Skip to content
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • Log In
  • Subscribe
  • Renew
  • Donate
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • The Alabama Baptist
  • The Baptist Paper
  • Log In
  • Subscribe
  • Renew
  • Donate
The Baptist Paper
The Baptist Paper
  • The Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Sunday School Lessons
  • Classifieds
  • The Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Sunday School Lessons
  • Classifieds

‘This is our time,’ reports Romanian Baptist pastor of relief, discipleship efforts among refugees

  • April 10, 2022
  • Jennifer Davis Rash
  • Alabama, International News, Latest News, Texas
Romanian Baptist and Brethren church volunteers deliver food and supplies to a drop-off site in Ukraine. The resources are taken to the site each time a van is filled up. The supplies are purchased with funds donated by U.S. churches.
(Photo courtesy of Sabin Boruga/The Baptist Paper)

‘This is our time,’ reports Romanian Baptist pastor of relief, discipleship efforts among refugees

Pastor Sabin Boruga deletes the photos as quickly as they pop into his WhatsApp group text. The images of horrific scenes discovered in Ukrainian towns devastated by the Russian invasion filter into the text stream alongside hope-filled, encouraging pictures of Romanian Baptists serving refugees along the border.

“My heart can’t handle the photos of the bodies so I delete them … and while I’m not one to cry easily, watching fathers having to leave their families at the border with the kids grasping to hold on to them gets me,” said Boruga, a Baptist church planter in Sighisoara, Romania.

Ron Lynch (right) of Madison Baptist Association in Huntsville, Alabama, hosts Pastor Sabin Boruga of Sighisoara, Romania, while he is in the state in early April visiting churches and ministry leaders. Boruga will also spend a few days in Texas during his time in the U.S. (Photo by Jennifer Davis Rash/The Baptist Paper)

Boruga shared his story with The Baptist Paper and TAB Media Group on April 9 while in the Huntsville, Alabama, area visiting churches and ministry donors on his way to Texas.

“Romanian Baptist churches were the first to take in refugees,” he mentioned, noting pastors have been working nonstop since the war began in late February. Some are at the border providing food, clothing and other resources. Others are managing the makeshift dormitories set up within the church buildings.

Church leaders moved quickly to adapt ministries to care for the overwhelming immediate needs of the more than half a million Ukrainians flowing through Romania, Boruga explained.

Pushing through exhaustion

“It is exhausting … but God is using us and we don’t want to complain. Still, we are working to keep the pastors (and other church leaders) from burning out, asking them to take turns, to get sleep and to talk about what they are experiencing.”

Boruga travels the country encouraging those who are serving while also making connections between those gathering supplies and the workers serving on the frontlines. He said he personally spends time each morning in prayer and journaling his thoughts to maintain his own sanity. “I want to fix it all and I can’t. We can’t help everyone and it’s hard to have to pick who to help.”

Talking it out with his wife and other mentors helps him cope as well, he said, something he’s encouraging pastors across the nation to do for themselves while also learning how to help the Ukrainians verbally process their trauma.

“Our pastors are taking online courses in trauma counseling,” Boruga said, noting the growing need for trained counselors to help children and adults work through their pain. Counselors who speak Ukrainian are especially in demand, he added.

‘God brought missions to our doorsteps’

“God is using Romanians for such a time as this. We are to be the hands and feet of Jesus, but we also have to use our mouths to share the gospel and make disciples,” he shared. “God can use this time for many people to know Jesus Christ. … And Ukrainians are coming to Christ and being baptized.

“God brought missions to our doorsteps. … This is our time … and He gives hope in the dark times. … God is going to give us the wisdom for how to do it. We want to be found faithful.”

Boruga and his wife, Mirella, are native Romanians but spent four years in Crockett, Texas, in the early 2000s serving West Side Baptist Church there while Sabin studied at Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary in Fort Worth, Texas. They returned to Romania in 2009 and have been focused on making disciples, planting churches and training pastors since then. The Borugas have two children, Emily, 14, and Ioel (pronounced Joel), 10.

Boruga recently earned a Ph.D. in church revitalization from the University of Bucharest and serves as vice president of education for Sibiu Baptist Association, the Romanian association partnering with Alabama’s Madison Baptist Association.

Ron Lynch, church ministries director for Madison Association, works with associational missions partnerships and has known Boruga since a team from the association first visited Romania nearly a decade ago.

“We have taken teams to do various projects and retreats for the pastors and churches of this central Romania area for the past eight to nine years,” Lynch said, noting the next team headed to Romania in late April will assist with the ministry to Ukrainian refugees.

Ways to pray

When asked how Baptists can pray, Boruga shared these requests:

•For wisdom.

•For God to help us reach the people for Christ.

