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{{Short description|Russian Orthodox underground Spiritual Christian sect}} {{About|the Russian religious sect|the American doom metal band|Khlyst (band)}} [[File:Ecstatic ritual of Khlysts (radeniye).jpg|thumb|right|Ecstatic ritual of ''Khlysts'' ("radeniye")]] The '''Khlysts''' or '''Khlysty''' ({{lang-rus|Π₯Π»ΡΡΡΡ|p=xlΙ¨ΛstΙ¨}}, {{literally}} "whips") were an underground [[Spiritual Christianity|Spiritual Christian]] sect which emerged in Russia in the 17th century. The sect is traditionally said to have been founded in 1645 by [[Danilo Filippovich]], although there is no written evidence to support this claim. The beliefs and practices of its members included ecstatic rituals, worship of charismatic leaders, and a rejection of the priesthood and holy books. They believed in direct communication with the [[Holy Spirit in Christianity|Holy Spirit]] and practiced the ritual of {{ill|radenie|ru|Π Π°Π΄Π΅Π½ΠΈΠ΅|italics=y}} ("rejoicing"), which was characterized by dancing, [[speaking in tongues]], and [[prophesying]]. Throughout their history, the Khlysts were pursued by accusations of sexual immorality and faced persecution from other religious groups and from the government. In the 18th century, doctrinal changes led to schisms, and by the 1970s, only a few isolated groups remained. The Khlysts had a significant influence on other Russian sectarian movements, such as the [[Skoptsy]], [[Dukhobors]] and [[Molokans]]. Russian mystic [[Grigori Rasputin]] was associated with the Khlysts in popular rumor, but the consensus among historians is that he was not a member of the sect. ==Name== The members of the sect referred to themselves by various names, including "God's People" (''liudi bozh'i''), "followers of Christ's faith" (''Khristovovery''),<ref name=gav>{{harvnb|Gavrilyuk|2012|pp=497β8}}</ref> or simply "Christs" (''Khristy'').<ref>{{harvnb|Etkind|2013|p=568}}</ref> The appellation "Khlysty" is a derogatory term applied by critics of the sect. The origin of the term is disputed. It is probably a corruption of the group's aforementioned self-designation of ''Khristy'', but may also allude to the sect's practice of ritual [[self-flagellation]]; the Russian word ''khlyst'' means a "whip" or "thin rod".<ref name=gav/><ref name=File40>{{harvnb|Radzinsky|2000|p=40}}</ref> It is also possible that the word is related to the Greek word ''khiliaste'' (meaning "chiliast" or "[[millennialist]]").<ref name="brackney">{{harvnb|Brackney|2012|p=173}}</ref> ==Origins== According to its own oral tradition, the sect was founded in 1645 by Danilo Filippov (or Daniil Filippovich), a peasant of [[Kostroma]] and a runaway soldier. He was said to have become a "living god" after the [[Lord of Hosts]] descended upon him on Gorodino Hill, [[Vladimir Oblast]]. He delivered twelve commandments to his disciples, which forbade (among other things) sexual intercourse, drinking and swearing. He later named as his successor Ivan Suslov, a peasant of [[Murom]]. Suslov, transformed by Filippov into a "new Christ", acquired a following of twelve apostles, along with a woman who was given the title of "[[Theotokos|Mother of God]]". The tradition relates that Suslov was crucified twice by the Russian authorities, but rose from the dead each time.<ref name=gav/><ref name=Clay70>{{harvnb|Clay|1985|p=70}}</ref><ref>{{harvnb|Radzinsky|2000|p=39}}</ref> There is no written evidence to support this story, or to confirm the existence of Filippov. The first historical references to the Khlysty are found in the writings of the [[Old Believers]], a Christian community which resisted the [[Nikonites|17th-century reforms]] of the Russian State Church. The Old Believers condemned the Khlysty as heretics, and warnings about them can be found in letters dating from around the 1670s. The [[Russian Orthodox Church|Orthodox Church]] also attacked the Khlysty; [[Dimitry of Rostov]] wrote against them in ''An Investigation of the Schismatic Faith'' (c. 1709).