| In-Progress:
(Updated July 12, 2010) BASED ON HOLIDAYS AND SONGS, over 250 ethno-religious congregations around the world today that label themselves "Molokans" are actually of 3 different religious denominations — 1 Molokan and 2 kinds of Jumpers (Spiritual and S&L-user), each with sub-groups (factions, schisms, sub-sects). Further confusion occurs because not all members of each congregation are in aggreement on every issue, nor can the report of one presbyter or a few members be a reliable measure of the whole. This guide is intended to facilitate identifying the major factors of each of these three faiths when they claim to be the "true" Molokan religion. "Molokan" is Russian for "milk-drinkers" (Russian: molokane, молокане, from moloko = milk). All these demonimations have a common origin in Russian Spiritual Christianity, use the Russian Bible with Apocrypha; and pray, sing, and read in Russian; but their holidays, rituals, liturgy, services, songs, and tolerance of each other and outsiders varies significantly. Members within and between congregations may be relatives, neighbors, friendly or unfriendly, intermarried, yet different in behavior and belief, sometimes hostile and secretive. Compare with Jewish religious movements, Sectarianism within Judaism, and Mennonite denominations. This is a summary taxonomy in-progress. Your comments and corrections are welcome — Adminstrrator@Molokane.org. SONGSMolokans and Jumpers can easily be differentiated by their use of song for worship. During worship Molokans sing only from the Bible, and do not sing hymns derived from Russian folksongs or borrowed from other faiths. Molokans do not use a songbook during worship, nor is a songbook on their altar table (престол : prestol ). Molokans may sing borrowed songs after paryer service on occasions such as weddnigs, funerals, and during meals. Jumpers now use a variety of songbooks, which were adapted from Russian folksongs and neighboring faiths, for a variety of reasons, including but not limited to: song message, melody, emotional-spiritual arousal, jumping and spiritual dance. Further, Jumper-S&L-users and Maksimists, who split from Jumpers, sing and read from the Book of the Sun: Spirit and Life (S&L) and display more jumping, prophesy, and shout-singing. All 3 faiths unfortunately use the one label "Molokan." At least three scholars have published papers about "Molokan" singing: Dr. O'brien-Rothe, Dr. Nikitina, Dr. Mazo, and a project is in-progress by Dr. Clay.
* Most adapted from
Russian folksongs and borrowed from German protestants.
** After services at weddings, funerals, child dedication, holidays. HOLIDAYS2010-2020 Spiritual Christian
Molokan
Holiday Calendar in Russian
(left) and English.
(From
Vest',
2009
Vol.
6, page 4)
Though many labels have been used for the varieties of Spiritual Christian "Molokan" offshoots and related groups, many of these sectarian congregations are now extinct or the labels no longer commonly used, for example: Knowers-Seers, True Spiritual Christians, Zionists, Akinfevs, Water Molokans, Sunday Molokans, Don group, Krylovs, Molokan-Sabbatarians (Molokan-Subbotniki), Saturday Molokans, Communalists, Noisy-nose-breathers, Bouncers, Molokan-Fasters, Clean, Shtundo-Molokans, Evangelicals, Molokan- Presbyterians, New Molokans, Evangelical Christians, Shtundo- Evangelicals, New Israel, ... See Two Sectarian Classification Systems for Spiritual Christian Molokans, Jumpers, and others, and Hijacking the Doukhobors and Molokans. In-Progress Религиозные течения и секты. Справочник http://www.militia-dei.spb.ru/?go=mdbase&id=311 The chart below shows a simple holiday taxonomy of all congregations of Spiritual Christian Molokans and Jumpers in the world in 2008. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| Holiday (Christ's, God's)1 | Group | |||
