April 30, 2022 | Warsaw, Poland | Daniel Neal, Trans-European Division, and Adventist Review
In a building located just a few blocks away from Warsaw’s Old Town with its colorful tenement houses and narrow streets, evangelist Mark Finley is bringing hope to a troubled world by reminding listeners about the promises of God.
As the daily news continues to report neighboring Ukraine’s cities under attack, the message is delivered not only in close proximity to the European theater of war but in the evocative heart of a city once destroyed by war between 1939 and 1945.
“What do we do when crisis strikes?” Finley asked on April 20, 2022, the opening night of a series of five twice-daily evangelistic presentations at Warsaw Central Seventh-day Adventist Church in Poland. His Christ-centered messages are being simultaneously translated into Polish and Ukrainian. “How is it possible to hope when all hope seems gone?” is the guiding question of the presentations that are bringing hope to hundreds.
Finley’s messages are simultaneously translated into Polish and Ukrainian, organizers said. [Photo: David Neal / CC BY 4.0]
In his opening remarks, Finley brought words of thanks and prayers from General Conference president Ted N. C. Wilson to Polish members for “opening their homes, opening their churches, but most of all opening their hearts to their Ukrainian neighbors.”
Designed to meet the spiritual needs of the moment experienced by distressed and fear-filled people, “Each Christ-centered message focuses on Christ’s compassion for suffering people, His divine presence in suffering, and the ultimate solution to the problem of suffering,” Finely emphasized.
St. Cross Church, Old Warsaw, with a recent banner quoting Luke 6:27, 28. [Photo: David Neal / CC BY 4.0]
As a result, a final instruction followed: “Don’t let fear strangle your joy!”
The original version of this story was posted on the Trans-European Division news site.