Protestants, Peace and the Apocalypse: The USSR’s Religious Cold War, 1947–62

In recent years historians have paid growing attention to the religious dimensions of the Cold War. These studies have largely focused, however, on the capitalist world, particularly the rise of evangelicalism and fundamentalism in the USA. This article turns the spotlight on the communist adversary, asking whether the USSR also participated in a ‘religious Cold War'. Given the atheist convictions on which the Soviet state was founded, this might appear counter-intuitive, but religious dynamics were of growing importance in the USSR too. Soviet officials sought to create what was called an ‘ecumenical movement', inviting religious actors to become advocates for the Soviet peace message. Protestants, in particular, were important figures on the international stage because of the large communities of co-believers in the West. At the same time, however, the authorities were alarmed about various grass-roots phenomena at home which seemed to be on the rise as the Cold War escalated, such as pacifism and apocalyptic prediction. Faced with such threats, state tactics included the arrest of believers and hostile press campaigns. Even though the inconsistencies were readily visible to all, this dualistic approach was not abandoned and the ultimately self-defeating engagement with the ‘religious Cold War' continued.

the missionary leader of the Slavic Gospel Association in Chicago, asking for them to be read aloud on radio programs broadcast on Soviet airwaves. His trial proceedings centred on the content of the texts such as the 'Appeal to Atheists' in which Krylov argued that the 'recklessness' of both political systems risked universal destruction. In it, he addressed the world's politicians directly: Leaders of nations! Decide your own fate today. If you now turn away from the world God offers you, you must lie in the bed you've made. You who kindle the flames of war, armed with arrows of fire, go walk into your own fire and among the sparks you have set ablaze. This is your fate at my hands: you shall lie down in torment . . . Showing no restraint in front of the people you threaten one another with atomic and hydrogen bombs, but on whose heads do you want to drop them, on yours or ours? It is not enough that you have sentenced hundreds of millions of people to eternal agony by turning them against God, but you, ignoring article 124 of the USSR Constitution, are also hurting the true people of God. 1 Here Krylov articulated political messages he wanted his imagined audience, both in the USA and at home in the USSR, to hear. He criticized the Soviet government for failing to adhere to its own promises, as laid out in article 124 of the 1936 Constitution which promised 'freedom of religious worship'. 2 But his text is not a straight-forward critique of the Soviet leaders and their unconstitutional mode of governance. 3 In fact his first, and perhaps most powerful, point concerns world leaders, particularly those responsible for the escalating Cold War. The author draws explicitly on the Bible, interweaving an unattributed verse from Isaiah (From 'You who kindle' to 'lie down in torment') into his own text to give a clear lesson: those who deny God, who continue to incite war, and who hurt the righteous will be punished, their own violence turned against them. 4 The Isaiah verse was used not only to prophesy retribution against the atheist state, but also to 1 Fedor Krylov, born in 1912 in a village in Poltava region (Ukraine), received only three years of schooling, and by the age of 20 his Baptist faith had landed him in prison for the first time, sentenced in 1932 by a GPU troika to three years, and in 1937 to a further 10 years by a NKVD troika. Between his release in 1947 and his third arrest in 1958, he lived with his wife in the Krasnodar region and supported eight children by working as a cobbler. In August 1958, he was sentenced under article 58 to 10 years in corrective-labour camps. In 1966 his sentence was reduced to eight years and he was released but not rehabilitated (although the 1937 conviction had been overturned). Gosudarstvennyi arkhiv Rossiiskii federatsii (GARF) f. 8131, op. 31, d. 89745 (especially l. 20). This case, and others based on individual court files, has been anonymized by assigning the protagonist a pseudonym. 2 1936 Constitution of the USSR. Available at: http://www.hist.msu.ru/ER/Etext/cnst1936.htm (accessed 8 November 2017). 3 In this respect, it was quite different from the texts composed by members of the dissident movement that was to emerge over the coming years. As Benjamin Nathans has shown, one key tactic deployed by dissidents was to call upon the state to obey its own laws. evoke scenes of blazing fire. The Soviet officials dealing with his case took this to mean Krylov believed atomic weapons threatened all peoples with a terrible extermination. 5 During the investigation, he apparently claimed that if believers served in the army they would 'burn for all eternity in a lake of fire', further evidence for his interrogators of his subversive, scripture-based pacifism. 6 Krylov's case raises important questions about Cold War mentalities in the Soviet Union. How far were Soviet people aware of the new threat posed by nuclear weapons in the late 1940s and 1950s? Did the advent of atomic weaponry shape their outlook on the contemporary world and on the future? Did the Cold War encourage pacifist sentiment (as with Krylov), or did it inspire robust patriotism, as the state hoped? And what role, if any, did religion play in all of this? Religion has often been considered a potential source of resistance to the communist regime, particularly for the early and late Soviet eras. 7 Without adopting the notion of resistance per se, this article contributes to the existing literature by showing how the threat of a new kind of global conflict, whose scale and character were unknown, made scripture appealing for those seeking to ease their fears about the future. The article also explores how, in the context of the Cold War, the Soviet state responded in new and quite ambivalent ways.
The issues under consideration here have been explored very fully in the existing scholarship on the USSR's nemesis: the USA. From August 1945, soon after Enola Gay dropped its load on Hiroshima, the media bombarded readers with images of the terrifying mushroom cloud, alongside poetry, jokes, and cartoons on the atomic theme; science fiction 'accounts of a nuclear holocaust wiping out the entire population' proliferated, with scenes of devastation far outstripping the destruction of which nuclear technology was yet capable. 8 Although this climate of fear and conjecture ebbed and flowed over the coming years, what Paul Boyer has called a 'nuclear consciousness' established itself as a key feature of the late 1940s and 1950s. 9 Over these years the country also experienced a major religious revival, with evangelicalism and fundamentalism gaining significant ground, phenomena which many historians attribute, at least partially, to the Cold War's impact.
