Moldovan minister pushes for change

Moldovan minister pushes for change

 

Valeriu Ghiletchi radiates confidence as he strides toward Moldova’s parliament building.

As one of the first Baptists elected to government service in the former Soviet Union, his assurance rises out of a conviction that God has called him to help his struggling people in their quest for freedom.

It’s an awesome responsibility, and Ghiletchi is well aware that Baptists and other believers around the world are watching him almost as closely as are the communist legislators down the hall.

Major challenge

Among Moldovan Baptists, Ghiletchi is a respected leader — a pastor in charge of youth ministry for one of the country’s largest churches, a teacher who helped establish the Baptist seminary.

Can a lone Baptist make a difference in a former Soviet republic? Ghiletchi hopes so. The very idea that a Baptist — much less a Baptist pastor — would run for  political office apparently offends many people in Moldova.

Before Ghiletchi won election to parliament in 1998, his Party of Democratic Forces (DPF) was attacked in many newspaper articles because he was on the candidate list. Orthodox Church leaders threatened to destroy the DPF campaign if Ghiletchi were not removed.

But the party leaders rallied behind Ghiletchi after he met with them and told them about his life. It was only after Ghiletchi was elected that one of the party leaders — a signer of Moldova’s declaration of independence in 1991 — told Ghiletchi why he was willing to risk so much in supporting the pastor.

In 1987 the leader’s son was ill, and two men came to visit him. One man was a Moldovan Baptist who had moved to the United States. He asked if he could pray for the son.

After some hesitation, the party leader and his wife agreed. It impressed him that the man wept and prayed fervently for the boy as if he were his own child.

The father never saw the man again, but his son recovered in a few days. The incident left the leader respectful of Baptists.

Even some Moldovan believers weren’t sure a minister should be running for public office. Ghiletchi didn’t ask Baptists to campaign for him, but to pray for him instead.

For Ghiletchi, serving in parliament is not just a whim or chance to help his struggling nation. Instead, he sees it as a spiritual quest, much as the Old Testament leader Joshua had to struggle to take and hold the land God promised.

Ghiletchi often speaks to young people about Moldova’s current dark days, which leave many of them despairing of finding decent jobs.

New world order

“I believe this generation is like Joshua and Caleb,” he says. “They must lead into a new world order. When I speak to them, I always encourage them to be faithful to the Lord during these difficulties. I understand there are many difficulties, but these young people will be able to change the situation.”

Early on he was elected to the parliamentary committee on human rights — a topic dear to the hearts of long-repressed Baptists. And he has kept his Christian faith public while trying not to alienate those of Orthodox faith or no faith. But the “special status” of the Orthodox Church keeps religious liberty issues on Ghiletchi’s front burner.

He has argued long and hard against Moldova’s Law of Religious Cults or Denominations. The measure outlaws proselytizing, a broadly defined term to which the Council of Europe objected. After much debate, the government banned proselytizing “by violence or abuse of authority.”   (BP)