
Interview By Laurie Beyer
When British-born Katherine Porter was majoring in
English Literature at Cambridge University in
England, her plans for the future included a career and time to enjoy her passion for writing. God had
other plans for her though. One evening at Katherine’s church,
Elizabeth Elliott, an American woman with a dynamic testimony,
shared her story about God working through her experiences on the
mission field. Katherine was both excited and confused!
Being a baby Christian and having no church background,
Katherine’s impression of a missionary woman had always been
someone “who went off to Africa or someplace very remote for 50
years or so, put her hair up in a bun, and wore a long skirt.” That
certainly didn’t describe her. So why was she so intrigued?
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Katherine Porter recently visited the U.S.
to speak at a women's leadership conference. |
To follow up on her curiosity, Katherine attended a missions
evening organized by the university. “It was the most boring evening
of my life,” she said. “They were talking about planting seedlings
somewhere in West Africa on an agricultural program. It was
absolutely dreadful!”
What Katherine was really being drawn to became clearer as she
picked up a brochure for Operation Mobilization, an international
missions organization. She saw human needs – where the seeds that
mattered would be those planted through compassion and the gospel
message. The faces on the brochure photos showed devastation, loss
and pain. It was those hurting lives that pierced her heart. “I took the
brochure home with me and I couldn’t get it out of my mind.”
That summer, Katherine participated in one of OM’s five-week
European programs to Hungary. “It was an amazing experience,
but I thought that would be the end of it.” Just a few months later
the Berlin Wall came down and Katherine remembered thinking
that Eastern Europe would finally be open to the gospel. “It was as
if God said, ‘Who’s going to go there?’ and I said, ‘NOT ME!’” A
few words of wise counsel from her pastor turned, “Not me!” into
“Why not me?”
Katherine began serving with Operation Mobilization as part of
a multicultural team based in Vienna. She was in Croatia when war
broke out, in Albania when it opened up to westerners, and rode the
trans-Siberian railway across Russia to eastern Siberia. She
traveled throughout Eastern Europe visiting and encouraging the
teams, helping them through problems and meeting their needs on
the field. Additionally, Katherine was instrumental in directing
missions-training conferences and taking on various writing
responsibilities for OM. She spent five years based in Vienna and
one year in Budapest.
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| Lloyd and Katherine Porter in
St. Petersburg, Russia. |
Four years ago God’s call took Katherine to St. Petersburg,
Russia. She and her husband, Lloyd, have been married for three of
those years and are now expecting their first child. Katherine
recalls their meeting: “He’s Australian, I’m British and we met in
Siberia. He asked me out in South Korea and we had our first date
in Holland. We were engaged in St. Petersburg, married in England
and then had a reception in Australia.” To keep the international
flavor of things rolling, Katherine adds that, “our baby will most
likely be born in Finland.”
After that they returned to Russia where Katherine and Lloyd are
team field leaders with Operation Mobilization. Their territory
encompasses the entire country, which covers eleven time zones.
Katherine graciously shared from her heart recently with Just
Between Us. Her story is rich because she has so willingly allowed
God to take her life plans and redirect them for His extraordinary
purposes.
Was there ever a time when you felt that you were not qualified
for the work God has called you to?
With my degree in English literature I remember making my
objections to the Lord about serving with OM. I said, “Really, what
do I have to offer? I mean, ‘Hello little Albanian child, can I tell
you about Shakespeare?’” It’s not one of the great missions lines of
all times, is it? Amazingly, I have found my degree quite useful in
speaking, teaching, and writing. God, in fact, will use whatever we
give to Him, especially a willing heart.
What are some of the challenges of working in a country like
Russia?
As foreigners, there’s the challenge of getting in and out of the
country. We not only need permission to enter the country, but also
to leave. The government doesn’t really take issue with the purpose
of our work there because we’re legally registered to do what we
are doing. The laws keep changing though, and with any change in
government leadership there is always a possibility of a change in
the laws. There is also always a certain segment of society that
wishes we weren’t doing what we’re doing. Following a recent
gathering of Russians for training in evangelism, several on the
leadership team were called in by the police and interrogated. Even
so, we sent 200 enthusiastic nationals out all over the country to
evangelize in orphanages and in the streets.