Stephen Whitfield suggests that the popularity of evangelist Billy Graham's invocation of Armageddon (as well as his promise of redemption) was possible only in the atmosphere of 'dread and anxiety' generated by the new conflict. 10 For pre-millennialists, nuclear war, or its threat, was evidence that the great tribulation was imminent; this kind of conjecture about the End Times -once the preserve of a minority -now took root in mainstream culture. 11 These cultural and spiritual shifts were encouraged by the country's political leaders, even if the latter did not always endorse the more apocalyptic visions. 12 On the international stage, Harry S. Truman sought to build an ecumenical alliance that would unite the democratic world against the godless communists. In 1948, the World Council of Churches -the interwar innovation of European and American Protestants horrified by the violence of the First World War and the rise of fascism -formally came into existence and, according to Dianne Kirby, Truman sought to incorporate it into his 'religious anti-communist front'. 13 Kirby writes that the Cold War came to be perceived as 'one of history's great religious wars' because of the way western propaganda exploited 'the crusade concept, transforming containment into a morality play in which western civilization and Christianity were defended from the encroaches of a godless communism'. 14 9 Boyer, By the Bomb's, xviii. More recent work cautions against overstressing the impact of the Cold War. See P. Kuznick  in 1950 renamed the World Peace Council, 'initiated and lavishly funded by the Kremlin'. 21 The core message was that 'peace' was pursued by the Soviet Union, responsibility for the arms race lying squarely with the West. The WPC recruited a range of public luminaries from the communist bloc as well as fellow-travellers in the West, holding almost annual international congresses that were awarded endless pages of reportage in Pravda and Izvestiia, peaking in 1950 with the issuing of the Stockholm Peace Appeal demanding 'the unconditional prohibition of the atomic weapon'. 22 Soviet citizens were not to be passive bystanders in all of this, but were instead expected to support the campaign by attending meetings or signing petitions. 23 The regime thus wanted its citizens to be alert to, and concerned about, the international crisis, but it denounced fear as an emotion unworthy of Soviet people and gave the public little sense of how nuclear weapons actually changed the nature of warfare. 24 Although Stalin's successors proved more willing to acknowledge the danger posed by the advent of atomic weaponry, cultural representations of nuclear war remained largely taboo until almost the very end of the Soviet period. In this context, anxiety did not dissolve but found alternative, illicit modes of expression.
In this article, I begin by offering a vision of Soviet society in the late 1940s and 1950s that has much in common with Timothy Johnston's recent social history. His examination of the USSR in the war and its immediate aftermath suggests a community abuzz with hearsay, a society in which rumours rivalled the state media as people's main source of information. He also suggests that whilst the peace campaigns were highly effective in galvanizing society, individuals often articulated a subtly different conception of peace, expressing views that were essentially pacifist, and failing to adopt the official logic, whereby war might in fact be essential for securing the peace of the future. 25 This article also includes examination of anti-war sentiment of certain groups within society, but departs from Johnston's portrayal of Soviet life in one key way. According to Johnston's picture, the vibrant oral culture of the postwar years was essentially a secular one. In relation to the war rumours of 1945-7, he argues that the 'the apocalyptic language of religious protest, identified by [Lynne] Viola in the 1930s, had been supplanted by a more earthly day of reckoning for the Soviet government'. 26 In contrast, I use archival materials such as court files and official reports to uncover evidence of apocalyptic moods linked to fears of war. According to anthropologist Mariia Akhmetova, grassroots movements anticipating the End Times have historically appeared in moments of crisis, including the seventeenth century, the revolutionary epoch, and the 1990s. 27 Although at this juncture they did not consolidate into a significant religious movement, these apocalyptic moods embodied a vision that clashed with communist eschatology, and caused sufficient alarm to draw their putative authors in the wave of state repression that hit in the late 1940s.
The second half of the article turns to the state's attempt to build a patriotic campaign around the notion of peace, focusing in particular on its curious decision to involve religious organizations in the movement. Witnessing how the USA sought to harness Christian organizations, including the World Council of Churches, a leading figure in the governmental apparatus responsible for religious matters, I.V. Polianskii, suggested the USSR take a similar tack, fashioning its own 'ecumenical movement'. The Russian Orthodox Church (ROC) would, of course, play the leading role: the Stalinist leadership had forged an alliance with the ROC from the midpoint of the war; 28 and this special relationship was to continue into the postwar period. 29 In the late 1940s, the international peace campaigns now offered the prime arena in which the ROC was expected to showcase its support for Soviet values, in addition to the financial contribution it was required to make to WPC funds. 30 Polianskii's proposed ecumenical movement required the involvement of religious organizations other than the ROC, however: the participation of leading Muslim, Jewish and Protestant figures, alongside Orthodox counterparts, in international peace events would -Polianskii's logic ran -convey the universal nature of support for the Soviet initiative and the tolerance of the atheist regime in allowing them a public presence. This attempt to orchestrate a religious dimension to the peace message was not unproblematic. Not only was it contested within some government circles, it placed high demands upon on religious leaders who now had to comment on the international situation in terms that were both acceptable to the communist authorities and in keeping with the tenets of their own faith. Eschatological 27 M. Akhmetova, Konets sveta v odnoy otedel'no vziatoi strane: religioznye soobshchestva postsovetskoi Rossii i ikh eskhatalogicheskii mif (Moscow 2010). 28 Some scholars explain the wartime alliance primarily in terms of international factors, particularly the government's desire to woo Western allies with evidence of its tolerance for religion. See D. Pospielovsky, The Orthodox Church in the History of Russia (Crestwood, NY 1998), 286. In a recent article, Dianne Kirby suggests that both US and Soviet leaders were keen to exploit religion, arguing that Franklin Roosevelt and Stalin 'sought to make Christianity a bridge between East and West'. interpretations of the contemporary world that were criminalized when they appeared in the vernacular culture (examined in the first half of the article), now had to find forms that were acceptable to the Soviet state.
Fearing the prospect of renewed and even more devastating conflict, some individuals and groups used scripture to make sense of the contemporary world; in apocalyptic rumours and so-called 'holy letters'; in sermons preached at informal gatherings; and in petitions to the peace congresses penned by religious leaders. Conscious of the west's harnessing of religion, and the USA's definition of the Cold War in terms of religious crusade, the Soviet state took a bifurcated approach to these voices, outlawing some as 'anti-Soviet', but adopting, sculpting and publicizing others to add weight to their own international campaigns. After an initial examination of the religious resurgence of the 1940s and its relationship to the emerging Cold War, this article focuses on the treatment of Protestants during the final bout of Stalinist repression and the fury of Khrushchev's anti-religious campaigns. Protestants (in particular Baptists, Evangelical Christians and Pentecostals) demonstrate the state's dualistic approach particularly well. Along with other socalled 'sectarians', they were demonized as pacifists and prophets of the apocalypse, but -unlike Jehovah's Witnesses who were condemned outright as 'enemies of the state' -they were also employed symbolically as spokesmen for the Soviet version of 'peace'. Their story points to the fundamental difficulty the regime encountered as it fashioned its response to the Cold War, and in particular to the contested place of religious outlooks in both official and unofficial cultures faced with the prospect of a future conflict.
