Russian Attacks Driving More Ukrainians To Seek Christ

Tuesday, April 11 2023 by Clem Boyd/Richard D. Hunt

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4,000 baptisms in 2022 in the Baptist Union of Ukraine alone
Baptist Union of Ukraine
4,000 baptisms in 2022 in the Baptist Union of Ukraine alone

Russia has targeted faith-based locations all over Ukraine. Pastors have been killed. Churches have been emptied because Ukrainians are fleeing for their lives. 

But the church is growing. The God of the resurrection is the answer. 

There were 4,000 baptisms in 2022 in the Union of Evangelical Christians - Baptists alone, and this is happening across every evangelical denomination. The information was shared by Mission Eurasia in a virtual conference.

A lot of believers left eastern Ukraine to escape the withering Russian attacks. Many congregations were decimated as families understandably tried to find safety in western Ukraine and across the border in Moldova and Poland. But now churches are packed to overflowing.

Many coming to determined faith
[Photo Credit: Baptist Union of Ukraine ] Many coming to determined faith

At the Love of Christ Church in Mykolaiv, not far from Kherson, which was liberated last November, crowds of people have been seeking help. This was a church of roughly 300 before the war, but when the war started, Pastor Edmund Rudnytskiy and the church planned to close their doors. 

Love of Christ Church was down to 40 to 50 in attendance, but they decided to give it two weeks. And now the building is not big enough to hold the 500 people who are coming on a regular basis on a weekend. 

In the midst of this terrible tragedy, God is moving hearts and minds, and bringing people to Himself. Despite the efforts of the enemy, the church will not be destroyed. God is building His church. 

The value of baptism is shared
[Photo Credit: Baptist Union of Ukraine ] The value of baptism is shared

Russian Pastor Boldly Stands with Ukraine In Spite of Grave Risks 

Pastor Yuri Sipko, former president of the Union of Evangelical Christians -Baptists in Russia from 2002-2010, is standing with Ukraine and fiercely criticizing his homeland. 

During a Zoom conference organized by Franklin, Tennessee-based Mission Eurasia to remember the one-year mark of the Russian invasion, Sipko praised Ukrainian believers for their “incredible example of courageous Christianity.” 

“My brothers of Ukraine, I’d like to express my sincere regret, my sincere apologies for us, the Russians, who became participants in this crime against Ukraine,” he said. “We continue to pray constantly for the Lord to stop this bloodbath.”

Sipko made his remarks even while acknowledging that Russians can now be arrested for speaking out against the war. 

Mission Eurasia, headed by Sergey Rakhuba, who was born and raised in Ukraine and who lived in Russia for many years, organized the conference. Mission Eurasia is a church planting and disciple making ministry serving the 13 former republics of the Soviet Union and also Israel. 

© 2025 K-LOVE News

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