Even in the evangelical churches in Russia, we have seen a real
crackdown. There are very few church buildings, so if you get
kicked out of your cinema, school or wherever you have been
meeting and get moved on and on and on, that hampers the work
you are doing. That happens quite a bit. And then of course there’s
the anti-Western sentiment that appears frequently. It’s quite a state
of unpredictability, sometimes stable, other times not. Only God
knows what’s going to happen next, and reminds us that we must
always be reliant on Him.
What is life like for the people you minister to in Russia?
St. Petersburg is a relatively modern city of five million people.
In the central part of the city you could walk down the street and
think you were in Berlin or Amsterdam. It’s absolutely beautiful
and very prosperous, with all of the designer-name shops. But in
the outskirts of the city, where we live, there are about 130,000
people and our church of 15 people is the only church. It’s a city of
gray concrete apartment buildings as far as you can see.
A “normal family” in Russia would be seen as a grandmother,
daughter and her child. It’s the women who hold things together.
It’s very sad because many men want to support their families, but
feel so hopeless. They want to look after them, yet there are no
jobs, or they’re not being paid for the jobs they’re doing.
Alcoholism is at epidemic proportions and abortions are the most
common form of birth control. There are people literally starving to
death on the streets in some areas.
I remember being out shopping one extremely cold day last
winter. I saw an old woman crying and said, “Is there anything I
can do for you?” She just sobbed on my shoulder and said, “I’m
91-years-old and haven’t eaten for a week, and I don’t know what
to do.” She had been looking through the garbage bin for food. The
average pension for an elderly woman is $14 dollars per month
which must pay for her rent, clothes, food and any other expenses.
Many feel that the food shops are like museums. All they can do is
look. Before witnessing this, I remember not even knowing what
being hungry meant.
To help meet these needs, we have for two winters, in
cooperation with an Irish mission, operated a soup kitchen and
food pantry. One young mother, Tanya, who came to the food
pantry had been feeding her two young sons from the garbage bins.
When we gave her groceries she couldn’t believe it. She wasn’t a
believer, but now she and her sons come to our church every week
and she was recently baptized. She even brings neighbors and
friends. For her it was truly a rescue. Another time we met
Svetlana, a 19-year-old whose husband was killed in Chechnya.
She’s raising two children on her own while trying to deal with her
grief. Her benefits amount to less than ten dollars a month.
We have another team working in Siberia. On a recent visit there
we went into an orphanage. The children there were literally
wearing rags. One little girl pulled a worker aside and said, “Have
you got a shoe?” The OM worker replied, “What kind of shoe?”
The little girl continued, “It doesn’t matter. It’s for my friend.
Winter’s coming and she’s only got one shoe!” Sure enough we
looked down and she had only one shoe. We said, “What size shoe
do you need?” She replied, “It doesn’t matter, any shoe will do.”
It’s heartbreaking!
Next door to the orphanage is an old people’s home which the
team has been going to week after week. The conditions were
dreadful. Some of the women were naked, lying in filth with just a
sheet over them. It was unbelievable! There is a huge struggle for
survival going on in many places across Russia.
Where do you even start under such conditions?
We sometimes get overwhelmed by the need. And then of course
there are the 11 time zones to cover – it’s the biggest country in the
world! But our goal is to give hope to people who feel hopeless. In
addition to the soup kitchen and food pantry, we distribute aid,
medicine and clothing in the areas where we work. We’ve got to
make it practical – the truth of the gospel. And of course we live
there and are enduring with them.
I am often reminded of Moses and the children of Israel when
they came out of Egypt. They looked back and said, “Ah, when we
were in Egypt our bellies were full and we had good beds.” Some
people are looking back at communism and saying, “When I lived
under communism I had my own apartment, my rent was paid and
I had a job. I wish we could go back.” At that point the challenge
for Moses was to say, “God is with us, here and now, and He will
lead us on our journey. And there is something better ahead.”
We must live that reality in the midst of their difficult situation.
Moses couldn’t have told them from the comforts of the promised
land. He couldn’t have yelled, “You’re heading the right way, keep
coming!” It’s such a huge privilege to think that after all the years
we prayed for Russia, God finally broke down those walls. Every
moment is precious, not knowing how long the opportunities will
be there.
It’s been more than 10 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall.
