A paper done for partial completion of the B.A degree in Practical Theology
Foundation University
Professor Doctor Samuel Lee
Introduction
My wife and I served as missionaries for a total of twelve years in Russia. This is
a brief history of that time of service.
For me, serving in Russia was necessary. In 1970, several months before I gave
my life to Christ, I had found a book called Gods Smuggler1. While reading this
book I said to the God that I didnt really know I want to do something like this
with my life. Several months later I surrendered my life to follow Jesus. For the
next 25 years I prayed for Russia and the Soviet Union. My wife and I mailed
Gospels of John to addresses in Russia, we prayed for persecuted believers
there and we supported radio ministries that broadcast the Gospel in iron
curtain countries. Over many years I had a deep desire to serve as a
missionary to Russia.
In the late 1980s the Soviet empire began to crumble and the door to Russia
began to open to those from the west. We became part of a flood of missionaries
entering the former Soviet Union in the early 1990s.
1
Brother Andrew; Sherrill, John; & Sherrill, Elizabeth ( 1967,2001). God's Smuggler. Chosen Books. ISBN 0-8007-9301-3.
My wife and I, along with our teenage children served as missionaries to Russia
for nineteen months from July 1994 to February 1996. At that time we were
members of in independent charismatic church. After 19 months of service we
had established a small church, and we returned to the United States to allow our
children to complete their education.
Even though we returned to the United States, my wife and I still had a deep
desire to serve as missionaries in Russia. During this period we became
members of a local congregation of the Foursquare Gospel church. We
approached the denominational missions committee about possibly serving as
Foursquare missionaries in Russia. Through a long application period, and
following much prayer, we were appointed as Foursquare missionaries to Russia
in the summer of 2003. We spent the following nine months raising our needed
financial support and preparing ourselves for our second term of service in
Russia.
After more than 15 years of Evangelical missionary work in Russia the country
was still only about 1.2% evangelical,2 Church planting was and remains a huge
need in the country. In the early to mid 1990s it was relatively easy to plant a
church in Russia. Westerners were viewed as exotic. The people of Russia were
very interested in meeting Americans and other westerners. If you could put
2
Ibid.
In April 2004, leaving our children and grandchildren behind, we moved to the city
of Nizhny Novgorod, Russia, a city of nearly two million people. Having lived in
this area in 1994-96 we still had several contacts among the small Evangelical
Christian community. We immediately re-established these relationships and
began trying to meet as many people as possible, seeking an open door for
ministry. We spent time on the streets, and in open-air markets, practicing our
language skills and seeking to build relationships. We also began to build
relationships within the local Christian community, visiting some of the 25 or so
Evangelical churches in this city of nearly two million people.
We tried beginning a home Bible study for people, but this only attracted
believers from other churches. Believers were not our target, and of course with
so few churches it would be easy to be accused of stealing people from other
churches.
We worked with the third brother for more than a year, helping him begin a small
church. He had pastoral gifts, but unfortunately, in the end we discovered that his
primary interest in ministry was for some Western group to sponsor him so that
he did not have to work. We ended our relationship with him after 15 months.
We were able to work with several authors and publishers to translate, print and
distribute books in Russia. We are most happy to have worked with the
translation and publishing of the book, The Foundations of Pentecostal
Theology.5
http://www.amazon.com/Foundations-Pentecostal-Theology-Guy-Duffield/dp/1599793369
In early 2006 I had begun praying a specific prayer, Lord, give us the keys to this
city. I prayed this because I believe that in every city, in every place, there are
people crying out to God. They might not know the God that they cry to, but they
are desperate to know if God exists and will help them. As believers it is our
responsibility to seek out these people and introduce them to the living God.
Breakthrough
In January 2007 we hosted a small Native American evangelistic team to our city.
Together we did several outreaches. While we were attending a local pastors
meeting with them a young pastor introduced himself and asked if we could bring
the team to his rehabilitation center. That night we visited this center and saw
what this young pastor was doing to serve the Lord. As we rode back to the city
Pastor Dmitry asked me Michael, do you know what the keys to Russian cities
are? Pastor Dmitry told me about their social outreach to the addicted and
homeless. We understood that the Lord was speaking to us through this young
man, and answering my prayers for the keys to the city.
Over the next several months we began to build a relationship with Pastor Dmitry.
