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| Blessing ships and aircraft such as this SU-27 SM fighter jet is believed to bestow divine protection |
The Russian Orthodox Church has proposed a stop to the practice of having priests bless weapons of mass destruction, though sprinkling holy water on planes and ships is still deemed appropriate.
The Church
on Monday published a draft document outlining its role in blessing Orthodox
Christians who "protect the Fatherland" and "carry out their
military duty", inviting internet users to discuss the proposal online.
Russians
often ask priests to bless anything from new cars and flats to Soyuz spaceships
in the belief that the gesture bestows divine protection.
Since the
fall of the Soviet Union, priests have also begun blessing troops, planes and
ships, and all sorts of weapons, from Kalashnikov rifles to nuclear-capable
Iskander ballistic missiles.
But the
document proposed that "blessing any type of weapons the usage of which
can inflict an indefinite number of deaths, including weapons with
indiscriminate effects or weapons of mass destruction... be removed from
pastoral practice."
At the same
time, it remains "appropriate" to "bless transport used by
soldiers on land, water and in the air", to ask God to protect the men
using them, it said.
The Russian
military has forged ever closer ties to the Church under Defence Minister
Sergei Shoigu, who is overseeing the construction of a huge cathedral for
Russia's armed forces outside Moscow.
It is to be
opened on May 9, the 75th anniversary of the Soviet victory over Nazi Germany
in the Great Patriotic War.
Since 2010
the military has inducted priests into its ranks, including an airborne unit
which can deploy with mobile inflatable chapels.
Blessing
ships and aircraft such as this SU-27 SM fighter jet is believed to bestow
divine protection.

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