How has the receptiveness to the gospel changed during that
time?
People all over were really quite open in the first few years, but
after that it became more difficult because all of the cults came in,
as well as Western materialism. It has been very confusing for
people because they suddenly were exposed to this wealth of
information and ideas. Also, because communism was so corrupt, it
left people with a lack of trust. They were so used to having things
rammed down their throats, they weren’t used to trying to discern
truth for themselves. I remember a school teacher once saying to
me, “What is the truth, and who will stay and teach us?”
It really is an issue of “staying power,” isn’t it? Isn’t being
there for the long haul what’s really going to have the greatest
influence on the people?
We are really praying for that. I remember when Lloyd first took
over as field leader in Russia. One of the first Russians who joined
our team, Slava, said, “We’ve had so many people come in, tell us
things, stay for a few weeks and leave. What we need is for you to
show us how to live.” For Lloyd and I, that has been a real
encouragement, building up people by living here with them. Every
time someone says to us, “Why are you here?” we say we really
believe this message and long for them to know it too!
The challenge is making the gospel real for their situation – not
just theory, not just wonderful ideas. Our mission is to let them
know that Jesus walks with them through their trials. They can be
paralyzed by hopelessness or they can be hopeful, depending on
their perspective. He offers hope and encouragement for the future,
that things can be different. He offers something they can trust in!
Can you tell us about your team in Russia, and how you go
about growing that team?
We believe that people need to be introduced to the gospel and
God in their own language. We have several nationals working
with us. Our goal is to have as many as possible. Obviously, they
speak the language and know the culture so they are the most
effective people to be working there.
Additionally, we have 30 team members from around the world.
Lloyd and I visit them frequently, providing teaching and training.
The goals we focus on are: church planting alongside Russian
churches, making and training disciples, translating and producing
quality Christian literature, and training and equipping nationals
and internationals for short term and longer term missions
opportunities, both inside and outside of Russia.
As far as adding to our team, we have to be realistic and honest,
so we just present the scale of the need – three generations have
been living under communism without God. There is an
opportunity in this generation to make the gospel real. This
opportunity involves showing the Russians how that message can
transform lives. Russia is very attractive in its own right because of
the culture and the history. It’s also a beautiful country. All of those
things will bring the right people.
What would you say to parents who sense that their child is
being called to the mission field, but who would like to protect
that child by keeping him or her closer to home?
On the one hand, I think there are sometimes valid family
concerns that could keep a child closer to home, but on the other
hand, we can never totally protect our children. They can step out
into the road in front of their house and get hit by a car. Or develop
a fatal disease at home. The greatest joy and blessing in life is in
being in the center of where God would have you be. That’s the
most amazing thing to realize. Even if things are hard physically, or
challenging spiritually, you’re never safer or more at peace than
where God would have you be.
When I returned once to Cambridge, I met with my fellow
graduates. Among that group there were several worldly success
stories. It was a bit intimidating at first, especially when we talked
about our salaries! But I recall several people coming up to me
later in the day and saying, “What are you doing, Katherine? You
just seem so happy!” What an analysis of someone making $30 a
month – and I even have to raise my own support! That’s really
when it hit home to me that there’s no better place, no safer place
and no more joyful place than to be in the Lord’s will.
To parents I say, I understand the risks involved in this type of
work. We do everything we sensibly can to take care of people, but
then you have to leave the rest up to God, and He does take care of
us.
Your work seems like such a modern-day illustration of the boy
with the five fishes and five loaves. How have you seen God
multiply the efforts of His servants in Russia?
We certainly can’t escape the need. It’s always there. And we
can’t send it away. We can’t focus on what we don’t have in order
to excuse ourselves from doing what we can. We do have resources
– as inadequate as they seem – people willing to be there and
willing to serve. It may not be enough by our standards, but it’s
enough in God’s hands to use and multiply. He is not discouraged
by our numbers or our inadequacies. He promises to use all that we
give Him to meet the needs before us and ultimately to bring glory
to His name.
Laurie Beyer is a writer for Just Between Us, and a former
women’s ministry coordinator at Elmbrook Church in Brookfield,
Wis. Laurie and her husband, George, have been married 20 years,
and have four children. They reside in Elm Grove, Wis.
Also read:
Praying When Life Gets Hard
Great Expectations
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