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church, His Beatitude Metropolitan Vladimir - the highest order of the UOC MP for bishops - the Venerables Anthony and Theodosius;

4) Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I - personal Panagia,

5) His Beatitude Patriarch Benedict of Jerusalem - the Order of St. Brand.

6) In 2009, His Beatitude Metropolitan Vladimir, “in consideration of church merits,” awarded the Order of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church of the Holy Apostle John the Theologian of the second degree.

7) Honorary Colonel General of the public organization "Zaporozhye Cossacks", advisor to the Hetman of the Zaporozhye Cossacks on spiritual issues.

8) In 2009 he was awarded the State Order of Friendship ( Russian Federation).

9) In 2010, Metropolitan Vladimir, Primate of the Moldavian Orthodox Church, awarded the highest order of the Orthodox Church of Moldova, St. Stephen the Great.

10) In 2011, the Rectorate of the National Music Academy of Ukraine named after P.I. Tchaikovsky awarded the Order “For outstanding achievements in musical art».

11) On February 27, 2012, he was awarded the State Order of Ukraine “For Merit”, III degree.

12) In April 2012, E.I.V. Grand Duchess Maria Vladimirovna was awarded the right to wear two medals with imperial state symbols, established in memory of the visit by the Head of the Russian Imperial House to Kyiv and Crimea.

13) May 18, 2012, with the blessing of the Primate of the Russian Orthodox Church, His Holiness Patriarch Kirill,

14) Metropolitan of Astana and Kazakhstan Alexander (Mogilev), Head of the Metropolitan District of the Russian Orthodox Church in Kazakhstan, was awarded a commemorative honorary silver medal “140 years of the founding of the Turkestan diocese.”

15) In February 2013, His Holiness Patriarch Kirill awarded a commemorative anniversary medal in memory of the 200th anniversary of Russia’s victory over the French in Patriotic War 1812.

16) Autumn, 2014 - The Primate of the UOC, His Beatitude Metropolitan Onuphry, awarded the Order of St. Andrew the First-Called."

P.S. “According to the caustic remark of Yuri Nagibin:
"His (Sergei Mikhalkov) inexhaustible thirst
to the next laureate titles and degrees,
all for new medals and orders
rooted in the desire, first of all, to prove to oneself,
that he exists, when in fact he has long been gone.
Only in the armor of golden pendants
this living dead
and acquires at least some semblance of flesh."

I remembered.

“The Cossack was walking somewhere into the distance.
There was a medal on the chest:

“For courage”, “For victory”,
"For a pleasant conversation"
"For scientific works"
"For the protection of the entire environment"
two cosmonaut medals,
Warcraft Player Order,
symbol of passing the GTO,
"Passing maintenance"
Pregnant Club "Crane",
Wardrobe of the House of Culture "Gidravlik",
"Altavista dot com"
"Society of Fungus Patients"
Captain of the game "Zarnitsa"
"Gomel mental hospital" ()

Date of creation: 10/04/1994

A country: Ukraine

City: Tulce And n, administrative center of Tulchinsky district, Vinnytsia region, Ukraine

Address: Ukraine, 23600, Vinnitsa region, Tulchin, st. Leontovicha, 41.

Office phone-fax: (4335) 2–18–04

Diocesan monthly bilingual (Ukrainian, Russian) newspaper "Orthodox Interlocutor", editor Archpriest Vasily Kovach.

Assistant editor of the diocesan newspaper "Orthodox Interlocutor"- senior subdeacon Sergius Zinkevich.

.......................................................................................................................................