During the Second World War, the USSR witnessed a religious resurgence. 31 Even before Stalin's meeting with the heads of the ROC in 1943, widespread expectations of a thaw in church-state relations emboldened many believers to gather for worship and prayer, and this grassroots activity only increased in the final two years of war. 32 In occupied territories, with the atheist authorities temporarily out of sight, religious life was even more vibrant. 33  congregational life during the war affected not only the Russian Orthodox, but also other denominations including Protestants. 34 As we shall see in more detail later, however, the state's new approach did not signal a straightforward relaxation, but instead entrenched a division between groups that were registered with the state, and those that escaped its oversight and control. Small followings sprang up around prophetic individuals, both men and women, within the Orthodox and evangelical traditions alike. 35 One practice that particularly alarmed the authorities was the exchange of rumours and texts predicting an imminent Judgement Day. Rather than dissipating, these apocalyptic moods seemed to intensify as cold-war tensions peaked in the late 1940s.
Anxiety about the future was perhaps inevitable in the wake of a war that had left such a trail of devastation and a peace that offered little reprieve. In 1946 famine took approximately two million lives and a generation of children developed chronic health problems as a result of malnutrition. 36 The Soviet media made no reference to this new trauma, but some kind of explanatory framework was evidently needed, and some people turned to the eschatological narratives offered in scripture. In Tambov region, for example, one local official working for the Council of Affairs of Religious Cults (CARC) 37 noted the growth of 'religious moods' following what he euphemistically called the 'crop failure' [neurozhai], before commenting on the dissemination of 'holy letters'. He told his superiors in Moscow: A large quantity of anonymous letters -which postmen jokingly call 'God's letters' [pis'ma bozhie] -have been delivered to the addresses of people living in cities . . . The content of the letters is the following: The antichrist has come, soon the world will end. People will face terrible misfortunes, disasters, and horrors. Only believers who have repented will be saved.
The recipient could save herself by passing the letter on to no fewer than 20 or 30 people. 38 As the decade progressed the impact of the famine declined, but fears of the End Times did not. In 1948, Metropolitan Veniamin of the ROC returned to the USSR from North America, where he had spent almost three decades. In a report composed for G.G. Karpov, Chairman of the Council for the Affairs of the Russian Orthodox Church (hereafter CAROC), 39 he laid out certain features of the religious situation in Latvia, the very first of which was the widespread nature of fears that the end of the world was nigh. 'This [idea], he wrote, ''sometimes leads to pathological fanaticism, and even on occasion to madness'. 40 In the same year, and at almost the other end of the Soviet Union, local officials in Altai region were reporting a similar trend. Amongst believers, it was alleged, anti-Soviet elements had recently spread rumours about the inevitability of war, using citations from the scriptures as evidence. One rumour claimed that if the USA and Turkey went to war against the USSR, Soviet power would dissolve: 'It is written in the scriptures that before the end of the world there will be three wars, after which there will be one king for the whole earth and this is what is happening'. 41 In May 1950, reporting to M.A. Suslov, secretary of the party's Central Committee, Karpov himself observed that in February and May a wave of 'mass mysticism' involving the 'so-called ''renewal''' (obnovlenie) of icons had swept through western regions of Belorussia. At the same time rumours claimed that a war would begin in 1950, a prediction based on the fact that the sum of the figures (1 + 9 + 5 + 0) came to 15, as had the fateful years of 1914 and 1941. 42 Like his colleague in Tambov three years earlier, Karpov reported on the dissemination of 'holy letters'. He included an example for his Central Committee readers: The holy letter was recounted by a 12 year-old boy. Near the White Sea stood a man in a white robe [riza] and in front of him was written 'Do not forget the Lord God'.
Write this letter out nine times. He who does so will have joy within six days. One woman wrote it, but forgot to pass it on, and she received an incurable disease.
Pray to God twice a day. In the name of the father and the son and the holy spirit. 43 Amen.
Christ said: 'Half of the people will perish on the 12 th June 1950 and on the 15 th all the rivers and lakes will fill up [napolniatsia] and the sun will grow dim and will stop shining'. 44 This is a bleak vision of the future, offering believers little real sense that redemption was possible, for while the letter might help protect those who passed it on in this life ( occur after 15 June. At almost the same time that Karpov submitted his memo, the department of propaganda and agitation also received a letter from a Pravda reporter based in Poltava region (Ukraine) who had found a 'holy letter' in her mailbox which she attributed to local 'sectarians'. 45 The letter was almost identical to the first, except for the ending which contained an explicit reference to a new world war and an allusion to the possibility of salvation, albeit brief: 'Christ himself said that on 12 June 1950 half the world will end. On 15 July there will be a world war and on 16th the sun will stop shining. People will recall the hours and the days, but by then it will be too late. Anyone who preserves this letter will be saved. Amen'. 46 While there is no explicit reference to the Cold War in either letter, it is suggestive that they make reference to 'half' the world, or 'half' the people, being destroyed, hinting at the bipolar dispositions encouraged by the international conflict; this contrasts to the Book of Revelations where devastation is repeatedly wreaked on a third, rather than a half, of the world. 47 Both letters offer concrete prophecy: Judgment Day is not some distant date but predicted to happen that very summer. According to official reports, apocalyptic fears seemed to continue rising into the fall of 1950. In a subsequent report, Karpov informed his readers that in Voronezh region some collective and state farms' work had been seriously disrupted as people began to prepare for the end of the world. 48 Neither the practice of writing and disseminating letters, nor the eschatological frameworks they deployed, were new of course. 49 Canonical Orthodox teaching may have been, in the words of Leonid Heretz, 'reticent on the time and indications of the Second Coming', but popular religion had long developed its own 'folk eschatology': 50 the darkening sun which appears in the 1950s holy letters drew on centuries-old Russian folk tradition. 51  The devastation of the natural world which follows the breaking of the seventh seal, including the sun and the moon turning dark, are to be found in the Book of Revelations, chapter 8. Here it is a third rather than a half of the world that is destroyed. For example, in verse 7: 'A third of the earth was burnt, a third of the trees were burnt, all the green grass was burnt'. In verse 12: 'The fourth angel blew his trumpet; and a third part of the sun was struck, a third of the moon, and a third of the stars, so that the third part went dark and a third of the light of the day failed, and of the night'. itself a long-established practice, and one that -like fears of the End Times -cut across denominational boundaries. 52 Yet their reappearance and re-working in the late 1940s is indicative of a new climate of anxiety, particularly given the imminence of the End Times they predicted. 53 Stephen Smith has recently explored how various religious practices, including the production of 'heavenly letters', survived the Bolshevik revolution not so much as vestiges of the past (the 'perezhitki' the Bolsheviks so persistently lamented), but as 're-energized' elements of Soviet culture. Smith argues that the greater distribution of such letters at the end of the 1920s, and a groundswell of prophetic tales on the brink of war in 1940, is evidence that they flourish not in moments of 'massive social dislocation itself -violent collectivization or Nazi invasion -but during the period just prior to the onset of disaster -that is, to the period when a threat loomed, yet when it still seemed possible to avert it'. 54 According to Smith, the purpose of the chain letter was to create a new epistolary community and, in promising 'divine protection to transcribers', to allay anxiety; they are not a call for arms but an invitation to 'prepare for the Last Times' through increased piety. 55 Following this interpretation, it is perhaps not so surprising that the start of the Cold War -a war which hovered on the horizon, menacing but unconsummated, generating anxiety but not requiring action -led to a resurgence of the holy letters. In a world where the possibility of universal destruction was hinted at but not expressed, where the danger was everywhere and nowhere, this surely felt like a pre-catastrophe moment. The wave of letter-writing thus points to a fear that some greater disaster was near. Certainly, in the second of the two texts cited above, the author is clear what this disaster was: a new world war.
