War Relief Updates - November 22, 2023

Thank you for your concern and for praying for Ukraine and the Ukrainian People

1. This week, BIEM is posting our war-relief update and video update on Wednesday instead of Friday because of the Thanksgiving holiday. We want to take this opportunity to wish each of you a blessed Thanksgiving. One of the things that we as a ministry are thankful for is you, our dear friends. We are grateful for each of you who receives these updates and partners with us in these efforts to share the Gospel through war relief to suffering Ukrainians. God is blessing these distributions as you can see from the following touching update.

2. Yura, our church planter in Lviv, related an incident in which, because of War Relief funds BIEM provided, he was able to significantly help a victim of the war from Kharkiv, which was heavily bombed. His name is Ivan, and he survived the bombing of a civilian apartment complex that killed 220 people, including his wife and two children. Ivan was critically wounded and ended up in the military hospital in Lviv, where Yura often ministers to the patients. Because Ivan was openly considering suicide, someone gave him Yura’s contact information. When he phoned Yura, this led to Yura being able to regularly counsel and encourage him. Praise God, through this Ivan came to know the Lord! Yura also purchased the medicines and food needed. However, finding a place for Ivan to live was a huge problem that Yura’s church in Lviv began to earnestly pray about. God answered their prayers through a Christian brother in Odessa who offered Ivan a home to live in rent-free! Today Yura drove Ivan to the train station, where he will take a train to his new home. The Christian brother there and the church will be able to continue to minister to Ivan. Today, Ivan made this statement to Yura: “I never believed that I would ever consider commit suicide, but then God sent you and I was able to find God through you. I am so happy that God forgave me and gave me a new life through his son Jesus Christ. Though I have lost my family, God has given me a new family which are my wonderful brothers and sisters in Christ.”

3. BIEM’s Ukrainian church planters Pavel Usach and Eugene Buyko wanted to express their gratitude and other thoughts to American believers before departing back to Ukraine. You can hear and see that brief video message here:

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/farewell

4. Please continue to pray about our humanitarian-aid container, which is due to arrive in the Polish port any day now. So far, the strike by Polish truck drivers continues to block border crossings into Ukraine. This quotation comes from the Kyiv Post:

As Polish protests blocking three major Poland-Ukraine border crossings stretch into their third week, negotiations to bring an end to the blockade have failed. Exhausted drivers are stuck in massive lines on both sides of the border, with expected waiting times reaching over one month at the Yahodyn – Dorohusk crossing, according to the electronic service, eCherha. Kyiv on Nov. 19 sent a humanitarian team to the border to provide food and water to truckers.

Furthermore, the arrangements we have made to avoid this blockade by shipping the container from Poland to Ukraine by rail instead of truck appear to offer little hope that the container shipped this way would arrive by December 1. Please pray.

5. One particularly encouraging video that Pasha Usach shared in the American churches he was able to visit is from Posad-Pokrovs’ke, a town in Kherson Oblast. On one of his aid-distribution trips to this town that was 80% destroyed, he noticed a heavily damaged church that had been abandoned. God burdened his heart about this, so he began asking people if they had contact information for any of its members, who had all evacuated to other areas of Ukraine. When he received contact information for two ladies who had been part of the church, he immediately noticed that they had evacuated to his own hometown. Soon Pasha paid them a visit, and he challenged them to return to their hometown as missionaries. This was indeed bold, since these ladies are in their 70s. Pasha told them the people there are very open to the Gospel and some have become believers through the distributions and the sharing of the Gospel that Pasha and his team performed. He told them their presence was needed there, not here where they were. He stated that he would help to re-establish the church if they would go back. They agreed to go! When they arrived, one of these ladies, upon seeing the destruction, collapsed! After two weeks of folks praying, she was able to walk again. So the two began services in her home. Even though these two ladies were limited to reading scripture, singing hymns, and sharing testimonies, before long more than 20 people were trying to attend but could not fit into their home. Pasha arranged for a tent to be put up beside the damaged church and for a church in a nearby town to send a preacher to hold the services regularly. Now 60+ people are attending and have the tent packed! Praise God! 

In Christ,

Sam Slobodian
President, BIEM