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Patr. Adrian was patriarch early in the reign of Peter I, as Peter began various reforms to modernize Russia both culturally and religiously. Patr. Adrian resisted Peter’s reforms as they applied to Church traditions and particularly criticized the Peter’s order of mandatory shaving of beards. While he accepted Peter’s criticisms of deficiencies in the governance of the Russian Church, his relations with Peter became very intense. These tensions were heightened by Patr. Adrian advocating a milder form of Patr. [[Nikhon of Moscow|Nikon’s]] claim that the Church had supervision over secular matters, a well as spiritual, and that the patriarch, as the figure of Christ, was another ruler of Russia as well as the tsar.<ref>Francis Dvornik, ''The Slavs in European History and Civilization'', Rutgers University Press, Brunswick, New Jersey, 1962, p539</ref>
After Patr. Adrian’s repose on [[October 16]], 1700, Peter delayed the appointment of a new patriarch for over twenty years while the Church was administered by a friendly Metr. Stephen (Iavorsky), as ''[[locum tenens]]'', before abolishing the position of patriarch and forming the Apostolic Governing Synod, under the supervision of a layman Ober-Procurator.<refNicholas ref>Nicholas V. Riasanovsky, ''A History of Russia'', 3rd ed., Oxford University Press, New York, 1977, p257.</ref/>
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