Despite persistent stereotypes describing Protestants as distancing from society, believers from evangelical Protestant churches have been fighting to save Ukraine's statehood and help its suffering society since the first days of the Russian war against Ukraine. In this timely and honest work, twelve Ukrainian Christians from different spheres of life tell their stories of living and serving during this devastating time. They provide insight into how Ukrainian Christians are responding to the challenges of war and delve into what it means to be a Christian in unprecedented situations. This book tackles the struggles that the Christian faith faces during times of war and how war shapes a new spiritual experience of prayer, Bible reading, and ministry. While these stories reveal the horrors and darkness of war, they are also a testament to the light and healing that they have encountered, revealing how faith is intertwined with doubt, fear with courage, and loneliness with belonging. ROMAN SOLOVIY is chairman of the Eastern European Institute of Theology, Lviv, Ukraine, and the regional commissioning editor for Eastern and Central Europe and Central Asia with Langham Publishing. He has taught and studied in various areas, including continental philosophy, postmodern Christianity, and the theology of hospitality. He was previously the president of Lviv Theological Seminary, Ukraine, and the director of Euro-Asian Accrediting Association Research and Resource Center. He currently serves as the editor-in-chief of the Eastern European Journal of Theology: Theological Reflections, and is a teaching pastor at the First Pentecostal Church, Lviv, Ukraine.