Influenced by his friendship with Patriarch Paissius and deeply impressed by such rites as the lighting of candles on Easter Eve from the "heavenly flame" in the church at the Holy Sepulcher, Arsenius sought in his writings to link Muscovy with the pre-Hellenistic church. Christ had lived and died and the Apostolic Church grown up around Jerusalem. The first gospels were not written for the Greeks; Russia was converted not by Byzantium but by the apostle Andrew; and, in any case, "from Zion came forth the law and the word of the Lord from Jerusalem." The "word of the Lord" had been muffled in Byzantium since the seventh ecumenical council of the church; and it was not accidental that the white cowl given by Pope Silvester to Constantine the Great was now in Moscow, or that the icon of first the Tikhvin and then the Georgian Mother of God had been miraculously transferred from Athos to Moscow.61
Jerusalem became-both literally and figuratively-a kind of alternative to Constantinople and Athos for the excited Muscovite imagination. Nikon, who had first sent Arsenius to the Holy Land, sent him back to Jerusalem to make a model of the Church of the Resurrection that sheltered the Holy Sepulcher; and sent a visiting Serbian metropolitan to Jerusalem to provide additional details on the rites and services of the Church. The new Muscovite theocracy was to be nothing less than the New Jerusalem. With this lofty vision in mind, Nikon set about building his "holy kingdom," the Monastery of the New Jerusalem, on a spot of great beauty by the Istra River outside Moscow. Giant bells, gilded gates, and a central cathedral modeled on the church over the Holy Sepulcher-all were part of Nikon's plan for bringing heaven to earth in Muscovy.62
For the puritanical fundamentalists, however, this New Jerusalem suggested the kingdom of the Antichrist, who was to establish his universal reign in Jerusalem. Rumors spread that Nikon's translators and editors were secret Moslems, Catholics, and Jews. Given the large numbers of refugees employed and the fluidity of confessional lines in the East, there were enough recent converts and mysterious personalities to lend some credence to this charge. Meanwhile, two well-educated brothers, the Potemkins, came to Muscovy from Smolensk, the advanced base for Uniat efforts to win the Pastern Slavs to Catholicism, warning that Latinization of the Greek ( Inirch indicated the imminent coming of the Antichrist. Spyridon Potemkin wiin hailed as a friend and prophet by the fundamentalists for his ten
treatises about the coming end; and his own death in 1664 was seen as a sign that history itself was drawing to a close. His brother Ephrem immediately set out for the woods north of Kostroma to await the end with fasting, prayer, and reading of the church fathers. Bearing the monastic name of the apocalyptical Syrian, this Ephrem proved no less gloomy and prophetic. He gathered a substantial following in the northern Volga region-partly by preaching doom at the famous summer fairs in the major trading cities.
Ephrem taught that Patriarch Nikon was the Antichrist, that the Second Coming was shortly to take place, and that men should gather provisions, because the seven years without bread prophesied in the Book of Daniel had already begun.63 Early in 1666 the government sent a special expedition to the trans-Volga region to burn the cells of his followers, imprisoned most of them, and brought Ephrem to Moscow. He was forced to recant and go on a humiliating public tour to demonstrate his acceptance of the new forms; but Ephrem's recantation and the simultaneous anathemi-zation of Awakum only deepened the apocalyptical gloom of the fundamentalists and sent them looking for more precise guidance on the expected end of the world.
Once again they turned to prophetic anti-Uniat writings. As early as 1620, one Kievan monk had prophesied that the spread of Catholicism would lead to the coming of the Antichrist in i666.64 Spyridon Potemkin developed this idea by computing that it had taken Rome a thousand years after the birth of Christ to break with Orthodoxy; six hundred more years for the White and Little Russian hierarchies; sixty years after that for the Great Russians; and six more years for the end of the world.65
The date 1666 became fixed in the popular imagination, because it contained the number 666-which held the key to the identity of the apocalyptical beast. The Book of Revelation had promised that
. . . anyone who has intelligence may work out the number of the beast. The number represents a man's name, and the numerical value of its letters is 666.66