Ruling diocesan bishop: His Eminence Jonathan (Eletskikh), Metropolitan of Tulch And nsky and br A Tslavsky

Vicar bishop- His Eminence Sergius (Anitsoy), Bishop of Ladyzhinsky, manager of the affairs of the Tulchin diocese, secretary of the Diocesan Council - ex officio) http://www.patriarchia.ru/db/text/5168016.html

Assistant Secretary of the Tulchin Diocese - Archpriest Vasily Kovach

Head of the Diocesan Chancellery- Archpriest Alexander Palysyuk

Assistant to the Diocesan Bishop- Hieromonk Jerome (Zub)

Economy of the Tulchin diocese - Protodeacon Sergiy Gradilenko

Assistant to the head of the office of the Tulchin diocese - senior subdeacon Sergius Zinkevich

.........................................................................................................................................

General information about the diocese

Date of creation: 10/04/1994

A country: Ukraine

City: Tulce And n, administrative center of Tulchinsky district in the eastern part of Vinnitsa region, Ukraine

Cathedral City- Tulch And n, population - 10 thousand people

Co-Cathedral City- Br A clav, population - 4 thousand people

Cathedral Church- Nativity of Christ Cathedral, Tulcea And n, rector - Bishop Sergius (Anitsoy), vicar of the Tulchin diocese

...........................................................................................................................................

ADMINISTRATIVE DIVISIONS OF THE TULCHIN DIOCESE OF THE UOC

The Tulchin diocese is territorially (as of 2019) divided into 15 church districts (deaneries), headed by priest administrators (deaneries) appointed by the ruling bishop.

Among the diocesan church districts: Tulchinskoye (city), Bratslavskoye (city), Bershad deanery, Gaysinskoye, Illinetskoye, Ladyzhinskoye, Lipovetskoye, Nemirovskoye, Oratovskoye, Pogrebischenskoye, Teplitskoye, Trostyanetskoye, Tulchinskoye (district), Tyvrovskoye and Chechelnitskoye.

The administration of the Tulchin diocese is carried out by the canonical diocesan bishop appointed by the Holy Synod of the UOC, by succession of the fullness of hierarchical power from the holy Apostles directly or in unity with the diocesan council, consisting of clergy of the diocese.

The diocese has a diocesan Church court.

The composition of the diocesan council and the diocesan court is subject to periodic rotation.

When forming the composition of the diocesan council and the church court, the diocesan bishop uses the right of “veto” (recusal of a candidacy).

DIOCESAN COUNCIL

(main cast as of 2019)

  1. Metropolitan Jonathan (Eletskikh) is the chairman and ruling bishop of the Tulchin diocese.
  2. Bishop of Ladyzhinsky Sergius (Anitsoy), vicar of the Tulchin diocese, manager of the affairs of the Tulchin diocese, secretary of the Diocesan Council.
  3. Archpriest Roman Rudakov, dean of the city of Tulchin.
  4. Archpriest Vasily Goncharuk, dean of the Nemirovsky church district.
  5. Archpriest Alexander Palysyuk, head of the office of the Tulchin diocesan administration.
  6. Archpriest Vasily Kovach, second secretary of the Tulchin diocese.

Note. With the blessing of the ruling bishop, all deans of diocesan church districts, heads of diocesan departments (human rights, youth, pilgrimage, etc.) and invited rectors of the diocese’s churches are included in extended composition of the Diocesan Council (with voting rights).

ABOUT THE BISHOP COUNCIL OF THE TULCHIN DIOCESE

The Episcopal Council - an auxiliary situational advisory body under the diocesan bishop - was established in October 2016 by order of His Grace Jonathan, Archbishop (now Metropolitan) of Tulchin and Bratslav.

The Episcopal Council includes the suffragan bishop of the Tulchin diocese - ex officio.

The composition of the Episcopal Council is formed by the ruling bishop from diocesan clergy who have positive experience in liturgical, charitable, missionary, administrative and economic activities.

EPARCHIAL CERICAL COURT

(as of 2018)

  1. Archpriest Roman Rudakov, chairman, dean of the city of Tulchin.
  2. Archpriest Vasily Goncharuk, secretary, dean of the Nemirovsky church district.
  3. Archpriest Sergius Poyarkin, rector of the Holy Protection Church in the village of Suvorovskoye, Tulchinsky church district.

