We Need Some Kind of Revival,’ Says Russian Church Leader In Wake Of New Law (Please use this version)
By Steve Rees, Special to ASSIST News Service
LOVELAND, CO (ANS – August 9, 2016)
-- Some Russian and American Christians – fearful of returning to a
time when underground churches were the norm and publicly speaking the
name Jesus Christ a crime with children present – remain in the dark now
that President Vladimir Putin has signed into law new regulations on
religious activity.
Christian
media in the United States published news reports about the Russian law
this summer but, depending on the source, the information either
elevated or alleviated worries of a return to Soviet-era days when
believers in Jesus met in secret, out of view of communist spies.
Sergey
Achkasov, a Russian who loves Jesus Christ and his teachings, was on
vacation in the U.S. this summer when the Kremlin and Putin passed the
law, which became effective July 20.
A
former pastor and church planter in Russia, Achkasov's interest in the
edict is personal: His brother is a worship leader and missions’
director in Russia, whose registered congregation must obey the law or
pay fines for violations of what's also billed a counterterrorism
measure.
Even
more personal for Achkasov are the memories of Soviet-era persecution
of Christians including himself: He was beaten between the ages of six
to nine for talking about God at home and at the elite Soviet school
where he studied piano more than a decade before communism's fall in
1991.
So,
in his free time, Achkasov began to study the law online from a summer
vacation home close to the Rocky Mountains in Colorado, where he and
wife, Jill Achkasova (female surnames add an “a” in the Russian
language), spent the month of July.
“Somebody
got the idea that every conversation about God or spiritual things is
against the law. It does give definition to what is and is not
missionary activity,” says Achkasov, adding that the law's major target
is potential terrorist activity in Russia, where Orthodox, Protestant
and Islamic faiths exist.
Much of the law addresses issues of electronic surveillance and storage of phone records as a counterterrorism measure.
“A
church is not forbidden to conduct missionary activity under this law
but it does need to be a legal, registered church – not underground like
some from the Soviet era,” says Achkasov, who was baptized in the
Russian Orthodox Church but attended illegal and legal Baptist,
Pentecostal, Charismatic and Catholic congregations on a youthful quest
for God.
“The
law is a last-ditch effort to get churches registered, and to prevent
large-group gatherings where the potential for terrorism exists,” he
says.
The
law doesn't forbid one-on-one dialogue about God, private prayer in
homes, or personal evangelism as some reports have stated.
The
proof: Achkasov says he will continue to speak about Jesus Christ with
citizens on Moscow’s streets – if and when people are willing and
interested in hearing him – without fear of persecution by Russian
authorities.
The
irony of Achkasov's message – a tale of his face-to-face encounter with
Jesus – is that it hearkens back to the Soviet era, when repression was
real and spiritual conversations with children forbidden.
“I
saw Jesus Christ when I was nine-years-old,” Achkasov says, wife Jill
Achkasova nodding as she does every time her husband tells the story.
“It was the thing that strengthened my faith as a child when everybody and everything was against me,” he says.
When
Achkasov was 18, his parents gave him an ultimatum: Renounce God or
move out. He left, living with Christian friends for a short time.
Shocked by her son's steadfastness, Achkasov's mother called the home
where her son was staying, imploring him: “Go to your meetings. Read
your Bible. Only come home.”
It’s
a story Achkasov has told innumerable times in private and at public
concerts with wife Jill – who accompanies him musically with a violin
and speaks Russian she learned at college in the U.S. – speech that’s
protected by the new law. As is Achkasov's recorded music, a CD titled
“Fire of the Holy Spirit.”
“My
impression is that the church in America is more restricted than in
Russia because it's here in America that it's illegal to speak about
God. In Russia, priests go to schools and teach children about God, and
the stories of Easter and Christmas are broadcast on loud speakers for
people outside of churches to hear,” Achkasov says.
Current
conditions in America, where prayer in school is banned and talk about
God shunned, remind Achkasov of the Soviet Union of his formative years,
characterized by both fears and tears.
Today
the 46-year-old Achkasov harbors painful memories of whippings and
tongue lashings that followed his talk about God at home and school.
A
good communist - Achkasov was told by his mother - doesn't believe in
God, especially one who's expected to represent his country's ideals
abroad. Even before his birth in 1970, Achkasov's destiny was determined
by his parents who purchased the piano he learned to play through his
studies at the Russian Conservatory.
“This
was a child who was like the prophet Jeremiah who said that ‘His word
was in my heart, as a burning fire shut up in my bones,’” says Jill
Achkasova, whose journey with Jesus began in the Foursquare Church in
America. She met Sergey at a Baptist church where he was the organist at
the time. They later married.
A
short-wave radio, also a gift from unbelieving parents, only increased
the eight-year-old's interest in God and the Bible after young Sergey
discovered a Gospel program broadcast by Russian-speaking evangelist
Earl Poysti.
Beyond
curiosity about a God he was told didn't exist, Achkasov activated his
budding faith by sharing Poysti's Bible messages, writing them
word-for-word on paper, then hand-delivering them to his Soviet
neighbors' mailboxes.
