Veliky Novgorod
On May 8 in St. Nikolai Lutheran there was a celebratory worship service to mark the 195th anniversary of the founding of the congregation in Novgorod and the 20 year anniversary of its re-establishment. The main guest of the day was the Archbishop of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Russia, Dietrich Brauer, together with his wife Tatyana.
A whole bus full of brothers and sisters from Sts. Peter and Paul Cathedral in St. Petersburg came as well, and they brought with them the brass choir of the congregation, which was a wonderful addition to the celebrations.
After worship Archbishop Brauer spoke about the state of our church and about plans for the near future. Then everyone had a chance to watch a movie dedicated to the anniversary of the congregation, followed by a small concert put on by the congregation's choir and youth group.
Then it was time for fellowship in the church courtyard. We had wonderful sunny and warm weather and that, together with the music from the brass choir, created a good mood an unforgettable atmosphere.
St. Nikola in Novgorod was established in Novgorod in 1821. More than 20 churches and prayer houses throughout the Novgorod region were part of the parish, and they had German, Estonian and Latvian roots. Many of the congregations were mixed; for example, in the city of Novgorod itself the congregation was made up of Germans, Estonians and Latvians had had more than 2000 members.
For more than a century Lutherans thrived in the Novgorod territory. The central congregation had a library that in 1913 had 2500 volumes. During the governorship of the ethnic German Lutheran E.V. Lerche (1864-1882), the congregation established a school for “building up the religious-moral level of Lutherans.”
At the end of the 1920s and beginning of the 1930s the Soviet state began a campaign to close Lutheran churches, and on February 6, 1930 the St. Nikolai Lutheran was closed; within the next two to three years the rest of the congregations in the region were closed as well.
New life came to St. Nikolai Lutheran in May 1996 when the re-established congregation was registered with the state. At present this small, friendly congregation (as well as their even smaller daughter congregation in the village of Kresttsy in the Novgorod region) continue to preach God's word and pray for God's continued blessings.
Pastor Igor Zhuravlev
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