Diocesan Monasteries

1) Holy Dormition monastery, Tyshkovskaya Sloboda, Gaysinsky deanery. The rector is Abbot Amphilochius (Vasilevsky).

2) Convent in the name of the Holy Archangel Michael (Arkhangelo-Mikhailovsky) in the regional center of Checheln And to the Superior - Abbess Seraphim (Smaglo).

................................................................................................................................................................................................

Archpriest ROMAN RUDAKOV, dean of churches in the city of Tulchin, Tulchin diocese of the UOC

BRIEF HISTORY

ORTHODOX CHURCH-ADMINISTRATIVE STRUCTURE OF PODOLIA

As is known, from the baptism of Rus' until the half of the 15th century, Podolia and Galicia were under the jurisdiction of the Metropolitan of Kyiv, who supplied the cities with archpriests (deans) to lead the entire clergy. In the second half of the 15th century. The churches and monasteries of Galicia and Podolia were subordinated by the secular authorities to the governors of the Lviv city council, but under King Sigismund I (at the request of the Orthodox nobility, townspeople and brotherhoods) the Podolsk clergy was again transferred to administration Kyiv Metropolis. The city is Br A Claw became the administrative center of the voivodeship of the same name.

Since 1498, Bratslav was subjected to constant devastation from the Crimean Tatars, who attacked on the orders of the Turkish sultans who were at war with Poland. Their raids were so frequent and so destructive that in 1598 all government and judicial institutions of the voivodeship were moved to a safer small town - Vinnitsa.

After the conclusion of the political union of Lithuania and Poland and the formation single state- The Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth began the offensive of the gentry and the Roman Church against the Orthodox of Belarus and Ukraine, which resulted in the Brest Church Union with Rome. Over time, the merciless economic exploitation of serfs by Polish feudal lords began, which included Active participation and the elite of the Jewish Kahal, who rented their vast lands in Ukraine.

The combination of economic oppression and complex ethnic-religious contradictions gave rise to a fierce military confrontation - the Khmelnytsky region, and ultimately led to the political division of Polish territories between three neighboring empires (Austria, Germany, Russia) for a long historical period.

The Polish government considered the union obligatory for all Orthodox subjects in the territory of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, and the Orthodox faith was outlawed.

The clergy who accepted the union were given equal rights to the priests and subordinated to the Lvov Uniate bishops, and the oppressed Orthodox - to the Kyiv metropolitans and partly to the Pereyaslavl bishops.

In Podolia, despite the Uniate-Catholic pressure, there were then 562 Orthodox churches: in the protopopia of Bratslav - 70, in Nemirovskaya - 56, Rashkovskaya - 44, Granovskaya - 52, Krasnyanskaya - 40, Brailovskaya - 55, Vinnitsa - 60, Komargorodskaya - 60 , in Yampolskaya - 55.

In 1770, the Orthodox of the Podolsk and Bratslav voivodeships dared to secretly send the Krasnyan archpriest John Bazilevich to St. Petersburg with a message about the persecution. In 1773, the Uniate Lviv Metropolitan Lev Sheptytsky sent Kholm Bishop Maximilian Rylo to the Volyn and Podolsk voivodeships, who, with the help of Polish military commands, began to seize Orthodox churches by force to impose a union. Soon, by decision of the Warsaw Catholic Congress on April 4, 1776, the Orthodox population of Right Bank Ukraine was imposed with a special tax - a charitative, consisting of monetary and natural parts.

In 1771 and 1773, new appeals were made by the Orthodox of Podolia to St. Petersburg with a request to protect their faith. And only in 1786, under pressure from the government of Empress Catherine II, an Orthodox diocese was opened for the Orthodox population of Polish Right-Bank Ukraine.

The right bank part of Ukraine until 1793 was part of the Catholic Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth and was divided into 4 voivodeships - Kiev (without Kyiv, which was subordinate to Russia), Volyn, Podolsk and Bratslav.

