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Missionary care, Slavic style
August 2017

By Josie Oldenburg — Many Western missionaries know the joy of opening up a parcel just before the holiday season and finding it full of candy canes, colorful ornaments and Christmas cookies.

ukrainian salad
Olivye salad — a classic dish on a Ukrainian’s holiday table.

Ukrainians don’t hanker for minty candy as December rolls into January, but they certainly have their own tastes of the season. And one of those is Olivye — a salad of potatoes, carrots, pickles, eggs, green onion, dill and mayo. Lots of mayo. 

The babushkas in one Ukrainian church determined that a Ukrainian family serving in Papua New Guinea absolutely needed Salat Olivye on their holiday table. The women pooled their funds and sent them to the family, so that they could buy the proper kind of potatoes to make the salad.

Now that’s thoughtful missionary care.

In the past five years, SEND’s 3M (Missions Mobilization Ministry) workers have seen more and more Ukrainians display that kind of personal connection to the Great Commission. God is moving entire church communities to passionately claim their role in engaging unreached people groups.

  • The Kairos missions mobilization course in Ukraine continues to develop missions awareness for many believers.
  • Six long-term missionary partners now serve in Central Asia and other areas.
  • About 70 short-term teams of Ukrainians have gone out all around the world. Some of those team members return from these short trips eager to make a longer-term commitment to cross-cultural missions.
  • Ten key mobilizers are distributed around the country. They are forming teams that can both build awareness and help give direction as God leads churches into missions.
  • For the past eight years, the Ukrainian Missions Alliance has coordinated sending efforts between various church denominations and put on an annual youth missions conference that draws young people from all over the country. Many of these young people dedicate themselves to missions and to searching out their part in making Christ known to the unreached. This spring, key leaders from 27 churches asked to join this effort.
  • SEND 3M and its partners have distributed thousands of prayer guides for the unreached in Russia and Ukraine. To help equip cross-cultural workers, SEND 3M translated Duane Elmer’s book “Cross-Cultural Servanthood: Serving the World in Christlike Humility” into Russian; so far, 2,000 copies have been passed out.

Big questions remain: Where are the most strategic places to send Ukrainians as global workers? So far, there are no Ukrainian sending agencies, so how can churches cooperate to send and support missionaries? How can Ukrainian churches best care for their missionaries who are working in far-away places?

Ask God to grant SEND Ukraine’s 3M workers wisdom as they interact with many different groups — village churches and city churches, pastors and lay people from a variety of denominations — to help Ukrainian churches fulfill their role in the Great Commission.

To help fund 3M’s work, click here. To watch a video about how one Ukrainian church sacrificed to support its missionary, click here



We welcome you to Eurasia, a land where we see God bringing people out of the darkness of their Communist past and into his glorious light! Learn more about SEND’s teams in Eurasia.

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Josie Oldenburg
Josie and her family served in Kyiv, Ukraine, for 12 years before she joined the SEND Communications team.