
‘This year has changed everything’
In the northern Polish city of Sopot, a group of…
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The number of Churches of Christ in Ukraine once rivaled the number in the rest of Europe combined.
The nation of 38 million people, once part of the Soviet Union, was fertile soil for missionaries and church planters after the fall of the Iron Curtain. Since its independence in August of 1991, Ukraine has found itself increasingly at odds with its neighbor, Russia, and caught between the influences of East and West. In 2014 the tension turned violent as Russia annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula and pro-Russian separatists seized control of portions of eastern Ukraine.
Billboards along the road leading into Ivan-Frankivsk bear messages of support for Ukraine’s military and citizens.
The Christian Chronicle has covered the impact of the hostilities on Ukraine’s churches for more than a decade. When the first bombs fell on Feb. 24, 2022, the Chronicle published an explainer, “Why Ukraine matters to Churches of Christ,” detailing the history of the fellowship in this Eastern European nation.
Following are links to the Chronicle’s reports, filed from Ukraine, Europe and other parts of the globe. The most recent stories appear first.
Mary Lee Rogers, left, greets Larysa Dekhiarova during breakfast at a Christian retreat center in Irpin, Ukraine.
Ukranian flags line Kyiv’s Maidan Nezalezhnosti (Independence Square), each honoring a Ukrainian who lost their life in the war with Russia.
@christianchronicle Erik Tryggestad reports from Ukraine with translator Inna Kuzmenko in Episode 67 of the Christian Chronicle Podcast. #ccpodcast #churchofchrist #ukraine ♬ original sound – The Christian Chronicle
Igor Kozlovsky, left, receives a hero’s welcome at Kyiv’s Boryspil International Airport after his Dec. 27, 2017, release from a prison in Donetsk, where he was held by pro-Russian separatists. Kozlovsky died Sept. 6. Artem Vinogradar, — with his wife, Valentina, at right — died in combat Aug. 15 while serving in Ukraine’s airborne assault unit.
Sasha and Nastia Nikolaienko stand near a Ukrainian flag at the Gemeente van Christus Den Haag (Church of Christ in The Hague).
Julia, right, holds her son Mark as she visits with Ukrainian refugee Aleksandra Hmyria and daughter Milana at the Memorial Church of Christ in Houston.
In Ukraine’s Kherson Oblast (or region), a rescue worker carries a man out of an area flooded after a dam collapsed.
Andrii Bilokonnyi shares a message of hope and prayer for workers and refugees at a former boarding school in eastern Ukraine.
After Russia’s retreat, hungry Ukrainians in the city of Izium take loaves of bread delivered by Volunteer Brothers.
Viktoria Oshurko works as a translator in a Košice relief center. In the early days of the war, 2,000 Ukrainians per day came through the center. A native of western Ukraine, Oshuko came to Slovakia to study public administration at a university. “Mentally, it’s hard,” she said of the weight of the war.
Only a few images from the church members’ seven-week ordeal remain, including this picture of one of the countless times they took refuge in their building’s hallway. As an evacuation corridor opened, most of the members deleted photos and videos of the siege from their phones, fearing that Russian soldiers would confiscate them.
As they get ready to watch a movie in the hotel, Ukrainian children make shadow puppets on a projected computer screen that reads “Pray for Ukraine!”
The Kościoł Chrystusowy w Warszawie (Warsaw Church of Christ) meets in a rented facility in the Polish capital. Most of its members are refugees from Ukraine.
Yulian Parfenenko, 6, helps his mother, Alyona, with grocery shopping at the free resource center run by the Cluj-Napoca Church of Christ in Romania. The Parfenenko family fled Odessa, Ukraine, at the beginning of March.
In Chernivtsi, Adi Voicu of Romania and Dennis Zolotaryov of Ukraine load Ukrainian- and Russian-language Bibles from Eastern European Mission for transport to Romania. The Bibles will be given to Ukrainian refugees.
Dima Grischuk, left, and fellow drivers with the Let’s Love ministry prepare for a journey to eastern Ukraine to distribute aid and to ferry back the displaced.
Paul Nance, coordinating minister for the Hillsboro Church of Christ, speaks on the Kelley Clarkson Show.
A long line of Ukrainians walks toward the Polish border checkpoint, fleeing the war in their homeland.
Members of the Grace Chapel Church of Christ in Cumming, Ga., hold signs at a prayer vigil for Ukraine.
A separatist fighter carries a live artillery shell through the former meeting place of the Petrovsky Church of Christ in Donetsk, Ukraine. Militants seized the building in October 2014 and renamed the region the Donetsk People’s Republic.
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