After the Second Partition of Poland, by the Personal Decree of Empress Catherine the Great on April 13, 1793, Izyaslav and Bratslav provinces were formed on the Right Bank of Ukraine, and the Kamenets region bordering Austria-Hungary was established.

Soon, a single Orthodox diocese was established on the territory of Minsk (Belarus), Izyaslav and Bratslav provinces. On May 15, 1793, a bishop was appointed there. He became an archpastor from the Kyiv Metropolis named Victor, who in May 1794 addressed all Uniates of the vast region with a call to return to the faith of their fathers. The letter ended with the words: “Persecution has disappeared. Run into the arms of the Church, your Mother, and may you enjoy the silence of your conscience, and may you walk the path of truth, leading you to grace...”

The pastoral call had an ardent response, and already in February 1795, Archbishop Victor joyfully informed the Holy Synod that “one thousand seven hundred churches with 1032 priests and a million lay people accepted into the arms of the Orthodox Church." In only one Bratslav province 1442 Orthodox churches returned to Orthodoxy.

Considering the success of the Orthodox mission, Empress Catherine II issued a Personal Decree: “For better management of spiritual affairs... to establish at first one local bishop,... under the name (title)Bratslav and Podolsk giving him space (honor) under the bishop of Novgorod-Seversky." Complete Collection of Laws Russian Empire, 1795

The first bishop of Bratslav and Podolsk was determined to be the archimandrite of the Moscow stauropegial Donskoy Monastery Ioanikiy (Polonny).

He was born in 1742 in Volyn in the town of Polonny, which is why his last name was Polonny. On May 13, 1795, Archimandrite Ioaniky was ordained Bishop of Bratslav and Podolsk with a stay in Kamenets Podolsk. (Vladyka Ioaniky labored in the department for 24 long years and died on February 7, 1819 at the age of 78. He was buried in the Church of St. John the Baptist in the city of Kamenets-Podolsky).

In 1795, the Bratslav-Podolsk diocese was divided into counties: 1) Bratslav, 2) Tulchin, 3) Pyatigorsk, 4) Lipovets, 5) Vinnitsa, 6) Khmelnytsky, 7) Makhnivsky, 8) Skvirsky, 9) Litinsky, 10) Mogilevsky, 11) Yampolsky, 12) Bershadsky, 13) Gaisinsky, 14) Kamenetsky, 15) Ushitsky, 16) Proskurovsky, 17) Zinkovetsky, 18) Grudetsky, 19) Starokonstantinovsky, 20) Bazilevsky, 21) Kremenetsky. And the counties, in turn, were divided into church deaneries.

At the end of the eighteenth century, in the Bratslav-Podolsk diocese there were two cathedral and 2048 parish churches, in which 1865 priests, 1903 deacons and sextons served. There were also 69 casual priests, 68 casual deacons and sextons, and 319 seminarians.

In 1797, some of the districts were transferred to the Kyiv and Volyn provinces, and Baltsky and Olg were annexed from the Voznesensk diocese O Polish.

In 1799, a synodal decree prescribed that the cities of Dubno, Kremenets and Starokonstantinov, number I Those living in the Bratslav diocese were assigned to the Zhitomir diocese. From this moment on, the reduced Bratslav diocese was to be called the Podolsk diocese. The title of the bishop became “Podolsk and Bratslav».

In this administrative state, being within the Podolsk province, the Podolsk-Bratslav diocese remained until 1917. Unfortunately, the ensuing political chaos, civil war and bloody persecution of the Church in revolutionary Russia violated the established administrative and canonical structure of the Podolsk region and therefore it is not yet possible to establish the exact procedure for replacing the chair on the basis of discovered archival data in its entirety.

Not earlier than 1921, the Tulchin Vicariate of the Kamenets-Podolsk diocese was formed, which was stopped already in 1922 due to the defection of Bishop Photius (Mankovsky) to Renovationism.

