Faith Without Frontiers
Gordon reconnects with Ruslan Zagidulin, a longtime youth leader from Kyrgyzstan, to discuss the relational roots of Converge and its continuation in Next Move, and how cross-cultural relationships shape global youth ministry. Ruslan explains his background in predominantly Muslim Kyrgyzstan, his conversion from atheism after encountering the story of Saul in a children’s Bible, and his decades of work with teenagers amid Central Asian restrictions introduced around 2008–2009, requiring adaptive, locally relevant approaches while recognizing global youth culture. He describes his Lausanne Movement role for an 11-country Eurasia region and clarifies that Lausanne is a friendship-based movement for global evangelism. Now living in Germany, Ruslan shares the family tragedy of losing his son David in a car accident, cultural differences in mourning, and how grief has reshaped his faith, prayer, and sense of home, urging prayer for Central Asian youth to know Christ. 00:54 Reconnecting After Years 01:52 Converge To Next Move 02:35 Why Relationships Matter 03:41 Growing Up In Kyrgyzstan 05:35 Finding Faith In Christ 10:13 Called Into Youth Ministry 11:49 Creative Ministry Under Restrictions 15:48 Global Youth Culture Today 16:37 Eurasia And Lausanne Role 19:22 What Is Lausanne Movement 21:05 Finding Home in Germany 22:17 A Tragic Loss 23:04 Rethinking Faith and Family 24:17 Presence Beyond Separation 28:30 Graveside Coping and Ecclesiastes 31:19 Christ Beyond Death 34:13 Grief Across Cultures 37:12 Simplicity and Spiritual Friends 40:37 Praying for Central Asia 41:51 Final Blessing and Thanks
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