The regime read into the exchange of rumours and letters that flourished in 1950 -as the proxy war in Korea unfurled and the peace campaigns reached a peak in intensity -a response to contemporary political events, and a response quite different in nature from the patriotic endorsement it had hoped to cultivate. Faced with a renascent religious culture, characterized at least in places by a fear of impending conflict, the authorities took an increasingly punitive approach to those who participated, as it did in many areas of Soviet life by the end of the 1940s. But even though the phenomena described here crossed denominational boundaries, and indeed were most commonly described by officials responsible for monitoring Orthodox life, it was those deemed religious outsiders who bore the brunt of the blame: the Pravda journalist who attributed authorship of the holy letter she received to local 'sectarians' was hardly alone. As we shall now see, the wave of repression against 'religious anti-Soviet elements' was particularly severe for those adhering to non-Orthodox traditions. This attack on the 'sectarian' was an approach which had pre-revolutionary roots but gained new prominence and severity as the Cold War escalated.
In Imperial Russia, the 'sectarian' had already received a great deal of attention not only from the state, but also from the Orthodox church and the intelligentsia. Groups that emerged over the course of the eighteenth century -the dancing, whirling khlysty, the self-castrated skoptsy, the pacifist Molokans and Dukhobors -were perceived as threats to 'social order' by the government. 56 Socialists often took a different stance: from the Populists to the Bolsheviks, there was a tradition of seeing the 'sectarian' as a possible ally, his non-conformity a form of social protest against the imperial regime. 57 Both those attracted to, and those repulsed by, the 'sectarian' were fixated with the unusual forms of worship and ritual such groups were alleged to practise, especially concerning their sexual customs. 58 When communities began to form under the influence of Protestant teaching in the late nineteenth century, 'Evangelical Christians' and Baptists (hereafter ECBs) were also grouped under the (pejorative) term 'sectarian'. 59 In the following decades the ranks of the 'sectarian' were further enlarged and diversified by the arrival of Pentecostalism and, with the annexation of new eastern-European territories during the Second World War, Jehovah's Witnesses. 60 Despite some initial overtures to the 'sectarians', Soviet anti-religious policy shows the Bolsheviks' earlier sympathies were not sustained: the 1930s were a bloody decade for both Orthodox and 'sectarian' believers alike. 61 From the mid-point of the war the government took a less hostile tack, seeing to create some kind of legitimate space for religious worship, albeit one that it could supervise and regulate. With this aim, two new bodies were created in 1943-4: the Council for the Affairs of the Russian Orthodox Church (CAROC) and the Council for the Affairs of Religious Cults (CARC) for other Christian denominations and other faiths. CAROC and CARC deployed plenipotentiaries across the country with the task of monitoring religious life. At the same time, the creation of Moscow-based religious organizations (such as the 'All-Union Council of Evangelical Christians-Baptists', hereafter AUCECB) aided ecclesiastical centralization. These measures, along with the attempt to register large numbers of religious groups, gave believers greater freedom in some regards, but it also made them more visible and accountable to the authorities. The new approach adopted in the years 1944-7 did not signal, moreover, a conclusive end to religious persecution. And when a new wave of repression was unleashed, certain 'sectarian' groups were targeted disproportionately.
Internal correspondence between the leadership of CARC and the party's Central Committee shows how and why the wartime reprieve was so quickly reversed. The year 1947 witnessed a significant shift, with two clear positions emerging: on the one hand, CARC defended the new more lenient approach, while on the other members of the Central Committee raised doubts about the loyalty of certain religious groups. 62 Following an extended exchange of views, in the summer of 1947, Stalin signed a decree meant to strengthen CARC and to provide better conditions for its plenipotentiaries, but which also introduced a bifurcated policy: registration for Old Believers, Muslims, Buddhists and the Armenian Apostolic Church was to continue in areas where they lacked prayer houses, while petitions for registrations coming from Roman Catholic, Jewish, Lutheran, and 'sectarian' congregations were only to be approved in 'highly exceptional circumstances'. The Cold War leaves a clear imprint here: religious communities associated with capitalist countries saw their opportunities for registration dramatically scaled back, while those without such links were protected. (The ROC did come under attack albeit a little later, primarily in late 1948 and early 1949, but in May 1949 Stalin personally intervened to halt an out-and-out campaign.) 63 The decree also recommended reducing the number of existing prayer houses, 'especially sectarian ones'. 64 The  66 Records from the Soviet Procruacy, the judicial body responsible for reviewing sentencing practices, paint a similar picture: at the end of the Stalin era, Baptists, Evangelical Christians, Pentecostals and (unsurprisingly) Jehovah's Witnesses were finding themselves charged under article 58/10 -anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda -rather more commonly than their Orthodox counterparts. 67 According to the indictments made against them, they used scripture to both predict and condemn a looming war. While many aspects of the charges can be read as fantasies about what the sectarian did and said, they required some grounding in actual religious practices and beliefs, however tenuous, to make them convincing texts. In addition to their potential affinities with fellow believers overseas, two aspects of the evangelical tradition helped to give the charges a veneer of veracity: the tradition of pacifism and the tendency towards pre-millennial dispositions (that is, their expectation of a period of conflict and strife prior to Christ's second coming).