After the end of the Second World War, the city of Vinnitsa became the administrative regional center of eastern Podolia. The Vinnytsia bishop began to temporarily govern the western part of Podolia with its center in Khmelnitsky (previously called Proskurov).

The ancient city of Kamenets Podolsky is the former diocesan center of the abolished Podolsk-Braslav diocese, state power was included in the Ternopil region western Ukraine. Currently, the city of Kamenets-Podolsk is the spiritual and administrative center of the Kamenets-Podolsk diocese of the UOC of the same name.

In the 90s of the twentieth century, due to the collapse of the ideology of state atheism, in the Vinnitsa diocese, which included the city of Tulchin, old churches began to quickly be revived and new churches were built. By the end of 1994 there were already 561 of them.

Taking this into account, the Holy Synod of the UOC on October 4, 1994 decided to form the Tulchin diocese by separating 16 eastern deaneries from the Vinnitsa diocese.

The newly formed Tulchin diocese also included the ancient center of the Podolsk diocese, the once populous Bratslav (now it is home to 6 thousand people, in Tulchin - 12.5 thousand people).

In 2014, from the Vinnitsa and Tulchin dioceses, the Holy Synod of the UOC allocated several southern deaneries, from which the third diocese was formed in the Vinnitsa region - Mogilev-Podolsk. The Kozatinsky deanery of the Tulchin diocese then became part of the Vinnitsa diocese.

To this we add that in the western part of Podolia - in the Khmelnitsky region, three independent dioceses of the UOC were formed. Together with the Kamenets-Podolsk diocese, they all made up the number 7, which is the historical maximum number Orthodox dioceses in Podolia in general.

