Thank you for your concern and for praying for Ukraine and the Ukrainian People
1. After a Russian missile struck an apartment complex in Lviv, Ukraine, BIEM’s Yura Levtseniuk and his church were among those who rendered aid to victims in various ways. Thanks to Yura’s medical training, he has an open door to make bandages and to assist in treating festering wounds at the local hospital. In turn, such assistance provides him with opportunities to share about Christ. Yura says, “Thank you very much for the [financial] help that was provided. Thanks to you, we were able to help people who suffered because of the missile strike. We helped them to purchase [repair] materials and transported them as needed. One woman promised to come to our services, saying that she used to visit an evangelical church.” In all these situations, believers reflect the love of God, and gifts to BIEM’s War Relief Fund play a key role.
2. The Ukrainian government continues to allow pastors to leave Ukraine for short periods of time for religious purposes. Speaking in churches and raising awareness of the war qualifies our missionary-pastors for this exception and helps to raise funds for our war-relief efforts. This weekend, we begin meetings with Vitaly Bilyak, who has made numerous war-relief-distribution trips to the war front. We will be in churches in Minnesota, Wisconsin, Indiana, Pennsylvania, and Ohio over the next several weeks. Please pray for these meetings as Vitaly seeks to minister to hearts from God’s Word and to update listeners on the current situation overseas.
3. This week’s war-relief video comes from Desna, Ukraine, where Igor and Aleksandra Fomichov talk about ways their local church has been able to minister to the physical needs of people in their community, including medicines for locals with limited income and tourniquets to save the lives of those injured due to the war. You can see the video here:
https://vimeo.com/856911786?share=copy
4. At this point in August, our final Christian camps for children and teens in Eastern Europe are winding down. We do not yet have statistics to share; however, we do know that many refugee children and youth attended these camps. For them, it was a chance to eat nourishing food and forget about the war while having fun, playing games, and fellowshipping. For our camp staffers, these camps provided a wonderful tool for uplifting these young people with God’s Word and explaining God’s way of salvation. Although some people expressed surprise that churches would even consider holding camps during a time of war, many parents of children who returned home refreshed and happy expressed deep appreciation to those who ministered to their children in these camps. Thank you to each of you who donated to make them possible. Together, your combined gifts met the full amount of our goal for the camp ministries.
5. On July 7, we told about a Ukrainian woman, Nastya, who was severely wounded in battle while serving in the Ukrainian military. Thanks to a tourniquet supplied via BIEM, her life and even her arm were saved. Amazingly, this week, Nastya felt strong enough to reenlist. However, Nastya had no suitable footgear for military duty, and her nation’s ability to supply such needs has worn thin. Willing to help, BIEM purchased a pair of boots for her.
Sam Slobodian
President - BIEM