The head of the Russian Orthodox Church, Patriarch Alexis II, assured his flock on Friday that new identification documents to be introduced in Russia will not contain the “sign of the Antichrist” despite scare-mongering rumors to the contrary, Itar-Tass reported.
Speaking ahead of a meeting of clerics in Moscow, he acknowledged plans to introduce new passports and other identification documents that employ new technologies, including digital fingerprints and photographs of the iris of the holder’s eye.
“But this is not the sign of the Antichrist!” the news agency quoted the patriarch as stating. His assertion was made “convincingly”, Itar-Tass said.
The decline of communist ideology and atheism of the former Soviet regime has coincided with a growth of sects and superstitions, including a belief that Satanic ideas will be spread under the cover of administrative innovations such as new individual tax-identification numbers.
Alexis II said “the number 666 is talked about a lot these days in relation to the tax number” and cautioned believers not to listen to “false prophets” suggesting that Satanic symbols are being placed in official documents.
“If we undermine the church with such rumours and myths from the inside, nothing good can come of it,” he said.
The number 666, cited in the Bible’s book of Revelation of St John, is considered “the number of the beast”, or a coded reference to Lucifer. — AFP