The Test of Faith, A Missionary Journey

Hours of prayer and many small steps of faith over the past several years led up to the recent conference for Christian medical students and young doctors in Ukraine.  Often missionaries say, “What I thought I was going to do changed after our arrival on the mission field.”  Transforming the medical culture of Ukraine through medical students was not our initial plan.  As time passed God opened more and more doors with Christian medical students thirsting for direction regarding how they could express their faith and encourage one another.

Some of these doors were seemingly random opportunities to connect with students and young doctors, but in retrospect we can clearly see the hand of God preparing the way.  Every connection is important and provided the necessary links between different denominations, different cities, and different organizations that literally span the world that resulted in a successful conference.

These connections came from a willingness to meet with someone not knowing if or when there would ever be any possibility of cooperation.  Meeting with someone not knowing if I could clearly communicate with them.  Or maybe traveling somewhere that took me out of my comfort zone – riding on a bus or train not knowing all the details of knowing where I was going.  All these were small steps of faith and trust in what was not seen.

Our first trip to Ukraine was to Belgorod-Dinestrovski in 1999.  I met a pediatrician with a daughter.  This daughter now attends the Crimean State Medical Institution.  She came to the conference.

In the fall of 2006 Marianna met a woman at a retreat for Christian missionaries living in Ukraine.  This resulted in the presentation of the Saline Solution program to teach doctors how to share their faith in a city called Burdansk.  At this conference I met Rostyslav who Introduced me to James Tomlinson, an Englishman, who is the director of the Eurasian Region of the International Christian Medical Dental Association.  He in turn put me in touch with Dennis Gorenko, co-director of Intervarsity Christian Fellowship of Ukraine.  Also two students from Burdansk came to the conference.  

So in the Spring of 2006 I attended the Christian Medical Association of Ukraine’s annual meeting in Rivne.  There I met some young doctors from Chernivtsi.  In October of the same year  Ukraine Medical Outreach partnered with Caring Partners International to sponser a conference in Lutsk to teach how to develop an Early Intervention Program for children with disabilities.  A speech pathologist in Chernivtsi heard of this conference, found how to contact me and asked if I would hold a conference there.  We held a conference there on autism, an introduction to Biblical counseling and an introduction to Biblical healthcare in the Spring of 2007.  There were 8 students and young doctors from Chernivtsi at the conference as a result.

All of these were thin but vital threads God was weaving into a still not completed tapestry, yet more opportunities to trust in God.  In January of 2008 I met with Dennis Gorenko.  We developed a budget based on 65 people attending the conference including staff. Based on this educated guess, we determined how much money we would need to raise. Amazingly one Church responded with the whole sum.

About five weeks before the conference we learned the cost of the conference almost doubled due to the decreased value of the dollar and an inflation rate in Ukraine of almost 30%. Then we learned the two main speakers for the conference could not come, one from Belarus and one from Russia.  Next my assistant resigned to return home to care for her sick grandmother.

Events were rapidly spinning out of control.  I began to realize we planned in faith, but God planned from complete foreknowledge.  He knew exactly how much money we would need because He knew how many would attend.  One by one God provided for each of the challenges I faced.  The solutions did not depend upon my ability, but upon God’s.  He gave me the desire to make contacts within the Ukrainian medical system and now He was using these circumstances to increase my faith in Him.  He provided sufficient funds to meet all our needs.  He provided for two speakers from Lithuania plus the non-budgeted money to get them to Kyiv. 

Now we are looking at the possibility of a winter conference and several regional conferences.  Our only desire was to glorify God through medical ministry.  When we began we did not know what would happen or how it would happen, but now we clearly see the hand of God at work.

Published in: on August 25, 2008 at 7:50 pm Comments (2)

Victory Day

In Ukraine on May 9th is celebrated Victory Day.  It is a combination of Veteran’s Day and Memorial Day rolled into one.  This day 62 years ago the Great Patriotic War or World War II officially came to an end.  A good reason to celebrate and a good reason to remember the 40 million people, 20 million from the former Soviet Union alone, who lost their lives in this conflict. 

As you walk the streets of most cities in Ukraine you will quickly come upon a veteran.  They are easy to spot because they are wearing their uniform proudly and usually have a chest full of medals.  Whether in America or Ukraine, I just want to go up to these men and women to say thank you.  I often did this when I lived in the USA.  What unspeakable horrors these men witnessed.  How strange to be living now on the other side and wanting to thank Ukrainians for their bravery. 

America and the Soviet Union fought on the same side during that conflict, but history records our relationship turned cold soon thereafter.  For much of my life, those we now consider our friends were indeed called the enemy.

For Ukrainians the name of this conflict makes sense because they were fighting on their soil, for their homes and their families.  For Americans we were fighting more for ideals.  We romantize our history probably to hide the horror and reality of war.

It is easy to say that freedom is not free but bought at a price.  But are we willing to pay the price?  There is a freedom however we cannot earn, our freedom from sin.  It too was bought at a tremendous price, the death of our savior, Jesus Christ.  On the final day of judgement will you be able to celebrate for eternity the victory won for those who place their faith in Christ?

Published in: on May 9, 2007 at 6:37 pm Leave a Comment

Despair

If you were alive about 2000 years ago and living in Jerusalem, imagine the despair you would feel today.  You were a disciple of the man they called Jesus.  Yesterday you were a witness to his brutal death.  What would you be thinking today?  You cannot fully describe all this man was to you since you began following him three years ago.  How do you make sense of what has happened.  Truly this is complete and total despair.

 What a difference a day makes.  We are blessed to know the rest of the story.  I can’t imagine any situation worse than this day for the disciples.  We have a living hope.  A future that cannot be taken away from us.  He died so that we may live.  He is alive to prove who He is.

Tomorrow we know the despair that is felt today will turn to joy.  On the streets of Ukraine people will greet each other saying, “Кристос воскес!  Воистину воскрес!” 

” He has risen!  He has risen indeed!”

Published in: on April 7, 2007 at 5:00 pm Comments (1)

Faith from Beginning to End

What must we have to be empowered to do God’s work?  Spurgeon explains the necessary ingredient well.  “Faith is the foot of the soul by which it can march along the road of the commandments.  Love can make the feet move more swiftly; but faith is the foot which carries the soul.  Faith is the oil enabling the wheels of holy devotion and of earnest piety to move well; and without faith the wheels are taken from the chariot, and we drag heavily.   With faith I can do all things; without faith I shall neither have the inclination nor the power to do anything in the service of God.  If you want to find the men who serve God the best, you must look for the men of the most faith.  Little faith will save a man, but little faith cannot do great things for God.”  May God enable us to have great faith.

Published in: on March 12, 2007 at 4:53 am Leave a Comment