•For opportunities to share the gospel with the refugees.

•To be a light in the darkness.

•For the health of the pastors and volunteers.

To learn more about Boruga and his ministry, visit goronow.com.

Share with others:

Facebook
X/Twitter
LinkedIn
Email
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Email

Latest News

  • Partnership between Baptist churches in Texas and Ukraine gains momentum
    Partnership between Baptist churches in Texas and Ukraine gains momentum
    April 2, 2026/
    0 Comments
  • Young to retire after 46 years of sharing Arizona Southern Baptist stories
    Young to retire after 46 years of sharing Arizona Southern Baptist stories
    April 1, 2026/
    0 Comments
  • Louisiana Christian University inaugurates Mark Johnson as new president
    Louisiana Christian University inaugurates Mark Johnson as new president
    April 1, 2026/
    0 Comments

Sign up for the Highlights

Get all latest content delivered to your email a few times a month.
Email is required Email is not valid
Thanks for your subscription.
Failed to subscribe, please contact admin.

Related Posts

Partnership between Baptist churches in Texas and Ukraine gains momentum

The Healing Path Movement, church-to-church partnership between Baptist churches in Texas and Ukraine, has experienced an increase in church involvement and planning, with 41 committed partnerships and four projects underway.

Young to retire after 46 years of sharing Arizona Southern Baptist stories

When Elizabeth Young first began telling the stories of God’s work among Arizona Southern Baptists as a news writer and journalistic consultant, she was a

Louisiana Christian University inaugurates Mark Johnson as new president

In a year when Louisiana Christian University is marking its 120th anniversary, the school celebrated the inauguration of Mark Johnson as its 10th president.

Judge’s ruling keeps ban on pastors endorsing candidates

A federal judge rejected a settlement that would have lifted an IRS ban on pastors endorsing candidates, saying the court had no authority to approve an agreement, in a surprising end to a decades-long battle.

Want to receive news highlights throughout the week? Sign up here!

Email is required Email is not valid
Thanks for your subscription.
Failed to subscribe, please contact admin.

About

  • Our Story
  • Our Team
  • Our Partners
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Contact us
  • Our Story
  • Our Team
  • Our Partners
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Contact us

Explore

  • The Kids Edition
  • State-specific news
  • Archive
  • Opinion pieces
  • Sunday School lessons
  • Persecuted Church
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • The Kids Edition
  • State-specific news
  • Archive
  • Opinion pieces
  • Sunday School lessons
  • Persecuted Church
  • Podcasts
  • Videos

Submissions

  • Story suggestions
  • Your Voice/Letter to the Editor
  • Photos / Videos
  • Corrections/other
  • Submission Policy
  • Story suggestions
  • Your Voice/Letter to the Editor
  • Photos / Videos
  • Corrections/other
  • Submission Policy

Subscribe

  • Subscribe
  • Renew subscription
  • Gift a subscription
  • Start a new member subscription
  • Start a new group subscription
  • Hosted Church
  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Request free trial
  • Subscribe
  • Renew subscription
  • Gift a subscription
  • Start a new member subscription
  • Start a new group subscription
  • Hosted Church
  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Request free trial
The Baptist Paper
Address:
3310 Independence Dr.
Birmingham, AL 35209
Copyright © 2026 TAB Media Group
  • Privacy/Terms of Use
  • Help
  • FAQ
  • Privacy/Terms of Use
  • Help
  • FAQ

Email:
news@thebaptistpaper.org

About

  • Our Team
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Donate
  • Contact us
  • Hosted Church
  • Our Team
  • Advertise and Promote
  • Classifieds
  • Donate
  • Contact us
  • Hosted Church

Explore

  • The Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Your State News
  • Persecuted Church
  • Editorials
  • Opinions
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Archive
  • Submit your news
  • The Kids Edition
  • Latest News
  • Trending
  • Your State News
  • Persecuted Church
  • Editorials
  • Opinions
  • Podcasts
  • Videos
  • Archive
  • Submit your news

Subscribe

  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Subscribe
  • Manage your group
  • Manage your account
  • Subscribe

Hi reader.
We’re a nonprofit Christian news ministry. 
Our mission is to provide grace-filled, trustworthy journalism from a Christian worldview. We make our reporting freely available online because we believe people should have access to reliable information.

Reader support helps sustain this work, offset rising costs, and allow us to continue providing affordable resources to churches and ministries. If you value this work, would you consider supporting our mission today?

Support Our Ministry

Log Out?

Lost your password?

Log In

Lost your password?

Log in

Become a part of our community!
Forgot your password? Get help
Privacy/Terms of Use

Reset password

Recover your password
A password reset link will be e-mailed to you.
Privacy/Terms of Use
Back to
Login
×
Close Panel