RULING BISHOPS OF BRATSLAV-PODILSK, PODILSKO-BRATSLAV, VINNYTSKO-BRATSLAV AND TULCHINSKO-BRATSLAV

  1. Archbishop Ioaniky (Nikiforovich-Polonsky) from April 12, 1795 to February 7, 1819 (died).
  2. Archbishop Anthony (Sokolov) from March 15, 1819 to April 3, 1821 (died March 29, 1827).
  3. Archbishop Xenophon (Troepolis) from July 3, 1821 to January 24, 1832 (died May 4, 1834).
  4. Archbishop Kirill (Platonov-Theologian) from January 24, 1832 to March 28, 1841 (died), in October 1835 he consecrated the Church of the Nativity of Christ in Tulchin - the current one Cathedral).
  5. Archbishop Arseny (Moskvin) from April 5, 1841 to November 6, 1848, then Metropolitan of Kiev (died April 28, 1878).
  6. Bishop Elpidiphoros (Benedictov) from November 6, 1848 to March 29, 1851, eventually archbishop (died May 31, 1861).
  7. Bishop Eusebius (Ilyinsky) from March 29, 1851 to March 1, 1858, eventually exarch of Georgia - archbishop (died March 12, 1879).
  8. Archbishop Irinarh (Popov) from March 17, 1858 to December 20, 1863 (died September 28, 1868).
  9. Archbishop Leonty (Lebedinsky) from December 20, 1863 to October 2, 1874, eventually Metropolitan of Moscow (died August 1, 1893).
  10. Bishop Feognost (Lebedev) from December 7, 1874 to December 2, 1878, eventually Archbishop of Novgorod.
  11. Bishop Markel (Popel) from December 9, 1978 to March 6, 1882.
  12. Bishop Victorin (Lyubimov) from March 6 to August 21, 1882 (died).
  13. Bishop Justin (Okhotin) from March 15, 1882 to March 28, 1887, eventually Archbishop of Kherson.
  14. Bishop Donat (Sokolov-Bobinsky) from March 28, 1887 to December 13, 1890, eventually archbishop.
  15. Bishop Dimitri (Sambikin) from December 13, 1890 to November 1, 1896.
  16. Bishop Irenaeus - from November 2, 1896 to April 29, 1900.
  17. Bishop Christopher (Smirnov) from April 29, 1900 to December 1, 1904.
  18. Bishop Parfeniy (Levitsky) from December 1, 1904 to September 15, 1908.
  19. Bishop Seraphim - from September 15, 1908 to March 22, 1914. Bishop Mitrofan (Athos) from March 22, 1914 to October 1917.
  20. Bishop Pimen (Pegov) from October 1917 to December 1919.
  21. Bishop Ambrose - from December 1919 to July 1920.
  22. Bishop Pimen - from July 1920 to October 1923.
  23. Archbishop Boris - from October 1923 to January 1927.
  24. Bishop Varlaam, temporary administrator from January 1927 to January 1929.
  25. Bishop Peter, administrator from January 1929 to July 1931.
  26. Sschmch. Alexander (Petrovsky) from August 25, 1933 to May 20, 1937.
  27. Sschmch. Innokenty (Tikhonov) from April 5 to November 29, 1937.
  28. Evlogy (Markovsky) from August 5, 1942 to 1943.
  29. Bishop Maxim (Bachinsky) from 1944 to December 1945.
  30. Archpriest N. M. Salata - in 1946, authorized representative of the Patriarchal Exarch of All Ukraine.
  31. Bishop Jacob (Zaika) from February 2, 1947 to November 18, 1948.
  32. Bishop Anatoly from 1948 to 1949.
  33. Bishop Innocent (Zelnitsky) from January 30, 1949 to December 27, 1951.
  34. Bishop Andrey (Sukhenko) from December 27, 1951 to February 9, 1954, ep. Chernivtsi
  35. Bishop Andrey (Sukhenko) from February 9, 1954 to October 17, 1955.
  36. Archbishop Simon (Ivanovsky) from October 19, 1955 to August 14, 1961. (Since 1942, Archbishop of Chernigov and Nizhyn. In 1944, he was arrested by the NKVD and until 1954 he served a prison term in Siberia at a logging site).
  37. Archbishop Joasaph (Lelyukhin) from August 14, 1961 to March 30, 1964.
  38. Archbishop Alypiy (Khotovitsky) from March 30, 1964 to November 11, 1975.
  39. Metropolitan Agafangel (Savvin) from November 16, 1975 to September 1991. He was illegally retired by former Metropolitan Filaret (Denisenko) for opposing the schism.
  40. Archbishop Theodosius (Dikun) from September 1991 to 1992.
  41. Metropolitan Agafangel (Savvin) - 1992 (restored to the department by decision of the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church before transferring to Odessa).
  42. Metropolitan Macarius (Svistun) from June 22, 1992 to October 4, 1994 - Vinnitsa and Bratslav; (from October 4, 1994 to June 4, 2007 - Vinnitsa and Mogilev-Podolsk).
  43. Metropolitan Simeon (Schostatsky) from 10.06. 2007 - Vinnitsa and Mogilev-Podolsk; (since January 5, 2013 - Vinnitsky and Barsky). On December 17, 2018, the Holy Synod of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church banned Metropolitan Simeon of Vinnitsa and Bar from serving in the ministry for deviating from the “autocephalous” schism of the OCU.
  44. Archbishop Barsanuphius (Stolyar). By the decision of the Holy Synod of the UOC dated December 17, 2018 (magazine No. 72), he was appointed Bishop of Vinnytsia and Bar.

TULCHIN-BRATSLAV BISHRIERS:

44. Bishop Innokenty (Shestopal), Tulchinsky and Bratslavsky from 1994 to 1999.

46. ​​Metropolitan Jonathan (Eletsky), Tulchinsky and Bratslavsky, from November 2006 to the present day.

Sources and literature:

1. Parishes and churches of the Podolsk diocese. Ed. Evfimiy Setsinsky, 1901.

2. Drawings of the history of the Polish Diocese (1795-1995), A.K. Fox.

3. Podolsk diocesan statements 1876, 1895

4. Podolsk archpastors (1795-1895). V. Yakubovich, P. Vikul., 1895