We began to attend his small church, and we were invited to preach several
times. Soon Dmitry asked us to come alongside him to help him build this oneyear-old church.
As we began to work with Dmitry we learned that he was a pastor, church planter
with a fellowship of churches called Cornerstone.
As this work grew other pastors asked Pastor Sergei to help them open
rehabilitation centers. Sergei sent several young men to help other centers
began, but there was a problem. The other pastors were not used to working
with addicts, and they wanted to control the young leaders that Pastor Sergei
sent to them. Sergei, realizing that this was not going to work, called his young
men home.
The Lord then began to give them a strategy to plant new churches. They began
slowly to send small teams of former drug addicts to new cities. These teams
would reach out to the addicted community and immediately open a small
A change of direction
As we began to work with Pastor Dmitry and his church it was clear to us that the
Lord had opened a new door for us and that the direction of our ministry was
changing. Dmitry asked us to serve his new church. He himself was a young
pastor and almost everyone in his new church had come to Christ less than one
year before. Dmitry said to us, We need for you to model the Christian life for
us. You have been believers for many years, we need to see that it is possible to
grow older and still be serving the Lord. We agreed to set aside our own plans
and to follow where the Spirit of God seemed to be leading.
As we began our work with Pastor Dmirty and the Cornerstone churches we
faced a new set of challenges. Up to this point in time our Russian language
skills were poor. We had been taking language lessons but our progress was
slow. We were paying for our language lessons and that was stretching our
budget. We had to make a decision. Would we hire a translator to work with us in
order to minister in the Cornerstone churches or would we continue to pay for
language lessons with the hope that our language skills would increase quickly
As we spent more time with the church and teaching in the rehabilitation center
we understood what an amazing system of discipleship the Cornerstone
churches had developed. The system works as follows:
A small church planting team enters a new city. The team is usually made up
entirely of former drug addicts and/or homeless people. Many of these people
have criminal backgrounds and some have been in prison for as much as half of
their lives! They had been evangelized and then given ministry opportunities and
now they were church planters.
The team is self-supporting. Often the only help they receive is a one-way train
ticket to their target city, paid for by the association. They live communally and
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The rehabilitation program is broken into tow parts or steps. In step one the
addict begins to understand what it means to be a Christian. There is a daily
regimen of Bible study, prayer, worship, Scripture memorization, small groups,
discussion and teaching. Slowly the former drug addicts become changed by the
Gospel. It was amazing to see the transformation of these people over the
months as they submitted themselves to the work of the Holy Spirit in their lives.
This first period is a transformative. The new convert is not allowed to leave the
center. They live communally. If they decide to leave they are not allowed back
again until a three-month period is passed.
If the rehabilitant successfully completes his/her first step they are encouraged to
stay in the program and begin to serve the new people at the rehabilitation
center. The purpose of this next step is to help the rehabilitant to begin serving
other people and find their calling as a believer.
During this next step several things begin to happen. These people are now
called leaders. They are given some responsibility to care for and serve the
newest people coming into the program. They are often assigned 1-3 people to
care for. They help the new people to become acclimated to the rehabilitation
program. They help them to begin to read the Bible. They teach them how to
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As this happens a person who was a drug addict just four months before, is now
a disciple maker. These young leaders gain real skills in leadership and as a
result of their serving another person their own life also continues to be
transformed. This is amazing when you understand that the average Christian
never disciples even one person during their lifetime.
These new leaders have more freedom in this step. They are no longer required
to live at the rehabilitation center all the time. They serve at the rehabilitation
center for one week. They then go into the city to serve in the church and the
ministry for the next week. They continue to do this for at least the next four
months. In the city they continue to live communally in a small apartment that is
rented by the church.
In the city they are responsible for street ministry, reaching out to the addicted.
They do this by handing out informational flyers that explain to interested people
what the rehabilitation program is all about. They hold weekly meetings where
people who are seeking help attend, sharing their story of how Christ changed
them and gave them hope. They attend and serve in all the ministries of the
church. Some are ushers and servers. They greet people at the door of the
church. They help clean the church, serving on the worship team and do anything
that the church has a need for. In doing this they begin to understand how a
church functions and what church ministry is like.
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Because of this service and training these young men and women desire to
become pastors and leaders. This is a natural, but deliberate plan of the
leadership of the church. The churches have one goal, that is to disciple men
and women who will continue to reach people by planting new churches in new
cities.
