Holy Sobriety in Modern Russia: A Faith Healer and His Followers

Holy Sobriety in Modern Russia: A Faith Healer and His Followers

by Kimberly Page Herrlinger
Holy Sobriety in Modern Russia: A Faith Healer and His Followers

Holy Sobriety in Modern Russia: A Faith Healer and His Followers

by Kimberly Page Herrlinger

Hardcover

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Overview

Drawing on multiple archives and primary sources, including secret police files and samizdat, Holy Sobriety in Modern Russia reconstructs the history of a spiritual movement that survived persecution by the Orthodox church and decades of official atheism, and still exists today. Since 1894, tens of thousands of Russians have found hope and faith through the teachings and prayers of the charismatic lay preacher and healer, Brother Ioann Churikov (1861–1933). Inspired by Churikov's deep piety, "miraculous" healing ability, and scripture-based philosophy known as holy sobriety, the "trezvenniki"—or "sober ones"—reclaimed their lives from the effects of alcoholism, unemployment, domestic abuse, and illness.
Page Herrlinger examines the lived religious experience and official repression of this primarily working-class community over the span of Russia's tumultuous twentieth century, crossing over—and challenging—the traditional divide between religious and secular studies of Russia and the Soviet Union, and highlighting previously unseen patterns of change and continuity between Russia's tsarist and socialist pasts. This grass-roots faith community makes an ideal case study through which to explore patterns of spiritual searching and religious toleration under both tsarist and Soviet rule, providing a deeper context for today's discussions about the relationship between Russian Orthodoxy and national identity.
Holy Sobriety in Modern Russia is a story of resilience, reinvention, and resistance. Herrlinger's analysis seeks to understand these unorthodox believers as active agents exercising their perceived right to live according to their beliefs, both as individuals and as a community.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781501771149
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 08/15/2023
Series: NIU Series in Slavic, East European, and Eurasian Studies
Pages: 360
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Page Herrlinger is Associate Professor of History at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine, where she teaches courses on nineteenth and twentieth century Russia and Europe. She is the author of Working Souls.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1. Becoming "Brother Ioann": Belief, Behavior, and Image
2. An Extraordinary Man on A Sober Mission
3. Sober Brothers: Male Trezvenniki Tell their Stories
4. Sober Sister: the Voices of Trezvennitsy
5. Not in Good Faith: the Orthodox Church's Case against Brother Ioann, 1910-1914
6. An Unorthodox Conversation: An Unorthodox Conversation
7. Revolutionary Sobriet: Challenges and Opportunities, 1917-1927
8. The End of it All? The Soviet State's Campaign against the Trezvenniki
9. Promises of an Afterlife: Holy Sobriety after Brother Ioann's Death
10. Sober Truths during Late Socialism
The Past is Present

What People are Saying About This

Catherine Wanner

In elegantly written prose, this book offers a biography of a social movement that elevates the battle for sobriety to a crusade. The vibrant testimonies of twin converts to sobriety and spirituality offer a panoramic view of the religiosity of urban Orthodox believers across social classes.

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