Let us begin with a case from Riazan' which blends political charges germane to the Cold War (pacifism and pro-Americanism), with long-established notions of the depraved behaviour of the sectarian. According to the charges, a woman born in 1900 stood accused of organizing a Pentecostal group in the immediate postwar years; alongside her in the dock were the two men whom she had recruited as preacher and prophet. All three were charged with praising various un-Soviet phenomena (pre-revolutionary Russia, the life of believers in the USA, and the German occupation during the Second World War), as well as spreading rumours of an impending war, the defeat of Soviet power, and the salvation of all believers. During this war, they allegedly said, believers should fire into the air, as shooting the enemy was a sin. 68 Although at the time such cases were not reported in the press, this woman later appeared in an anti-religious tract which claimed that, in addition to the 'wild habits' of the Pentecostals, she brought her own innovations, making believers crawl behind her on their knees and blowing into their mouths. 69 This accretion of disparate allegations was typical of Stalinist criminal justice, as if the very diffuseness of the charges somehow endowed them with an aura of truth. Charges against other Pentecostals contained a similar melding of the religious and the political, with prophesy, wild prayer, and the refusal to bear arms regular offences. 70 Three 'evangelist-baptists' found themselves -like the Riazan' Pentecostals -facing a whole raft of accusations: praising life in pre-revolutionary Russia, spreading rumours about the disbandment of collective farms, saying 'Heil Hitler', listening to Voice of America, predicting a war with the USA and refusing to bear arms. Interestingly, in his petition letter, one of the defendants denied all the charges except for the latter. 71 In the same year, a Baptist who belonged to a registered ECB congregation was sentenced to 25 years because, as he explained in his subsequent petition letter, he had refused to participate in military training in early 1953. 72 Alongside the charges of foreign allegiance, pacifism was the cornerstone of many indictments.
In other cases, expectation that Christ's second coming was imminent -and would be preceded by a period of conflict and suffering -was used to cast the believer as an opponent of Soviet progress. One elderly collective farmer from Iaroslav region was accused of leading an illegal sect of Evangelical Christians from 1949 to 1952. According to witness statements, some of them provided by young city girls billeted with him while helping with the harvest, he had also criticized Soviet agricultural policy, used scripture to predict an imminent world war, and announced the coming of the Anti-Christ. 73 A group of Ukrainian evangelicals -whether they were Baptist or Pentecostal is unclear -stood trial in Uzbekistan. Local procurators maintained: 'At their meetings, they preached that the ''end of the world'' is coming, that inevitably ''life will perish'', that the Soviet people ''must perish'', and that God will destroy Soviet power with an inextinguishable fire.' 74 In Kirovabad in Azerbaijan, two Pentecostals were accused of scaring members of their 'sect' with references to the 'end of the world' and the judgement facing un-believers. 75 On the most western fringes of Ukraine, eight members of a 'Sabbath Pentecostal' 76 group had conducted missionary work in a number of villages, it was alleged, warning people that at Judgement Day nonbelievers would be destroyed and not only Soviet rule, but all earthly powers, would be annihilated, leaving God to reign for eternity. 77 In the context of a society based on Marxist-Leninist doctrine, prediction of the End Times could all too easily be read as an assault on the Revolution's promise to create a 'shining future'. In a number of cases, investigators claimed that defendants, inspired by the Book of Revelations, not only prophesied the coming of the antichrist but even identified Lenin or Stalin as his embodiment. Let us take the example of an evangelical woman, A.E. Tsvetkova, originally from a Ukrainian village, who lived in the postwar period in the Sakhalin region, working from home as a licensed dressmaker. 78 According to witness statements, she held gatherings where she read from the Bible and explained passages, saying there will be drought, hunger, disease and people will beg God to let them die, but they won't die, just carry on suffering. Soon the sun will turn dark, and the moon will turn to blood, the devil will blow smoke which will burn with flames. This will happen because people disrespected God. 79 Another witness claimed Tsvetkova said: 'The first devil has been, and died, and now the second is carrying out the dragon's affairs'. 80 Another case from 1953 involved Elena Tarasova, a native of Mogilev. A member of a Pentecostal sect from 1947, she allegedly refused to participate in elections, advised her son and others to refuse military service, and praised capitalist countries. In December 1952, she wrote two letters addressed to the World Peace Council. In one letter, she directed her reader to various verses from the Book of Revelations in which she identified the two beasts as Lenin and Stalin. 81 Her second letter was more prosaic: 'There are rumours', she wrote, 'that the American government has set aside 100 million dollars to save people who are not subject to humane law. I beg you not to refuse me and to include me amongst those resettled [pereselentsy]'. 82 What is striking about this last case is that the believer addressed her concerns to the World Peace Council. Its political role was apparently oblique to her and she imagined it as an external institution that might, alongside the US government, choose to intervene in Soviet life to save her. The WPC appears in another case; here the harmonious future promised by the peace movement was descried as an illusion masking the true desolation the world found itself in. The case concerned four men and two women living in a Novosibirsk village -all but one of them exiles or former convicts -who were sentenced to 25  the 'cover of an 'evangelical-baptist group', and more specifically, of predicting the imminent end of Soviet power. 84 One of his co-defendants allegedly testified in court: I used to say that people greet each other 'peace to the world' [mir miru] but in fact there will be a great war . . . the lord god will come and there will be a great judgment. I said that in the Soviet Union they talk about freedom of speech and of religion, but in fact it's not like that, and the whole world is full of evil [lezhit v zle]. 85 'Peace to the world' was how the writer Il'ia Erenburg had finished his speech to the World Congress of Partisans for Peace in 1949 and the slogan had been used widely during the gathering of signatures for the Stockholm petition in 1950. 86 Here the believer condemns the false rhetoric of the peace campaigns and predicts instead war and judgement. Despite their different understandings of what the international peace movement stood for, the cases of Potapov and Tarasova suggest the campaigns had penetrated deep into remote corners of the Soviet Union, but with meanings far removed from those anticipated by the authorities: they did not reassure believers but fed into fears of an impending crisis.
In describing the above cases, the words 'alleged', 'accused' and 'apparently' have been interjected into almost every sentence. The cases are products of the late Stalinist era, a time when fabricated witness statements and forced confessions were commonplace. As the work of Hiroaki Kuromiya amply demonstrates, we should treat the files of the Stalinist criminal justice system with great wariness; in the trial of Reformed Adventists that forms the centre-piece of his microhistory, he finds that all of the charges laid were misrepresentation and fabrication. 87 Reflections on scripture were often twisted beyond recognition, of course, and we should not read them as accurate reports on what the accused said or did. But even if epistemological caution prevails, we can see in the indictments laid against the 'sectarian' the authorities' attempts to isolate and exoticize certain practices and beliefs. Faced with a religious resurgence they wanted to explain, neuter, and suppress, and by the threat of nuclear war they refused to fully acknowledge, the Soviet authorities found in Protestants' pacifism and pre-millennialism -however marginal and benign within the denomination -handy tools for transforming them into a despised fifth column.
