Friday, March 20, 2026

Statement by the Roman-Ruthenian Pope on the Humanitarian Situation in Cuba

The United Roman-Ruthenian Church notes with grave concern recent public statements and policy directions voiced on the world stage suggesting a possible assumption of control by one country over the sovereign nation of Cuba, whether by military, economic, or other coercive means.

While the internal conditions of any nation may be subject to legitimate concern and discussion, the forced imposition of external control, whether framed as liberation or otherwise, raises serious moral questions. The sovereignty of nations and the dignity of peoples are not matters to be disposed of according to power or opportunity. No nation possesses the authority to dominate another or to dispose of the sovereignty of peoples according to its own will. Power does not by itself confer moral license, and the ordering of the world cannot be justly founded upon coercion or unilateral control.

Christian doctrine has long held that the use of force is permissible only under the most strict and grave conditions, particularly in defense against real, certain, and grave harm. These principles are articulated more fully within the Church's Doctrine of Just Defense, to which the faithful are bound in conscience. Actions or proposals that move toward domination, coercive regime change, or the exploitation of weakness stand in serious tension with these principles.

It must therefore be clearly stated that support for such directions, insofar as they involve unjust coercion, disregard for sovereignty, or the initiation of force absent moral necessity, cannot be reconciled with the moral teaching of the Church and stands in direct tension with the principles governing just defense.

At the same time, we recognize that nations and leaders act within complex circumstances, and not all actions or intentions may be known in full. For this reason, judgment must be made with care and precision, avoiding both naïve acceptance and unjust generalization.

The Church again calls for restraint, respect for sovereignty, and the pursuit of diplomatic solutions that uphold the dignity of all peoples. No nation’s suffering should become an opportunity for domination, and no people should be reduced to an object of geopolitical ambition.

May wisdom prevail over power, and peace over coercion.

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Statement by His Holiness Pope Radislav I of Rome-Ruthenia on the Ongoing Humanitarian Crisis in the Middle East and the World


Grave responsibility lies with those who have initiated and sustained actions that fail to meet the moral criteria for just war, particularly those who have chosen to engage in military action far beyond their own borders when diplomatic solutions remained viable, under the decisive direction of a single executive authority. The resulting escalation has significantly contributed to a widening humanitarian crisis, disruption of global energy stability, and cascading economic effects that threaten the most vulnerable populations. Indeed, no nation possesses the authority to dominate the world or to bend the community of nations to its own will. Power does not confer moral license, and global order cannot be justly founded upon the unilateral imposition of one state’s interests over others.

Such actions cannot be understood merely as matters of political strategy or national interest. They must be judged according to the higher moral law that governs the use of force. When military power is exercised absent true necessity as defined in Just War Doctrine, and when it foreseeably produces widespread suffering among civilian populations, it departs from the bounds of legitimate defense and enters into moral disorder.

Equally concerning is the normalization of language and attitudes that treat the use of force, the projection of military power, and even the loss of human life with a casual or dismissive tone. Such detachment from the human cost of war is itself a moral disorder and stands in contradiction to the reverence for life demanded by the Christian conscience.

The present situation in the Middle East further demonstrates the grave danger of normalizing preemptive or discretionary uses of force untethered from strict moral criteria. If such actions are accepted as permissible, the distinction between defense and aggression becomes obscured, and the door is opened to perpetual conflict justified by fear, speculation, or strategic ambition rather than by justice.

Moreover, the consequences now unfolding extend far beyond any single region or political objective. Disruptions to energy supplies, economic instability, and threats to food security disproportionately affect the poor and vulnerable across the world. These are not incidental effects. Rather, they are foreseeable outcomes that must be included in any serious moral evaluation of the decision to use force.

The Church therefore reiterates that the burden of proof for the use of military force remains extraordinarily high. It is not sufficient to assert necessity; it must be demonstrated with clarity and moral certainty. Where such certainty is lacking, and where peaceful alternatives remain, the initiation or continuation of violence cannot be justified.

In this light, all parties are called to cease further escalation and to return to the path of diplomacy and negotiation. True strength is not shown in the capacity to project force, but in the wisdom to restrain it for the sake of justice, peace, and the preservation of human life.

Monday, March 16, 2026

A Tradition Guided by Thought and Reason




By J. DuBois

ROME-RUTHENIA 16 March 2026 (NRom)

Alongside its ancient Apostolic inheritance, the United Roman-Ruthenian Church is shaped by a leadership deeply engaged with the intellectual challenges of the modern world. A graduate of Harvard University, Georgia Institute of Technology, and the University of Kentucky, with seminary formation at the Pontifical Georgian College, His Apostolic Highness the Most Holy Pope Radislav I of Rome-Ruthenia has served for many years as a professor, teaching in the fields of economics, sustainability, business and finance, mathematics, and physics. He has developed university-level coursework in decision strategy, game theory, mathematics, physics, and behavioral economics. This includes international academic work and engagement within leading scientific and academic circles, in partnership with institutions such as the Georgia Institute of Technology and the Harvard University Extension School. His Holiness continues to teach globally, primarily in the areas of economics, business, and sustainability.

This synthesis of scientific formation and Apostolic tradition reflects a continuity of both faith and reason — a Church that preserves the past while engaging the complexity of the present.

Roman-Ruthenian Pope Confirms Just Wars Have Existed, Part of Christian Doctrine

Statement from H.A.H. the Roman-Ruthenian Pope
on Just War Doctrine

16 March 2026

Recent discussions in the broader Christian world have raised questions regarding the existence and legitimacy of what has historically been called “just war.” In light of this, it is necessary to reaffirm clearly the teaching received within the Christian tradition.

From the earliest centuries, the Church has recognized that while war is always tragic and a consequence of the fallen state of mankind, it is not the case that all use of force is morally equivalent. The tradition, articulated by the Fathers and developed in theological clarity over time, affirms that under strict and grave conditions, the use of force in appropriate defense of the innocent and the restoration of order within the legitimate authority and proper scope of the relevant actors may be morally permissible. (See the Church's teaching on the Doctrine of Just Defence here.)

This teaching does not glorify war in and of itself, nor does it diminish its horror. On the contrary, it places severe moral limits upon it, insisting that even justified defense carries with it profound moral responsibility and spiritual consequence. The recognition that a war may be just in principle and therefore morally permissible as an act of defense does not render war in and of itself inherently good, nor does it remove the obligation of repentance, restraint, and the pursuit of peace.  That is, war can be legitimate and just, but only as a tool for justice and good.

Therefore, it must be clearly stated: the concept of just defense, including what has historically been termed “just war,” remains part of the received moral teaching of the Church. To deny this entirely risks obscuring the essential moral distinction between defense and aggression, and may leave the innocent without moral recourse in the face of grave injustice.

At the same time, this doctrine must never be misused as a justification for violence undertaken lightly, preemptively without moral certainty, or for purposes of domination, expansion, or ideological ambition. The burden of proof for the just use of force remains extremely high.

The Church continues to call all nations and leaders to pursue peace, to exhaust every path of diplomacy, and to remember that even justified violence wounds the human family. The ultimate goal remains not victory, but reconciliation and the restoration of peace.

In all things, the faithful are reminded that they must act in accordance with conscience rightly formed, seeking justice without hatred and defense without losing sight of the dignity of every human person.