Ukrainian-American Pastor: ‘Overcome Evil with Good’ by Supporting Ukraine, Refugees
A Ukrainian-American pastor says Christians in his home country are “putting their faith into practice” and shining the light of Christ despite not knowing what will remain of their homeland after the war.
Andrew Moroz, who was born in Ukraine and whose family members are still sheltering from bombs back in Ukraine, said it’s both “beautiful” and “heartbreaking” to see how churches have responded to Russia’s unprovoked invasion.
Pastor @AndrewMoroz has family in Ukraine and shares the plight of Christians in the war-torn nation https://t.co/YPGvW82se9
— Sean Langille (@SeanLangille) March 5, 2022
“We’re… seeing them encourage one another, we’re seeing them come alongside their neighbors and friends and show love – and really show the deepest expressions of their faith,” Moroz, who serves as the pastor of Gospel Community Church in Lynchburg, Virginia, told Fox News.
“What we’re seeing,” he said, “is Ukrainians are putting their faith into practice.”
Moroz said he’s found hope and inspiration in a specific Bible verse, Romans 12:21: “Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.”
“The context of this verse was written to a group of first-century Christians that were isolated and who were persecuted, who were going through a very challenging time,” Moroz said. “They were isolated from Jews, they were persecuted by the Romans. And they had every reason to give up, every reason to be overwhelmed. But instead, what they got to experience was overwhelming, resilient hope. And they had hope, because of their faith in Jesus Christ – because their hope was rooted in something that was outside of them and outside of their circumstances, and in this glorious future that God has prepared for His people.
“By God’s grace,” he said, “we can overcome evil with good, we can do that by joining the Ukrainian people in their struggle. We can practice good by supporting the Ukrainian government. We can practice good by investing ourselves into these refugee causes right now. And we can practice good by preparing to help rebuild the Ukrainian nation.”
The Ukrainian church, Moroz said, has flourished since gaining its independence following the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union. Christians in Ukraine don’t want to return to the state of oppression they experienced under communism, he said.
“Ukraine has kind of become a base camp for operations [by churches] into other former Soviet countries,” he said. “Oftentimes, nonprofit groups or church groups will start in Ukraine and then go and extend their efforts. One of the fears with this encroachment of the Russian military is that we’re going to go back in time, and we’re going to experience the oppression that my family experienced, that my mom experienced when she was growing up in the Soviet Union.”
Related:
Ukrainians Kneel in Prayer Outdoors as Russia Invades: ‘Lord Please Intervene’
Ukraine’s Christians Urge World to Pray: ‘It’s Our Weapon in Times of War’
Photo courtesy: ©iStock/Getty Images Plus/HStocks
Video courtesy: ©Fox News
Michael Foust has covered the intersection of faith and news for 20 years. His stories have appeared in Baptist Press, Christianity Today, The Christian Post, the Leaf-Chronicle, the Toronto Star and the Knoxville News-Sentinel.
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