War Relief Updates - December 29, 2023

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

1. This morning I spoke with brother Yura, our church planter in Lviv, a large city in Western Ukraine very close to the Polish border. They had a rough night of little sleep since they were heavily attacked by Russian rockets and drones throughout the night. Their church building—which is also where Yura’s family lives—is very close to the airport, which seemed to be the focus of this latest Russian attack. Brother Yura shared with me that his church added a festive element to their distributions of aid, which they have been delivering to needy refugee families and soldiers stationed nearby. They formed their youth and church members into groups of carolers who sang Christmas carols along with delivering the aid. Praise God!

2. On Tuesday of this week the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine published the draft of a law that plans to mobilize another 500,000 citizens for military service. Throughout Ukraine there is much concern about the measures contained in this draft, which would make many more Ukrainians eligible for conscription. One aspect of this draft may also affect BIEM’s ability to continue bringing Ukrainian pastors to the United States to help boost our War Relief efforts by speaking in churches. Specifically, one measure in this draft requires all Ukrainians traveling abroad to register for military service and to validate their registration with local consulates. Please pray that this would not be enacted, as it would negatively impact our Ukrainian pastors’ ability to visit the United States.

3. In this week’s war relief video you will hear from Vitaly Yurchenko, one of our Ukrainian church planters we have been bringing to the United States to visit supporting churches. Vitaly, along with his wife Olena and son Nikita, were a great blessing while with us during this month of December. Since brother Vitaly’s church in Chervona Sloboda is just a couple miles from the formerly occupied areas of Bucha and Hostomel, they have been at the center of much or our war relief distribution and have received and helped hundreds of refugees. Here is the link:

https://vimeo.com/user37287229/expanding

4. There is good news and bad news concerning our container that had been stuck in Poland, largely due to the border blockade conducted by protesting Polish truck drivers. The good news is that, after delays with the overloaded rail system, our container has finally arrived in Ukraine, where it is now at Customs. The bad news is that, despite news that the new regulations concerning such humanitarian shipments were postponed for 6 months, that does not appear to be the case for our container. Therefore, our people must process the humanitarian status of our container under the new regulations. This was the very thing we had hoped to avoid since it will greatly increase the effort required to accomplish this. Please pray for our Ukrainian director and pastor, Eugene Buyko, as he must now navigate a mountain of bureaucratic steps to fulfill the new requirements. 

5. An important part of our War Relief outreach is to encourage people to pray for the war to end. We now have a large quantity of special prayer reminders in both prayer card and book marker formats. These beautifully designed and printed prayer reminders are available for free upon request. You can order as many as you can use for yourself or to distribute to others by contacting us by phone at 317-718-1633 or through our email address, missions@baptistinternational.org. Please don’t be weary in praying for this.

 In Christ,

Sam Slobodian
President, BIEM