Four days into my trip, I already had six teaching sessions and preparing for one more tonight at the Theological School in Minsk, Belarus. So far, most of my audiences were university (or university-age) students – local and international. Most of them with no or very little church background but very eager to learn and to ask questions “about gods”. I had much fun adjusting my message to be clear and relevant to an IT student from China, a medical student from Zimbabwe, a linguistics student from Belarus and a law student from India at the same time. Luckily, most of them already spoke pretty good Russian and I only occasionally had to help my interpreters with certain theological or cultural terms and concepts. Working in small groups truly helped deepen their understanding of Christian teaching and the place Christ needs to take in their life.
An overnight train will bring me to Moscow tomorrow morning for two presentations almost back-to-back: at the University of Culture (outreach) and the Synodal Missions Department (training). I am still not certain where I will be staying for the next four days before taking off for Stavropol in Southern Russia. First ten days of May are traditionally spent in “dachas” (cabins) and I am pretty sure some of my friends will offer their empty homes for my lodging.
I hope and pray that the oil storage fire in Tuapse will be put off by the time I arrive to the area, or, at least, the wind does not change and will blow away from where I will be travelling and teaching for the last week of the trip. My audiences in the region (Stavropolye and Northern Caucasus) are expected to be very diverse: from clergy to military, from schoolkids to university faculty and from parishioners to general audiences.







Leave a Reply