If you've read much on the blog or heard us talk about Russia often then you know that flexibility is the name of the game here. This past Sunday we got up and got ready for church only to get a phone call shortly before we were set to leave telling us the service had been cancelled. Like many Protestant churches in Russia, Chelyabinsk Church of God rents a room to have their services in. The floor of their normal meeting place had been painted that week and though they'd been assured it would dry in plenty of time for their Sunday service, low and behold Sunday morning the senior pastor arrived to set up for the service only to be told the floor wouldn't be dry until Wednesday and they couldn't meet there. With no time to come up with an alternative location he started to call around and tell everyone the service was cancelled.
But shortly after we got that initial phone call our friend called back to say that they were going to meet anyway and find a place in the park to have the service! So, Dan changed into slightly more comfortable clothes and we set off to see what would happen. We met with a group of about 30-40 outside the usual meeting place and walked to a nearby park. There we eventually convinced some ladies staffing a chess club (which was poorly attended that morning!) to let us meet under their tent. While I prayed that Dan wouldn't be arrested for preaching on the street (a suspicious and perhaps illegal activity for a foreigner) we got on with the Sunday service, an hour or so late. Pr. Sergei, the senior pastor, reminded us as we started the service that 25 years ago every Sunday morning started for Protestant believers with a phone call telling them which bus stop to gather at that week. Then small groups of Christians would secretely slip away to a hidden place to have their weekly service. What would have been unbelievable for them was such an open meeting in the middle of a public space! It was a sober and joyful reminder of the freedom these Christian friends now have compared to the generation before them.
In front of our impromptu meeting spot - the sign says "Chess Club", though it also serves as a reading room. I believe it's run by the local library.
Senior Pastor Sergei Alexandervich and Alexei.
After church we went with a group of friends to a friend's dacha for picnic lunch and a long, relaxing afternoon under a pear tree.