10.5281/zenodo.2528880
https://zenodo.org/records/2528880
oai:zenodo.org:2528880
Ershov, Bogdan Anatolievich, Fursov, Vladimir Nikolaevich
Ershov, Bogdan Anatolievich, Fursov, Vladimir Nikolaevich
0000-0002-0544-0350
Voronezh State Technical University, Voronezh State Pedagogical University
THE RUSSIAN CHURCH IN THE STATE MECHANISM OF RUSSIA
Zenodo
2018
Church, state, priest, charity, hierarchy.
2018-02-14
eng
https://search.datacite.org/works/10.5281/zenodo.2528879
10.5281/zenodo.2528879
https://zenodo.org/communities/bulletensocial
Published
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International
In article outlines the key areas of the charitable and educational activities of the Orthodox Church, which are analyzed during religious reforms in the 19th and early 20th centuries in Russia. It is shown that at that time the scale of charity aid and the responsibilities of charitable organizations increased; the control over the distribution of aid has improved, the role of the Church in the social protection of the population has increased. The conclusions made in the article allow us to look at a holistic picture of the Church's activities in providing the educational process in Russian church schools during the period under study. It turned out that the concrete activity of the clergy, which was impossible without the proper level of education, placed the clergy in the most literate category of the population. It is the priests, in the absence of a developed education system in Russia, began to introduce primary public education. This article helps to understand and systematize the position of the Church as a spiritual and moral institution that preserves Russia's cultural heritage. Of particular importance is the regional nature of the topic under study, which makes it possible to understand the general and specific relations between the Church and the state. For the international community, the article will be useful as an archival exhibition, which is a rare publication that reveals the relationship between the Orthodox Church and the state in Russia in the 19th and early 20th centuries.