| English
Russian, Поруссий* (*character set = Windows-1251) |
1
Bible reference (more can be found) |
Jumpers, pryguny |
||
|
dukhovnye |
|
|||
| Annunciation**
Blagoveschenie, Благовещение |
Luke 1:28-31 |
X |
X |
|
| Palm Sunday |
X |
|||
| Easter,
Passover Paskha, Пасха |
Leviticus 23:5-10 |
(Passion Week, Easter) |
|
|
| Ascension Day**
Voznesenie, Вознесение |
Mark 16:1-8; Acts 1:9 |
(Ascension) |
|
|
| Pentecost***,
Trinity Piatidesiatnitsa, Пятидесятница Troitsa, Троица |
Acts 2, Leviticus 23:16-23 |
(Pentecost) |
|
|
| Transfiguration**
Preobrazhenie, Преображение |
Mathew 17:1-9 |
|
|
|
| (Memorial, Blowing of) Trumpets*** Trubnyi, Трубный Pamiat Trub, Памят Труб |
Leviticus 23:23-25 |
|
|
|
| Fast Day of Atonement***
Post Sudnyi Den', Пост Судный День |
Leviticus 16:29-34 |
|
|
|
| Festival of Shelters/Booths*** 4 Feast of Tabernacles Kuschei, Kuscha, Кущей, Куща |
Leviticus 23:33-44 |
|
|
|
| Harvest Festival4 Urozhai, zhatva : Урожай, жатва |
Leviticus 23:33-44 |
(3-Day Fast, Thanksgiving4) |
||
| Birth of Christ,
Christmas Rozhdestvo Khrista, Рождество Христа |
Luke 2:1-20 |
(Christmas Eve Youth Program, Christmas Day Service5) |
|
|
| Epiphany**
Kreschenie, Крещение |
Luke 3:21-22 |
|
|
|
| Seventh (Week) Sed'moi, Седьмой |
From prophesy in Armenia |
X
Armenia3 |
||
| Annunciation — March 25, announcement by angel
Gabriel to the Virgin
Mary of the incarnation of Christ. Ascension Day — 40th day after Easter, for the bodily passing of Christ from earth to heaven. Transfiguration — August 6, festival for the supernatural change in the appearance of Christ on the mountain. Epiphany — January 6, for the coming of the 3 gentile wise men, Magi, to Jesus at Bethlehem, and baptism. |
|
| *** | See Interpretation of American Jumper Holidays (with Jewish comparison) |
| Information is from many sources The oldest is an 1874 Spiritual Christian (Molokan) calendar (right) found in the Russian State Historical Archive (RGIA, St. Petersburg) by Edward J. Samarin in 1992 and published in Molokan NEWS (1993, San Francisco CA). Ed thought it listed Molokan and Jumper-Maksimist holidays combined in one table. I argued that it shows some group celebrated all these holidays. In 1997 I found a calendar of Jumper holidays typed by ________. Verification comes from a holiday table typed by the head speaker (Besednik) of the Spiritual Molokan community in Inozemstvo, Stavropol'skii territory, Russia (near Piatigorsk). His table showed their holidays for the entire decade of the 1990s. His congregation resettled from Azerbaidjan in the mid-1990s. The use of these holidays was confirmed by elders of the Piatigorsk Spiritual (Dukhovnie) Molokans, who left Kars in the 1920s, whose elder prophet Botieff added that there are two categories of holidays — Christ's and God's — and that every holiday is important, but the Constants and Maksimisti each reject half of our holidays. For comparison see Holidays and Rituals of Doukhobors in the Caucasus, by Svetlana A. Inikova, Russian Academy of Sciences, and Calendar of Doukhobor Holidays in the Caucasus, compiled by Jonathan J. Kalpakoff. Footnotes: |
|
| The first Molokans kept the major Orthodox
Christian
holidays, which some now call Christ's
Holidays.
Also in the beginning many judiazers (Sabbatarians. Russian:
Subbotniki)
joined the Molokans (See
Miluikov)
and the Old Testament God's Holidays
were added. I suspect that early Molokans were allowed to chose their
sabbath
day (Saturday or Sunday), and which holidays to follow (all or some).