<ref>{{harvnb|Clay|1985|pp=71β2}}</ref> Suslov died around 1716, at which time Prokofii Lupkin became the new "Christ". The oral tradition claims that Lupkin was the son of Filippov, but this is unlikely to be true.<ref>{{harvnb|Clay|1985|p=85}}</ref> Lupkin was a trader, and made use of his frequent journeys to places such as [[Uglich]] and [[Venev]] to organise secret assemblies for his followers. He encouraged his followers to worship in the manner of the Old Believers, such as by making the [[sign of the cross]] with two fingers instead of three,<ref>{{harvnb|Clay|1985|p=92}}</ref> but he also instructed them to attend the State Church and take communion. Many Khlysty, including Lupkin's wife and son, even took monastic vows. Lupkin also made large donations to the Church, which helped to protect the sect from persecution.<ref>{{harvnb|Clay|2017|p=128}}</ref> ==Beliefs and practices== {{Further|Baptism with the Holy Spirit}} The Khlysty renounced priesthood, holy books and veneration of the saints (excluding the [[Theotokos]]). They believed in the possibility of direct communication with the [[Holy Spirit]] and of its embodiment in living people.<ref name=Clay70/> Each of their leaders was a "living god", and each congregation (or "ark") had its own "Christ" and "Mother of God", appointed by the overall leader of the sect.<ref name=File40/><ref>{{harvnb|Buss|2003|p=74}}</ref> Furthermore, they believed that the [[Holy Spirit in Christianity|Holy Spirit]] could descend upon any one of them during the state of ecstasy which they attained during the ritual of ''radenie'' ("rejoicing"). This ritual, which formed the focus of their worship, took place on holy feast days. The congregation would gather during the evening at a prearranged location, such as a member's house. They would remove their outer clothing, and enter the sacred space dressed only in an undershirt. After a period of singing or chanting the [[Jesus Prayer]] ("Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner"), some of the worshippers would feel the Holy Spirit come upon them, and would begin dancing wildly, prophesying in [[Speaking in tongues|unintelligible language]]. This would continue for half an hour or more, until the dancers collapsed with exhaustion. Finally, they would share a sacramental meal of nuts, bread, pastry and [[kvass]].<ref>{{harvnb|Clay|1985|pp=88β91}}</ref> The Khlysty practiced an extreme [[asceticism]], in order to prepare themselves for the reception of the Holy Spirit into their bodies. They abstained from alcohol, and often fasted for days or weeks at a time. Although marriage was permitted for practical purposes, "because the help of a wife was indispensable for a peasant", it was a sin to engage in sexual intercourse, even with one's own wife.<ref>{{harvnb|Buss|2003|pp=74β75}}</ref> Connected with this [[mortification of the flesh]] was the practice of [[self-flagellation]] which often accompanied the ''radenie'' rite. Russian author [[Edvard Radzinsky]] has described a ''radenie'' ritual which he witnessed on the island of Chechen in 1964:<ref name=File41>{{harvnb|Radzinsky|2000|p=41}}</ref> {{blockquote|In white flaxen shirts worn over naked bodies they went down into the cellar of a peasant lodge. There in the dry cellar they lit candles. They started to sing something sacred in the half-light β as was later explained, a verse from the Easter canon: "Seeing, we are gladdened, for Christ has risen." After that a little old man with joyful, light-coloured eyes β the local Christ β began to chant a ''Khlyst'' prayer in the flickering candlelight. And