Protestantism in Ukraine

Percentage of parishes[1]
Parishes Percentage
Evangelical Baptists
8.9%
Pentecostals
5.6%
Seventh-day Adventists
3.7%
Percentage of Protestant religious organizations out of the total number of religious organizations by oblast of Ukraine, as of 2006.

Protestants in Ukraine number about 600,000 to 700,000 (2007), about 2% of the total population.[according to whom?] Nearly all traditional Protestant denominations are represented in the country. According to Christianity Today magazine, Ukraine has become not just the "Bible Belt" of Eastern Europe, but a "hub of evangelical church life, education, and missions".[2] At present, the country is a key supplier of missionaries and a center of evangelical training and press printing for all the countries of the former Soviet Union, where the legal environment is not so favourable.[2]

Compared to Protestants and Evangelicals in Western Europe and the United States, believers in Ukraine are considered to be more conservative and traditional. For most Western Evangelicals their way of life reflects a form of strict moral asceticism.[2]

The earliest Protestants appeared in Ukraine in the 1530s and ’40s. They were preceded by various pre-Reformation movements, like the Bogomils and Hussites.

The first Protestant commune (Anabaptists) was established in Volodymyr-Volynsk in 1536. In the 1540s, primarily among the nobles, Lutherans, then Calvinists and some others began their activity. In the first half of the 17th century, the Socinians (Unitarians) were reported to operate. In the 17th century, Protestantism spread from Volhynia, Podlaskie, the Chełm region and western Ukrainian Galicia to Podillia, the Kyiv region, and southwestern Ukrainian Transcarpathia.[3]

Today the All-Ukrainian Union of Churches of Evangelical Christian Baptists Church has nearly 150,000 members,[4] the All-Ukrainian Union of Evangelical Christians (Pentecostal) claims about 105,000 members, and the Ukrainian Union of Seventh-day Adventists has nearly 40,000 members.

Due to the 1990 Lautenberg Amendment granting refugee status to Soviet religious minorities, some Ukrainian Protestants have emigrated to the United States and gone on to take an important part in local social activities.[5] The Protestant Festival of Hope, with the participation of evangelist Franklin Graham, was held on July 6–8, 2007, and gathered more than 40,000 Ukrainians at the Olympic National Stadium in Kyiv. Guests of the festival were able to hear testimonies of faith by well-known athletes, evangelical activists, and civil leaders. There were musical groups of various genres from Ukraine, Russia, Belarus, Moldova, and the United States. Satellite transmission of the festival was organized in 75 halls in the majority regions of Ukraine.

  1. ^ Report of the Ministry of Culture "about sitiaton and tendencies of development of religious situation and the state-confessional relationships in Ukraine in 2011
  2. ^ a b c "Eastern Europe's Evangelical Hub", Christianity Today magazine, January 2008
  3. ^ Religious Information Service of Ukraine on Protestantism
  4. ^ Structure of the Union, All-Ukrainian Union of Associations of Evangelical Christians Baptists official web-site
  5. ^ Ukrainian Baptists rebuild homes devastated by Katrina, Baptist Press, September 2006

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