During the course of rehabilitation teachers and ministers from other Cornerstone
churches are often visit and teach. The rehabilitants hear how these leaders
were once addicts, criminals and homeless themselves. They see the great
transformation that has taken place and a desire to become like these leaders is
planted in many hearts. All during the course of rehabilitation the rehabilitants
are told that they were saved by God in order to go and serve others. They are
told to pray about how they will serve when their rehabilitation is complete. They
are challenged to form a team and go to the missionary training school. A desire
forms among them and some of them begin to discuss how they can form a team
and attend the Cornerstone missionary training school.
The result is that every year fifty to one hundred former drug addicts form teams
of three to ten people. They go to missionary training school as a group. At this
six-month school they learn the basic skills needed to go to a new target city,
open a rehabilitation center and plant a church. As of the writing of this paper
there are now almost one hundred Cornerstone churches in Russia with three
hundred rehabilitation centers for the addicted, homeless and criminals. In the
spring of 2015 sixteen teams will graduate from the missionary training school
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Our Work
We began our work with the Cornerstone churches by teaching weekly at the
local rehabilitation center for drug addicts. In just a few months another center
was opened for homeless people. We began to teach at this center also. Later a
third center opened far outside the city. Karen and I would drive there once every
week, often times helping the leaders get to the center. Many times we delivered
food supplies for the centers. Soon new churches were planted in several cities
nearby and our ministry expanded.
In our third year of relationship with the Cornerstone churches we began to travel
into the Ural mountain area and into Siberia. Doors were opened for us to begin
preaching in all the churches. Often we would travel for 15-30 days at a time,
speaking every day in churches and rehab centers.
During these times of ministry we would preach and teach and then do personal
ministry. Many of the people we ministered too had either just recently entered
the rehabilitation program, or were just several months old in the Lord.
We found two things too be important in these times of ministry. The first was the
need to clearly preach the basic message of the Gospel. Many of these young
people could be classified as born again, but they actually had very little
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We also found that the Holy Spirit would really touch peoples lives when we took
time to individually pray for people. During a time of worship at a rehab center
we would begin to lay hands upon people, pray for them and speak words of
encouragement into their lives. Sometimes people would begin to weep as the
Spirit healed their minds or emotions.
This was the basic form of our work with the Cornerstone Churches over eight
years. We were given an open door by the leadership to speak and travel in their
churches across Russia. The churches were both appreciative and generous to
us. They often paid our travel expenses, something that is unusual for most
missionaries.
In 2010 I was able to open the door for some of the pastors in the Cornerstone
Association to travel to America. We did this not in order to seek funds or other
help for the Russian churches, but rather to introduce them to our denominational
leaders and to allow them to see various other ministries in the United States.
They were able to spend time at First Baptist church in Houston TX, a very
influential church. We also took them to Saddleback Church, Pastor by Rick
Warren. While I hoped that our denominational leaders would reach out to these
men and begin a relationship, this did not happen.
15
Some frustrations
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The results of our ministry in Russia are best shown by the words of our friends
Pastor Sergei Nyehpomntehsheek says about us, Michael and Karen are not
Americans, they became a part of us, they think like Russian believers. They
might call themselves Foursquare, but they are also Cornerstone.
Pastor Dmitry Zaborski says, Michael and Karen helped me build my church.
They taught us what it means to serve as a missionary. Michael taught me how
to preach. Michael and Karen opened the world up for us.
Pastor Oleg Kuznetzov says, Michael and Karen served our church and our
center and laid a foundation for our ministry, we will never forget them.
Pastor Ivan Beshlyaga says. Michael and Karen served our church and Bible
School, they were like spiritual parents to us.
Ending Comments
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In looking back at our years of service in Russia we clearly see the hand of the
Lord at work both in us and through us. Our personal lives have been hugely
impacted by this time. We grew in our faith and our understanding of what it
means to be a follower of Jesus. While we served the Russian church and
taught in their churches, we received from them far more than we gave to them.
We are better human beings and better Christians because of what we
experienced in Russia. We never thought that we would leave Russia. A large
part of our heart will always be in Russia. I thank God that the dream of ministry
to Russia, that he planted in my heart 44 years ago, was fulfilled. We give Him
all the glory for what He has done in us and through us.
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