Yet Protestants were never criminalized en masse as was the fate of the Jehovah's Witnesses. 88 Despite the undesirable characteristics of their faith, and their potential sympathies with believers in the capitalist world, Protestant church leaders were not prevented from enlisting in the public performance of peace, as we shall now see. It did, however, make their participation in the campaigns controversial at the highest echelons of power. It also saddled church leaders with the 84  difficult task of commenting on cold-war hostilities in terms that were acceptable to both their atheist master and to their Christian, and in some quarters pacifist, followers.
Let us return to the pivotal year of 1947 and the exchange of memos between the leaders of CARC and the party's Central Committee (CC). This correspondence reveals the conflicting perspectives that emerged with the onset of the Cold War as leading government figures sought to weigh up the pros and cons of allowing religious groups a public presence. Writing to the CC on 1 July 1947, I.V. Polianskii, chair of CARC, began by asserting that the defeat of fascism had led to a renewal of reactionary forces, particularly Christianity. This had resulted in an ecumenical movement opposed to communism, he said. Expressing alarm about western attempts to 'politicize religious activity', Polianskii suggested it would be desirable for the Soviet Union to create its own 'ecumenical movement' under the aegis of the Russian Orthodox Church. Other religious organizations would participate and would be encouraged to develop closer ties between themselves, he said. 89 Of these religious organizations, the Protestant one -the All-Union Council of Evangelical Christians-Baptists (which included Pentecostals) -was the largest. 90 It also presented particular challenges for the Soviet state despite the commitment of its leaders -many of whom had personally experienced Stalinist repression -to proving their loyalty to the state in order to ensure the church's survival. 91 From the outset, a patriotic note was struck in Bratskii vestnik [Fraternal Bulletin], the official AUCECB journal which reported on key developments in the organization's work as well as offering readers regular theological articles and sermons. In its very first edition, an editorial from Ia.I. Zhidkov, chair of the AUCECB, praised the new unity of Evangelical Christians and Baptists, and warned readers they would find the word 'rodina' (motherland) many times in the coming pages; faith and patriotism are not in conflict, he said, reminding readers of Jesus' own love for his native Israel. Zhidkov spelt out the implications of this patriotic love very clearly: believers must obey the laws and decrees of their government and should carry out military service. He wrote: 'To be a warrior like the centurion from Capernaum (Matthew 8: 5-10) or the centurion Cornelius from Caesarea (Acts of the Apostles 10: 1-2) should be the genuine desire of every their revived and amalgamated incarnation as the AUCECB, leaders again told believers that a refusal to bear arms was alien to their faith. 93 The AUCECB leadership also tended to say little on the subject of eschatology, even though a premillennial disposition had been brought to Russian Protestantism from British evangelical writings. 94 For Polianskii and his colleagues, there was much to be praised in the AUCECB's initial work. CARC's internal memos did not deny that the evangelical communities presented particular problems for the Soviet state (the church's inclination towards 'anarchy', its commitment to proselytism, and of course pacifist traditions), but -at least in the early postwar period -they tended to depict its members as being, by and large, patriotic citizens. They noted that for the most part ECB believers completed their military service and that many had fought in the war. 95 CARC also stressed the key role their leaders were playing: at home, they provided the kind of hierarchy and centralization hitherto missing; internationally, they advertised Soviet religious freedoms, as the 1946 visit of Louie Newton, President of the South Baptist Convention, seemed to demonstrate. 96 By June 1947, however, the Central Committee denounced Polianskii's views as simply 'naı¨ve' and criticized CARC for failing to see that the Evangelical Christians-Baptist 'sect' -note the wording -was 'able to adroitly adapt itself to new conditions and hide its true face', language typical of Stalinist rhetoric towards perceived enemies. Central Committee memos noted censoriously that the Evangelical Christians-Baptist communities were the only religious group still growing and that their methods of recruitment were illegal ones; they criticized Bratskii vestnik for trying to claim it was the sole guide to morality in the USSR; and they denounced the leaders of the Baptist World Alliance as 'the faithful servants of Anglo-American capital'. 97 With time, the head of CARC, Polianskii became more cautious too, though he still maintained that the religious organizations (such as the AUCECB) were the best form of control over religious life and that an ecumenical movement was viable and beneficial. 98 Ultimately CARC was successful in defending itself and the religious organizations overseen by CARC survived. For a time, however, the international role these organizations were to play was more ambiguous. The decree of July 1947 recommended that the Armenian Apostolic Church and Muslim organizations should be encouraged to widen their international ties and help 'propagandize' the freedom of religion which existed in the USSR, but the extent to which other groups, including the AUCECB, were to cultivate links overseas would 'depend on the concrete conditions of the moment'. 99 This rather equivocal instruction inevitably bred uncertainty. Without doubt, the international profile of the AUCECB was temporarily curtailed: between November 1947 and May 1950, for example, no foreign visitors were officially received at the Moscow Central Baptist Church. 100 And as the peace movement developed momentum in 1949 and 1950, Protestant leaders were not involved. In April 1949, Polianskii contacted D.T. Shepilov at the Central Committee's Propaganda and Agitation Department informing him that in the run-up to the World Congress of Partisans for Peace to be held in Paris that month he was receiving requests from various religious organizations, including the AUCECB, asking for their 'Appeals in Defence of Peace' to be published in the press. Polianskii explained that although he did not object to what he called 'patriotic documents', he did not support their publication, with the exception of an appeal he had received from the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church. 101 Shepilov advised against publication in all cases. 102 At this early stage of the peace campaigns, therefore, only the Russian Orthodox Church seemed to have an assured role. 103 Very gradually, nonetheless, the ecumenical movement got underway, and AUCECB leaders made their way onto the international stage alongside other faith leaders. Official visits from foreign visitors re-commenced in May 1950. 104 In October 1950, Zhidkov attended the 'partisans of peace' congress held in Moscow and spoke on the radio, telling listeners that Evangelical Christians-Baptists were not only praying for peace but actively taking part in the struggle to achieve it. 105 In May 1952, he was invited to a conference bringing together all churches and religious organizations in the USSR to pursue the peace cause.
