|
Sam
Slobodian was born on May 1, 1954 to Ukrainian missionaries, Peter and
Mary Slobodian, in Saenz Pena, Argentina.
Although he had come to the United States at the age of three, he
did not have a real introduction to the English language until his first
day of kindergarten. As young
children do, Sam learned the language quickly and one of his more vivid
memories of those days was the time his father came home with a small
green AM radio. The idea was
that somehow the knowledge of the English language would be imparted to
the immigrant family as they huddled around the radio and listened to it
in their small but very clean fourth-floor apartment, located in a
run-down neighborhood of Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Childhood for Sam and his
sisters, Ann and Debbie, was quite normal and saturated with church
activities since their parents began establishing Ukrainian and Russian
Baptist churches to reach the Slavic population of Minneapolis while they
both were studying at Northwestern College and Central Baptist Theological
Seminary.
When Sam was ten, he began
to do some serious thinking after his Daily Vacation Bible School teacher
asked each boy in the class to give not only the date of his birth but
also the date he was born again, his spiritual birthday. Having been raised in a preacher’s home and having heard
the Gospel preached continually, Sam reasoned that he must have been saved
at some point, even if he could remember neither the date nor the
circumstances surrounding his decision.
However, the Holy Spirit soon convicted Sam that the reason he
could not remember anything about this event was that it had never
happened! And so by the end
of the week Sam received Christ as his personal Savior and wrote the date
down in his Bible: June 24,
1964.
When Sam was twelve, his
family moved to Chicago, Illinois. Having
completed their studies in Minneapolis, Sam’s parents were drawn to
Chicago by the opportunity of ministering to the huge Slavic population of
the city. Though he was not
thrilled with spending Saturday’s in a Ukrainian grammar school, looking
back it seems that even in those days God was preparing Sam for his future
ministry. As a dedicated
Christian young man growing up in Chicago, Sam was active in church and
youth activities and had an effective witness for Christ in addition to
always managing to find employment. Even
though Sam earned academic honors in high school, being named an Illinois
State Scholar, his main interest was trumpet, which he hoped to pursue
professionally. Sam became a
serous musician and eventually was recognized as one of the outstanding
high school musicians of the city.
As a senior in high
school, Sam began to struggle with a call to preach.
After the Lord dealt with Sam through the Word and some specific
circumstances, Sam surrendered for full-time Christian service.
As a result, he did not audition for any of the talent scholarships
available from many major universities.
One day the band director called Sam aside and told him the
exciting news that he had been offered a talent scholarship which had no
audition requirement; others and his reputation had spoken for Sam.
Indeed, the document was on his desk, and it had only to be
accepted. When Sam responded
by saying he was planning on the ministry, the director replied, “Sam,
that’s wonderful, I’m not even going to try to talk you out of
that!”
After high school, Sam served as the youth pastor
for East Maine Baptist Church in Glenview, a northwest suburb of Chicago.
The youth group multiplied under his ministry, and he involved many
of the youth in the soul winning and bus ministries, starting several new
bus routes During this time,
Sam attended Northeastern Illinois University, where he earned a
bachelor’s degree. Feeling
the need for theological training and preparation, Sam resigned the youth
ministry at East Maine in order to attend Central Baptist Theological
Seminary, where he earned a Master of Divinity.
While a student there, Sam served as the first assistant pastor of
the Valley Baptist Church in Golden Valley, Minnesota, where he developed
the youth ministry into an extremely active program featuring camps,
retreats, and cross-country bus trips.
Eventually brother Sam earned a Doctor of Missiology Degree from
Trinity Evangelical Divinity School in Deerfield, Illinois.
While at Central Baptist Seminary, Sam met Amy
Lindner, whose family attended Fourth Baptist Church, which housed the
seminary. Amy also grew up in
a Christian home was saved at the age of 10 as a result of Evangelistic
meetings in her home church in Littleton, Colorado.
Amy attended Pillsbury Baptist Bible College and after they were
married completed her education at Hyles-Anderson College, where she
earned a bachelor’s degree in elementary education.
Amy and Sam were married on June 6,1977.
After Sam’s graduation from seminary, and they immediately moved
to Chicago, where Sam had been called as pastor of the Southside Baptist
Church of Chicago.
Sam and Amy devoted
themselves completely to the inner-city work and God blessed with a
harvest of souls and a wonderful congregation of loving people.
After three fruitful years, Sam led the church in a move to the
southwest suburb of Oak Lawn, where the church had already started a
Christian day school. This
proved to be an excellent move for the church and the school soon numbered
over 300 students.
In 1982 Sam became
increasingly burdened and challenged by the ministry (Baptist
International Evangelistic Ministries- BIEM) that he and his father had
established the previous year to reach behind the Iron Curtain.
This burden and challenge continued to grow to the point where it
was evident that this was the calling of God to leave the pastorate in
order to serve as a missionary with BIEM reaching Russia and Eastern
Europe.
In 1990 dramatic changes
came to the ministry of BIEM with the advent of glasnost and perestroika
in the Soviet Union. The
collapse of Communism resulted in many new opportunities for ministry in
Russia and led Sam and Amy to consider moving there.
Counseling with BIEM’ board and those with longtime involvement
with the Slobodians and BIEM, both in and out of Russia helped Sam
conclude that they would be most effective operating from the United
States. Today Sam serves as
president and Amy and Sarah work in the Indianapolis office of BIEM. BIEM specializes in Russia and Eastern Europe where they
have planted numerous churches by supporting, training and equipping
nationals. BIEM also
distributes Bibles and Gospel literature, translates and prints
discipleship and pastoral training materials, conducts evangelistic
outreach ministries, provides material aid and helps new congregations
build churches.
In 1993 the Slobodian
family moved to Indianapolis, Indiana to establish a new office for BIEM.
God has greatly blessed this move and the ministry has steadily
expanded. The
Slobodians are members of Mount Tabor Baptist Church of Lebanon, Indiana
(Pastor Rick Adkins) and have 5 children; Sarah 25, Susan 23, Steven 21,
Sharon 19, and Stephanie 16.
|