Recommended

500 Russian Orphans Blessed with Winter Coat

JACKSON, Miss. — Twenty Mississippians will travel to Russia in late December to provide 500 Russian children with winter coats for the Christmas season. The project, a cooperative venture between church members of the Mississippi United Methodist Church, will visit five different orphanages in the Penza region of Russia.

The Rev. Danny Dabbs, pastor of First United Methodist Church, Hernando, Miss., developed the plan and organized the trip, building on the North Mississippi Penza Russia Initiative.

"We’ve been working since 1995 to start a church in the Penza region of Russia," said Dabbs. The effort culminated in September 2002 with the establishment of New Life church. "The congregation was registered with the city in April," Dabbs added.

Get Our Latest News for FREE

Subscribe to get daily/weekly email with the top stories (plus special offers!) from The Christian Post. Be the first to know.

Dabbs and the other members of the team — all from the three districts — leave Mississippi Dec. 30. They’ll spend New Year’s Eve at a hotel on Red Square in Moscow, and then travel to the Penza region.

"We’re going to an orphanage each day and have a Christmas party. We’ll be singing, and the local folks will dance wearing traditional Russian costumes," Dabbs said.

"I’m looking forward to getting in there and spending five or six hours with the kids. We’ll meet administrators and the kids," he added. "We hope that, in some way, the Lord will open a door for us to share Christ from our perspective."

Methodist church members come from the Senatobia, New Albany and Tupelo districts of the denomination’s Mississippi Annual Conference. Members of Penza’s New Life United Methodist Church, determined coat sizes and made the purchases.

Fund-raising efforts began in October, when Dabbs asked each Sunday school class in the three districts to contribute $25 - the cost of one coat.

"Our goal was to raise $12,000," said Dabbs.

According to Dabbs, the first few weeks were the hardest.

"I was sweating until about the first week in November."

However, by late November, donations began pouring in. Dabbs said churches of all sizes have joined the effort.

"One of the little churches I first served in Pittsboro sent $25. Some churches sent $4,000 or $5,000."

. "Our people wanted to support this particular mission project because of the work already done in Russia by the team," said the Rev. Billy McCord, pastor of Coffeeville United Methodist Church. . "Coats for Kids’ was attractive to us because of our desire to serve kids around the world in every way we can." Coffeeville collectively contributed $500.

Now that the fund has more money than what is needed for coats, Dabbs is exploring new needs of those they will serve. Team members will make that decision, he said.

"It’s amazing the number of checks people sent," Dabbs said. "There’s no telling how many different people have bought a coat. My hope is that it turns out to be such a good project that we can do it next year."

He added, "This is really a story about the United Methodist connection. United Methodists put out the call and folks said, ‘Let’s go.’"

McCord agreed. "It says to us that, through the connectional efforts of the United Methodist Church, we can be in mission in Russia, even if we cannot personally go there ourselves. Together we can serve Christ better than if we try to act alone."

Was this article helpful?

Help keep The Christian Post free for everyone.

By making a recurring donation or a one-time donation of any amount, you're helping to keep CP's articles free and accessible for everyone.

We’re sorry to hear that.

Hope you’ll give us another try and check out some other articles. Return to homepage.