A Pravda article recounted how participants had discussed Metropolitan Nikolai's lecture, entitled 'The Church together with the People in the Struggle for Peace'; first on the roster of participants was Zhidkov, followed by Jewish, Muslim, Orthodox, Roman Catholic, Lutheran and Buddhist representatives. 106 The inclusion of the ECB church into public life did not always run smoothly, however, for participation in the peace movement required more than sitting on the stage at these public events. Zhidkov and his colleagues had to learn to articulate the peace message appropriately. In 1949, his first attempt at a peace 'appeal' had rather missed the mark. He had made appropriate references to 'feverish enemies'a stalwart in the Stalinist lexicon -but he also depicted a future far more terrible than was permissible within official Soviet culture. Zhidkov wrote: It is with great sadness that they [Evangelical Christians-Baptists] follow the feverish actions of the enemies of peace who, calling themselves the defenders of Christian civilization, prepare for the destruction of all human culture, the annihilation of the majority of humankind by means of hellish [adskoi] atomic technology, and the transformation of significant expanses of the earth into desert. 107 This rendition of the peace message is entirely at odds with the tenor of the Soviet press, and not only because of the reference to atomic technology as 'hellish'. As suggested at the beginning of this article, Izvestiia and Pravda were highly restrained in their treatment of nuclear war, giving readers little sense that what might lie ahead would be substantively different from the war they had just experienced. No one was speaking of the possibility that a majority of the human race might be destroyed or the world turned to desert. 108 Even five years later, with the climate more relaxed after Stalin's death, Zhidkov and his colleagues were still articulating a message slightly at odds with the mainstream press. A new peace appeal signed by the AUCECB leaders did now make it on to the pages of Izvestiia, but its depiction of nuclear holocaust still pushed the boundaries of what was acceptable. 109 Its authors began by noting that although international tensions had recently decreased, peace was still under threat, because 'some governments' wanted to arm West Germany. And 'if West Germany is armed, then the atomic bomb will hang over Europe, threatening to turn it into a scorched desert in a matter of days'. By 1954, Stalin's successors were willing to acknowledge at least some of the dangers posed by the bomb, publishing a few short reports on the radiation risks of US tests, but this vision of ecological disaster was still daring. 110 In his 1954 New Year message to the faithful, Zhidkov warned readers that the new weapons would lead to the 'destruction of people' articles of AUCECB leaders. 114 All this weakened the domestic profile of the AUCECB and contributed to the schisms that were to characterize the church from the 1950s onwards. 115 Yet despite the many concerns, doubts, and criticisms, from 1950 the Evangelical Christians-Baptists developed a public role in the Soviet Union. Thus, at the very same time that a minority of Protestant believers found themselves on trial denounced as traitors and pacifists, their church leaders were tentatively carving out a public role for themselves as advocates of the Soviet peace campaigns. These contradictions, which served to undermine both the peace rhetoric and the anti-religious campaigns, were to remain and deepen in the post-Stalin years: the elderly (male) pastor sombrely sitting on the podium at the peace congress was now joined in Soviet performative space by the dangerous, deluded, and invariably female, fanatic.
One of the facets of de-Stalinization was the changing role of the press: ideological controls were certainly not lifted, but there was more room for manoeuvre, and editors were expected to make their publications lively and engaging for the reader. 116 Protestants now made it on to the pages of the Soviet press with greater regularity. But they did so under two quite distinct guises. Toward the end of the decade, as a new attack on religion gathered strength, the 'sectarian' became a particular focus of attention, with a raft of sensationalist stories about her dangerous, uncontrolled behaviour. At the same time, more sober pieces reported on international events at which non-Orthodox Christians, particularly ECBs, appeared as trusted ambassadors who embodied the tolerance and allegedly peaceful ambitions of the Soviet state. The ambivalent position of the Protestant, which this article has traced back to the late Stalinist period, now became readily visible to the attentive reader.
Pravda and Izvestiia reported on a number of international exchanges involving Protestant leaders: on visits to the USSR by Baptists, Anglicans and Quakers; and on visits by leaders of the AUCECB to the USA and Sweden. 117 A number of press articles followed celebrating their participation in the peace campaigns: in 1956, an article acknowledged the speech given by A.V. Karev when the Stalin Peace Prize was awarded to a Norwegian pastor; 118 in 1957 the AUCECB sent an 'appeal' to the Berlin Congress of Peace commending the importance of Christian love; 119 in 1959 Karev himself was one of five Soviet public figures awarded a medal by the WPC for their peace work. 120 Zhidkov and Karev were frequent signatories on petitions calling for nuclear disarmament and articles alerting the world to the threat of atomic bombs. 121 In these pieces, AUCECB leaders were regularly included in lists of advocates for peace, lined up alongside other religious leaders: the ecumenical movement Polianskii had advocated in 1947 seemed to have become a discursive reality. Yet CARC officials were themselves unhappy with what had been achieved.
In 1956, CARC leaders reviewed progress so far in a memo addressed to the Central Committee's Department of Propaganda and Agitation. In this major report, CARC began by noting that since its inception the Council had been able to ensure that religious organizations, not just the ROC, developed a patriotic relationship with the Soviet state. The authors stressed the thriving ecumenical movement in the West, citing the work of the WCC in particular, and presented the participation of various Soviet religious leaders in the peace campaigns as a very important counterweight. But in order for their potential to be exploited, CARC maintained, greater coherence between international and domestic policy was needed, particularly given that foreigners were increasingly interested in the nature of religious freedom 'behind the iron curtain'. The memo's main thrust was thus to call for an end to miscarriages of justice committed towards believers and for the constitution to be respected. 122 As the rich historiography on the antireligious campaigns of the Khrushchev era establishes, this was not at all what happened, of course: by the end of the decade, the number of church closures and arrests had spiralled. 123 The use of propaganda to demonize the sectarian in fact meant such abuses were hardly a secret, either for the Soviet or the international public. In the media, stories of child sacrifice conducted by 'sectarians' were perhaps the most extreme manifestation of this demonizing tendency. 124 Other charges were laid against 'sectarians' in the press: they endangered proselytes' physical and mental health, sometimes resulting in suicide; 125 they committed criminal acts such as fraud; 126 and, of course, they predicted the end of the world. 127 This vilification of the sectarian is reflected in the fact that Protestants, given the relatively small size of the community overall, again constituted a disproportionate percentage of arrests: between 1961 and 1964, 640 convictions had been made on religious grounds in Russia, of which 260 concerned Pentecostals or ECBs; in Ukraine in the same period, of 324 religious arrests, 167 were Pentecostal or ECB. 128 Let us consider a final court-case which shows how the public demonization of believers that became so ubiquitous in the Khrushchev period also drew on, and amplified, ideas re-discovered in the late Stalinist era, in particular the concept of the sectarian as a pacifist and dangerous prophet of the apocalypse. In December 1956 two men, both of German ethnicity, were convicted of anti-Soviet agitation and propaganda by Semipalatinsk regional court (Kazakhstan). Both collective farmers in their thirties, Ia. Betram and A. Gotman were identified as leaders of the Soviet religious group 'Children of God', but Gotman had been a member of a Baptist congregation for a number of years. The men were accused of spreading anti-Soviet propaganda. According to the court records, they burnt their army cards, vociferously condemned military service, destroyed their own property, killed their dogs, stopped their children attending school, and called on others to do the same. 129 A summary of court proceedings suggested that Gotman explained his actions in terms of prophecy (prorochestvo) particularly with regard to the imminent end: he was told believers would be led to Israel, and their belongings should not be left behind for their enemies (non-believers). 130 For the whole of November and December 1956, it was claimed, 26 villagers refused to go to work on the farm because they were preparing for the end of the world. 131 If true, this would suggest that the fears were not unique to the two leaders.