then with youthful energy he started to "rejoice", that is, to whirl wildly in place, crossing himself and continually whipping his body. The choir chanted prayers, their voices ever more savagely, ever more fervently and passionately praying, so that some of them were already screaming and sobbing. But at this point the old man stopped in his whirling and cried out wildly, "Brothers! Brothers! I feel it, the Holy Spirit! God is within me!" And he began to prophesy, shouting out incoherent sounds mixed into which were the words, "Oh, Spirit!" "Oh, God!" "Oh, Spirit Lord!" After that began the main communal rite of "rejoicing", or general whirling and dancing.}} Radzinsky says that they referred to the whirling dance as "spiritual beer", on account of its intoxicating effect. He reports that after the dance had continued for some time, the worshippers fell to the floor: "And that was the end of it. But apparently only because I was present."<ref name=File41/> Radzinsky claims that in some arks, the Khlysts would at this point engage in "group sinning" β a frenzied sexual orgy, which they believed would purify them from the lusts of the flesh.<ref>{{harvnb|Radzinsky|2000|pp=41β2}}</ref> Similarly, [[C. L. Sulzberger]], in his book ''The Fall of Eagles'', writes that the Khlysty's "foremost idea was that salvation could be attained only by total repentance and that this became far more achievable for one who had truly transgressed. 'Sin in order that you may obtain forgiveness,' was the practical side of the Khlysty."<ref name=Sulzberger>{{harvnb|Sulzberger|1977|p=214}}</ref> Other scholars have dismissed these rumours. [[Frederick Cornwallis Conybeare]], referencing a study by Karl Konrad Grass, writes:<ref>{{harvnb|Coneybeare|1921|page=353}}</ref> {{blockquote|[The Khlysty] have been accused of ending their ''radenia'' or religious dances with wholesale debauchery, the lights being first put out. Grass examines the evidence very carefully and impartially, and rejects the story as calumny. The only thing that gives it colour is that often, when the ecstasies are over, the exhausted votaries drop down on the floor and sleep till dawn, the men on one side of the apartment, the women on the other. Their doing so, instead of going home at once, is a necessity dictated either by the climate or by fear of the Russian police, whose suspicions would be roused if they trooped home at a late hour.}} Historian Joseph T. Fuhrmann claims that "splinter groups practiced 'holy intercourse,' but most khlysty were devout [[Pentecostalism|pentecostalists]] who condemned such behaviour."<ref>{{harvnb|Fuhrmann|1990|page=7}}</ref> ==Persecution== Accusations of sexual immorality pursued the sect from its earliest days, and provoked numerous government investigations.<ref>{{harvnb|Clay|1985|pp=72β3}}</ref> In 1717, Lupkin and twenty other Khlysty were arrested in [[Uglich]]. They were held for five months, during which time they were interrogated and beaten. While some of his followers remained in custody, Lupkin managed to negotiate his own release, with the help of a 300-ruble bribe.<ref>{{harvnb|Clay|1985|pp=82β4}}</ref> Despite officially repenting, he continued to lead the movement until his death in 1732.<ref>{{harvnb|Clay|1985|p=93}}</ref> From 1733 to 1739, a specially-formed government commission arrested hundreds of suspected Khlyst members, charging them with participation in sexual orgies and ritual [[infanticide]]. These accusations were repeatedly denied, but the commission nevertheless convicted over three hundred people. They handed out sentences of hard labour, beatings, and mutilation of the nostrils and the tongue, and sent many of the prisoners into exile in [[Siberia]] or [[Orenburg]].