Almost 40 years later, Achkasov met his spiritual father on one of a handful of trips to Colorado.
“I
just wanted to share. They (Poysti's broadcasts) touched my heart and I
wanted people to know,” says Achkasov, who also sought out priests
within the Russian Orthodox Church with questions about God at the same
time.
Because
the priests were forbidden by Soviets officials from speaking to
children, Achkasov turned to an underground Baptist church where members
clandestinely shared single pages of the Bible in an apartment.
Another
Baptist church, this one registered with the government, had quick
access to complete copies of the Bible, whetting further Achkasov's
spiritual appetite for God and his Word.
Shortly
after Achkasov accompanied his mother on a business trip to Estonia
and, as was his bent, he ended up in a church: This one a
Pentecostal/Charismatic congregation where Achkasov heard discussion of
topics he'd read about but didn't fully understand.
Spiritual
gifts, including tongues in particular, intrigued Achkasov as church
members explained them. He determined he would later kneel and pray to
receive his heavenly language but, stepping off the bus, unknown words
poured over his lips. A practice he continues today.
In
his 20s and after the Soviet Union’s dissolution on August 1, 1991,
Achkasov planted seven churches, worked alongside a group that started
20 congregations total, and served as pastor himself during the 90s.
Today
the churches Achkasov pioneered are still preaching the Gospel as
independent, self-supporting bodies with pastors who are capable of
dealing with challenges, if any, associated with the new law.
“This means that I fulfilled my roles as pastor and church planter. I did what I was inspired to do at the time,” he says.
Achkasov’s
brother, 41-year-old Vladislav, is a leader at a
Charismatic/Pentecostal church but, because it's recognized by Russia,
its members can get permits to legally preach the Gospel in public.
The two brothers discussed the matter by telephone within days of a signature by Putin, who attends the Orthodox church.
“There’s
no fresh news of any actions on the part of the government directed
against churches,” Vladislav Achkasov says. “The law seems mostly
directed at terrorists that preach radical Islam, not at Christian
missionaries and churches,” he says.
Vladislav's
church is challenged with finding a permanent home, and some of its
members are prevented from attending because of transportation or other
issues; For some, it's been a crisis of faith, but nobody in his church
is currently affected by the law, adversely.
“If
we were all on fire and preaching the Gospel actively like we used to,
then possibly a law would have more of an effect on us. We really need
some kind of revival,” Vladislav says.
A
leader of the main Evangelical body, which includes Pentecostals and
Charismatics in Russia, advises Putin. The president reportedly says he
understands the fears of some Christians.
“Sergei
Ryakhovsky, the head of the large Pentecostal/Charismatic movement I
was a part of, saw the panic among the churches and wrote President
Putin, asking him to not sign the law.
“Putin
answered in a letter, stating that the law doesn't contradict the
article of the constitution that guarantees freedom of religion for all
citizens,” Sergey Achkasov says.
Real
suppression during the Soviet era – not the mere fear of it associated
with the new Russian law - is something Achkasov discussed in an
emotional and dramatic meeting with his spiritual father Poysti.
“I
started listening to your radio show when I was eight-years-old,”
Achkasov told a teary-eyed Poysti, a broadcast minister with Russian
Christian Radio during his lifetime.
“Everybody
around me would beat me when I mentioned God. Your ministry opened the
world of Christ to me, and it really helped me to understand the Bible.
“I'm
the fruit of your ministry,” Achkasov said, hugging his spiritual
father, who was born in Russia and became a citizen of Sweden and the
U.S.
A few years later, in 2010, Poysti died in Estes, Park, Colo.
Achkasov's
biological father, an atheist during the Soviet era, repented of his
unbelief, confessing his faith in God before he died. The mother who
beat her son for talking about God shares the same faith today.
“He
is my pastor today,” says Jill Achkasova, who remains active in the
Russian Orthodox Church. “Sergey retains a pastor's heart even though
he's no longer a pastor.”
Photo
captions: 1) Sergey and Jill hugging. 2) The Cathedral of Vasily the
Blessed, commonly known as Saint Basil's Cathedral, a Russian Orthodox
church in Red Square in Moscow, Russia. 3) The couple playing at a joint
Christmas event with several churches in the eastern part of the Moscow
Region: See video: http://ru.cross.tv/57474. 4) Cover of Fire of the Holy Spirit CD: (http://www.cdbaby.com/cd/sergeyachkasov) 5) Sergey and Jill playing at her childhood home in Colorado. 6) The late Earl Poysti. 7) Steve Rees.
About
the writer: Steve Rees is a freelance Christian journalist and a
regular contributor to the ASSIST News Service, who loves the church and
writes about how it engages the culture and works toward fulfilling the
Great Commission. He lives in Longmont, Colorado, and attends
Resurrection Fellowship, a nondenominational, missions-driven church
that honors all the gifts of the Holy Spirit and the five-fold ministry
offices. The church is in Loveland, Colo. Rees formerly worked as a
newspaper reporter and was among the first journalists who wrote about
Promise Keepers before it spread nationwide from Boulder, Colo. He can
be contacted by e-mail at steverees@peoplepc.com .
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