In
the 1700s a large group of Sabbatarians in Saratov led by Dolmatov
joined
and many of core Molokans refused the compromise causing a split
— probably into Constants, Sabbatarians, and Spiritual (See
Miluikov). In 1833, many of the Spiritual became Jumpers/Leapers in
the Milky Waters area (See
Hoover & Petrov, chap. 12: "Salt and Light"; also Berokoff,
chap 5). In the 1860s in the Caucasus, one leader among the
several Jumper groups, MG Rudomiotkin, removed Christ's
Holidays
for his followers (See Berokoff,
Addenda XXX), who were labeled Maksimisti in the 1920s (See
Lane). During the 1910s in America, the American Jumpers, who
dominated
all but two American Constant congregations, began to insist that the
Maksimist new
rituals be adopted (See
Berokoff, chap 3) and removed Christ's
Holidays, which caused concern, and jealousy, among youth who
felt deprived of
American Christian celebrations like Christmas. Before WWII, the UMCA
sponsored
youth activities during Christmas (carol singing, gift stockings) and
Easter
(candy baskets). This practice was mostly officially stopped by newer
elected officers before the UMCA relocated to
East
Los Angeles, about 1950. In the mid-1950s, the Spiritual Molokans who
immigrated
from Persia (Iran) were told by the dominant American Jumpers to
abandon Christ's
Holidays or be labeled "non-Molokan" (See
Berokoff, chap. 8), even though the American Constant Molokans
obeyed these
holidays. Therefore all Jumper congegations in America and Australia
became S&L-users. |
|
| All Jumpers in America and Australia are
S&L-users. In America, some
dominant
members of the S&L-users claim to be the "center of
Molokansim" while ignoring the Molokan-Constants. Also
confusing is that congegations and individulas who use the S&L
are not equal, they differ widely on interpretation and focus. Some
believe Rudomiotkin did
not
die, but rose into heaven, some say on a white horse. Some sing songs
to praize Rudomiotkin, others avoid such songs. Some S&L-users
primarily follow Klubnikin, or David Esseich, not Rudometkin. Some hate
the book, yet tollerate it to be socially accepted, to keep their
position in their congregation, and/or be accepted by other
congregations. Dispite
these diferrences and politics, all S&L-users place the S&L
on their altar table and follow the Old Testament holidays. |
|
| This major holiday was
added by prophesy to the Spiritual/Jumper congregations in Armenia as a
perpetual Pentecost. Every 7 weeks throughout
the year, Armenian Jumpers conduct Sed'moi
(Russian: Seventh),
a spiritual fast
and
cleansing service which they started before WWII. This new holiday
is practiced only in that region. Sed'moi became important during
perestroika and the
Karabakh war (late 1980s), as families (90%) were
fleeing to safety in Russia. Sed'moi
promotes intra-group cohesion, so
the refugees and those 10% remaining in Armenia will rekindle their
spiritual faith and identity more often than on their few
traditional major holidays. There is some concern by a few of the
several dozen
recent Armenian- Spiritual- Jumpers migrants in America and Australia
that they cannot perform this holiday with their new American or
Australian congregations. In Australia in 2006, recent immigrants
from Armenia purchased their own building to hold their own traditional
services. |
|
| Some Russian Constants celebrate the Harvest
Festival
(3-day fast) in place of the Festival of Shelters for 8 days. The
American
Constants adopted, or substituted, American Thanksgiving because it is
a similar autumn harvest festival, but they time the feast to be on the
Sunday before American Thanksgiving which occurs on Thursdays. In
Central California, the Jumper congregations near Kernam have
celebrated a version of the harvest festival, calling it an offering
for the crops. Formerly 2 congregations joined so each could performe
the blessing for the other, but disagreement over how a presbyter was
removed has stopped their cooperation. For a history of the Harvest
Festival and the Old Testament, see: Праздник Сбора Урожая
или Праздник Кущей [ДБ34] (Christian Churches of God, Australia). |
|
| Molokans in Russia, as all Russians and
Eastern Orthodox,
celebrate the Birth of Christ on January 7, according to the Julian
calendar, but
American Constant Molokans adopted the American Christmas Day, December
25, perhaps to blend in with American, and to take advantage of the
national time off of work and school. |
|