OMS Outreach September-December 2014 | Page 6

Radical Love Russia in Boarding a train in Oktyabrski, Russia, a team of missionaries from One Mission Society had two minutes to load their equipment and the team members into the car. Moving through the narrow corridor, crowded with men shouting in Russian and holding open bottles of alcohol, was not a small task. Managing his way through the chaos, Jim reached his compartment, falling into one of the empty seats. Across from him sat a large, muscular man in a black suit. While the man’s friends taunted Jim from the doorway of the compartment, the man only glared. “Dobra vecher, menya zavoot Jim (Good evening, my name is Jim),” Jim said, smiling and extending his hand. The man grabbed his hand, pulling Jim to his face, and growled, “I am a KGB major, and I hate Americans.” Jim’s heart pounded even more than it had from the struggle to get to his seat. In a flash, he prayed silently for help. Not breaking his smile, Jim replied in 6 By Beth Jordal, Communications Department, One Mission Society his broken Russian, “I understand, but I love Russia and the Russian people.” The man paused, blinked a few times, and then collapsed back into his seat as he released Jim’s hand. Silently, Jim offered thanks to God, then remembered the proverb, “A gentle answer turns away wrath” (Proverbs 15:1 NIV). Jim was able to give this gentle answer because God had broken his heart for the Russian people. When he arrived in Russia about four months earlier, fear gripped him as soon as he closed the door to his flat. In humility, he admitted his fear to God and begged, “Give me your love for the Russian people, God.” Immediately, his heart overflowed with joy, and he could not wait to meet the Russians in his midst. Through prayer, radical love burgeoned from a radical dependence on God. This is just