<ref>{{harvnb|Clay|2017|p=129}}</ref> However, the Khlysty were undeterred, and continued practising. Some of those who had been sent into exile began to spread the movement through Siberia. In 1745, therefore, a new commission was formed, this time using "far crueler methods of interrogation".<ref name=Clay130>{{harvnb|Clay|2017|pp=130β1}}</ref> This commission, although eliciting false confessions of sexual deviation and cannibalistic communion, and sending another 200 people into exile, likewise failed to stamp out the movement.<ref name=Clay130/> ==Later history== Around 1750, some doctrinal changes took place within the sect, and they became known as the [[Postniki]] ("Fasters"). The leaders of the sect were now seen as "personifications of Christ", rather than only playing host to his spirit. It was no longer considered possible for ordinary members to receive the Holy Spirit during ''radenie'', although the ritual still held a central position in their worship.<ref name=lane>{{harvnb|Lane|1978|pp=92β3}}</ref> In 1840, a new splinter sect broke away from the Postniki. Calling themselves Israelites, they shortly afterwards split again into Old Israel and [[New Israel]]. The beliefs of the latter group departed considerably from the traditional teachings of the Khlysts,<ref name=lane/> and the sect still exists today in [[Uruguay]].<ref>{{harvnb|Shubin|2004|page=158}}</ref> These schisms weakened the movement, and their numbers began to decline. By the start of the twentieth century, estimates of the Khlysty's numbers ranged at around one hundred thousand.<ref>{{harvnb|Etkind|2013|p=570}}</ref> Prior to the outbreak of [[World War I]], there were reported to be around 20,000 New Israelites, 15,000 Old Israelites and 3,000 Postniki in Russia. By the 1970s, there were only "a few isolated groups" remaining.<ref name=lane/> ==Influence== The Khlysty are said to have been "the root of all Russian sectarianism", having spawned sects such as the [[Skoptsy]], the [[Dukhobors]] and the [[Molokans]].<ref>{{harvnb|Buss|2003|p=73}}</ref> ===Connection to Rasputin=== [[Grigori Rasputin]] was twice investigated (in 1903 and 1907) by the Tobolsk Theological Consistory, under charges of spreading Khlyst doctrine. Both investigations were closed without any evidence being found against him,<ref>{{harvnb|Radzinsky|2000|pages=45, 83β4, 183β4}}</ref> but popular rumour continued to link Rasputin to the sect.<ref>{{harvnb|Radzinsky|2000|pages=101, 230β231}}</ref> C. L. Sulzberger, in 1977, claimed that Rasputin "adopted the philosophy (if not proven membership)" of the Khlysts.<ref name=Sulzberger/> In ''The Man Behind the Myth'', co-authored by Rasputin's daughter [[Maria Rasputin|Maria]], it is claimed that Rasputin attended several Khlyst gatherings in the years before his arrival in St. Petersberg, but ultimately became disillusioned with the sect.<ref>{{harvnb|Rasputin|Barham|1977|pages=100β108}}</ref> The factual accuracy of this book has been called into question,<ref>{{harvnb|Fuhrmann|2012|page=x}}</ref> and according to [[Brian Moynahan]], Maria's story is the only evidence that Rasputin had any Khlyst connections.<ref>{{harvnb|Moynahan|1997|page=38}}</ref> The consensus of modern historians is that Rasputin was never a member of the sect.<ref>{{harvnb|Smith|2017|page=287}}</ref> ==See also== * [[Frankism]] * [[Kartanoism|Kartanolaisuus]], Finnish cult with influences from Khlysts and Skoptsys * ''[[The Silver Dove]]'', [[Andrei Bely]]'s first novel (1909), is based on the Khlysts ==References== '''Footnotes''' {{reflist}} '''Sources''' *{{cite book |last1=Brackney |first1=William H. |title=Historical Dictionary of Radical Christianity |date=2012 |publisher=Scarecrow Press |location=Lanham, Md. |isbn=978-0810871793 |page=173}} *{{cite book |last=Buss |first=Andreas |year=2003 |title=The Russian-Orthodox Tradition and