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- RELIGION, Page 82Historic Sermon
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- Soft-sell televangelism hits the Soviet Union
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- Even in the unpredictable Soviet Union, television viewers
- must be astonished by a new program on one of the two state-run
- channels. Last week, in a Sunday time slot following the
- evening news, Metropolitan Pitirim, head of the publishing
- department of the Russian Orthodox Church, appeared on the
- screen garbed in clerical robes and holding prayer beads. For
- ten minutes, Pitirim spoke soothingly about the need to set
- aside daily troubles in order to help others and contemplate the
- meaning of life. The priest also worked in discreet mentions of
- Jesus Christ and the Bible.
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- Metropolitan Pitirim was appearing on a new weekly show
- called Thoughts About the Eternal: Sunday Moral Sermon, which
- a layman had inaugurated the previous week. Pitirim's
- commentary, though as innocuous as a sermonette after an
- American late movie on television, was nonetheless historic: the
- first time in 72 years of Communist rule that a clergyman's
- sermon had been broadcast. Coming six weeks before President
- Mikhail Gorbachev's scheduled meeting with the Pope at the
- Vatican, the show underscored Soviet leaders' increasing
- tolerance of religious practice.
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