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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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103089
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10308900.002
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1990-09-18
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RELIGION, Page 82Historic SermonSoft-sell televangelism hits the Soviet Union
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.
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.