Modernity |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=vvt5DwAAQBAJ&pg=PA73 |publisher=Brill |isbn=9789047402725}} *{{Cite journal |last=Clay |first=J. Eugene |year=1985 |title=God's People in the early eighteenth century: The Uglich affair of 1717 |journal=Cahiers du Monde Russe |pages=69β124 |volume=26 |issue=1 |doi=10.3406/cmr.1985.2034}} *{{cite journal |last=Clay |first=Eugene |year=2017 |title=The 'Quaker Heresy' in Siberia |journal=Canadian-American Slavic Studies |volume=51 |issue=1 |publisher=Brill |pages=122β126 |doi=10.1163/22102396-05101005}} *{{cite book |last=Coneybeare |first=Frederick C. |year=1921 |title=Russian Dissenters |publisher=Harvard University Press |url=https://archive.org/details/russiandissenter10cony/page/352/mode/2up}} *{{cite journal |last=Etkind |first=Alexander |journal=The Russian Review |volume=62 |issue=4 |year=2013 |pages=565β588 |title=Whirling with the Other: Russian Populism and Religious Sects |doi=10.1111/1467-9434.00292 |jstor=3664790}} *{{cite book |last=Fuhrmann |first=Joseph T. |year=1990 |title=Rasputin: A Life |url=https://archive.org/details/rasputinlife00fuhr/page/6/mode/2up |publisher=Praeger |isbn=0-275-93215-X}} *{{cite book |last=Fuhrmann |first=Joseph T. |year=2012 |title=Rasputin: The Untold Story |publisher=Wiley |isbn=9781118226933}} *{{cite book |editor-last=Lamm |editor-first=Julia A. |last=Gavrilyuk |first=Paul L. |year=2012 |title=The Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Christian Mysticism |chapter=Nineteenth- to Twentieth-Century Russian Mysticism |pages=489β500 |location=Chichester, UK |publisher=John Wiley & Sons, Ltd |doi=10.1002/9781118232736.ch32|isbn=9781118232736 }} *{{cite book |last=Lane |first=Christel |year=1978 |title=Christian Religion in the Soviet Union |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=VSmdHtacha8C&pg=PA92|publisher=SUNY Press |isbn=9780873953276}} *{{cite book |last=Moynahan |first=Brian |year=1997 |title=Rasputin: The Saint Who Sinned |publisher=Random House |url=https://archive.org/details/rasputinsaintwho00moyn/page/38/mode/2up |isbn=0-679-41930-6}} *{{cite book |last = Radzinsky |first = Edvard |title = The Rasputin File |publisher = Anchor |year = 2000 |isbn = 0-385-48910-2 |url = https://archive.org/details/rasputinfile00edva }} *{{cite book |last1=Rasputin |first1=Maria |last2=Barham |first2=Patte |title=Rasputin: The Man Behind the Myth |publisher=Prentice-Hall |year=1977 |url=https://archive.org/details/rasputinmanbehin00rasp/page/100/mode/1up |isbn=0-446-82480-1}} *{{Cite book |last=Shubin |first=Daniel H. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2X0bbj5SK-kC&pg=PA158 |title=A History of Russian Christianity, Vol. III: The Synodal Era and the Sectarians β 1725 to 1894 |date=2004 |publisher=Algora Publishing |isbn=978-0-87586-426-6}} *{{cite book |last=Smith |first=Douglas |date=2017 |title=Rasputin |publisher=Pan Books |isbn=978-1-4472-4585-8}} *{{cite book |last=Sulzberger |first=C. L. |year=1977 |title=The Fall of Eagles |location=New York |publisher=Crown Publishers |isbn=0-517-52817-7}} ==Further reading== * Emeliantseva, E. "Situational Religiosity: Everyday Strategies of the Moscow Christ-Faith Believers and of the St Petersburg Mystics Attracted by This Faith in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century," in Thomas Bremer (ed), ''Religion and the Conceptual Boundary in Central and Eastern Europe: Encounters of Faiths'' (Basingstoke, [[Palgrave Macmillan]], 2008) (Studies in Central and Eastern Europe), 98-120. * Panchenko, Aleksandr. [http://www.ruthenia.ru/folklore/panchenko3.htm "Strange faith" and the blood libel] {{Authority control}} [[Category:Khlysts| ]] [[Category:Spiritual Christianity]] [[Category:17th century in Russia]]
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