OMS Outreach September-December 2014 | Page 23

alleged police brutality. It led to greater uncertainty and fear among Ukrainians. At our meetings, we shifted our planned topics to include discussions of what it means to follow God in the midst of political turmoil and uncertainty. We sought to use Psalms 46 and 91 to help our Ukrainian friends focus on God, even when the economic and political structures seemed to be collapsing around them. We prayed a lot more, both individually and in our groups. The political uncertainty came to a head in late January when the government passed laws attempting to stop the protests—laws that protestors saw as a violation of their rights for free expression. Rioting broke out among some of the fringe factions of the protest movement. They shot fireworks at the police and threw Molotov cocktails. They burned buses, and the police fought back. Protestors also took over government buildings in Kiev and in other regional city centers. Although the riots were isolated, it still surprised us when we read about it. Ukraine didn’t seem like a country primed for revolution. Were we about to get caught up in a civil war? This brought us to our knees. We were helpless to do anything to change the situation in this country we love. But God could. So we prayed. And we invited people around the world to pray. Many Ukrainians turned to God during this time as well. Even among the protestors, there were prayer movements in which priests and pastors were invited to lead public prayers in Kiev’s central square. Tents were set up on the square to provide ongoing prayer throughout the crisis. The situation climaxed in late February when more than 70 protestors were killed over a two-day period. But in a miraculous turn of events, the shootings stopped, and the president abandoned his post and was soon impeached by the parliament. Leaders sympathetic to the protest movement took control, and a move toward Europe and a more Westernstyle democracy began. The violence lessened. God had answered prayer! At the time of this writing, threats still remain, with a small-scale war occurring in a couple of Ukraine’s eastern provinces as some there want to separate and join Russia. But many, if not most, Ukrainians are pleased with the Ukrainian government and are hopeful for the future. 23 photos page 22, top: Protestors stand against police in Kiev’s Independence Square. bottom: Molotov cocktail photo page 23: Many Ukrainians united in prayer in the midst of chaos.