In contrast to the court cases of the late Stalinist era, this trial was reported in the national press. In 1957 an article in Komsomol'skaia pravda explained how the 'Children of God' held conversations with the almighty which ended in 'contorted dancing and grimacing', engaged in sexual depravity (such as wife-sharing), and spread rumours that the end of the world was imminent (the charge which was the centre of the court case). But this was not all: the piece also graphically describes how young communists, upon hearing cries and disturbance, hurried to Betram's home, 'flung open the door and saw a wild sight -a young, half-naked woman was standing beside a tall white cross . . . The monsters planned to nail the young woman to the cross'. 132 A fleeting reference to this unlikely occurrence was made in a witness statement in the court record but was key to the press version which depicted the believers as debauched fanatics, drawing on pre-revolutionary notions of the sectarian's depravity. 133 The article also made clear that such monstrous behaviour resulted from their hysteria about the End Times. Perhaps geography played its part: the collective farm where this incident occurred was close to the town of Borodulikha in eastern Kazakhstan, and in relative proximity to the Semipalatinsk nuclear test site. 134 No reference was made to this in the court file or newspaper coverage, but it is worth speculating whether there was a connection between locals' belief that the end was coming and the huge fireballs, mushroom clouds, deafening roars, and earthquake-like tremors they must have witnessed.
At least in part a product of the early Cold War, the anxiety surrounding religious subcultures, particularly their potential to spread apocalyptic fear, now coalesced into a terrifying and much-publicized spectre: the 'sectarian' was no longer a problem over which party and state officials shook their heads in the hush of governmental offices, or passed sentence in a closed courtroom, as had been the case in the late 1940s and early 1950s, but a folk devil repeatedly reviled in the press, newsreels and feature films. And yet this image of the fanatic was rivalled by that of 'sectarian' leaders taking to the international stage. In 1960, at the peak of Khrushchev's anti-religious campaign, one tract noted: 'There is no doubt that the struggle for peace would be even more successful if it was freed from its religious covering [obolochka] as religion only prevents people from recognizing and exposing enemies of peace'. 135 Quite an admission for a piece of Soviet propaganda. Still, this contradictory approach continued into the early 1960s, with Zhidkov among the signatories of an ecumenical peace appeal published in Izvestiia during the Cuban Crisis of 1962 -the year with the highest levels of anti-religious propaganda. 136 In the USA, the late 1940s and 1950s saw religion, broadly conceived, provide a common ground for politicians, business leaders, and ordinary people, many of whom came to believe that their country's position in the Cold War was divinely sanctioned. Some thought that nuclear weapons might be a sign of the Second Coming, conferring on the conflict additional intensity and purpose. Given the atheist foundations of the communist regime, religion could hardly create this kind of convergence of interests in the USSR. And yet the term 'religious cold war' is nonetheless suggestive in the Soviet context, even if it allows us to identify points of tension rather than a story of (prospective) national unity as was the case in the USA.
In the USSR, religious activity had increased during the war. In its aftermath, the threat of a new outbreak of violence (with weapons about which citizens were given ominous but unclear warnings), created intense anxiety, and religious concepts and imagery proved one way to articulate these fears, just as they did in the USA. Instead of encouraging, or at least tolerating, apocalyptic thinking, the Soviet state tried to suppress the religious imagination, dismissing it as the realm only of a sectarian, lunatic fringe. This demonization of the 'sectarian' made itself fully felt with the anti-religious campaigns of the Khrushchev era, but its roots date back to mid-1947 and the start of the Cold War. Yet the Soviet state did not limit itself to this tactic. The party leadership did not straight-forwardly denounce religion and its adherents, even though this would have been in keeping with the atheist doctrines which the regime had fought so hard to instil in its population. 137 Nor did it simply embrace Russian Orthodoxy as a source of nationalist sentiment, as is often assumed. It felt drawn to participate in the 'religious cold war' launched by the USA under Truman's presidency and sought to create its own ecumenical movement, attempting to prove its tolerance towards different faiths and the universal appeal of its peace message.
'Peace' was presented as a patriotic cause, a shared commitment to building a state of harmony on earth, and certainly some Christians -including ECB leaderswere willing to endorse such a vision. And yet within the Christian tradition, and cutting across the denominations, there was also a very different conception of both 'peace' and the future: pacifist opposition to warfare; and a belief that paradise must await the second coming (and further strife and devastation). As the Cold War escalated, the authorities were fearful that dangerous and politicized interpretations of scripture were on the rise. As a result, those identified as 'sectarians' were targeted for arrest in both the late Stalinist era and during Khrushchev's anti-religious campaigns. This persecution opened the regime up to easy charges of hypocrisy by providing opponents both at home and abroad with ready ammunition, as was noted in the major CARC report of 1956 and demonstrated by Krylov's 'appeal' two years later.
Although religion was an arena of the Cold War where the USA clearly had a natural advantage, the Soviet government was unwilling to retreat. 138 Throughout the final decades of its existence the Soviet regime continued to denounce religious faith as both a tool used by imperialists to discipline their subjects and as a dangerous source of irrational and unproductive thinking among its own population, but it nonetheless sought to present itself, both domestically and internationally, as an inclusive and law-bound polity, far more committed to defending freedom of conscience than its capitalist adversaries. Religion thus took on a renewed prominence in the USSR during the Cold War, but its treatment was more conflicted and ambiguous than might be expected. The status of Protestantism embodies this ambivalence particularly clearly: its believers were vilified as subversive and unsettling 'sectarians', but its leaders were enlisted to join the chorus of patriotic approval for the Soviet peace cause. A 'religious cold war' was thus waged on both sides of the iron curtain, but to the east -instead of providing a sense of shared mission as it did in the west -its internal contradictions undermined both the regime's long-standing atheist credentials and its more recent attempts to present itself as humankind's only hope for achieving peace and harmony in this world.
in-progress and I benefited enormously from their responses, as I did from the feedback the three anonymous JCH reviewers gave me.