Even if Western Evangelicals did help Romanian Evangelicals in various ways prior to 1989, what happened after constituted an unprecedented support especially during the decade 1990-2000. Despite of this, Romanian people experienced inequalities in various ways. It should be stressed that their implication in Evangelical ecclesiastical life continued well into the present, the way they helped their Romanian brothers and sisters in faith was not only multifaceted but also very consistent. Put together under the over-encompassing umbrella of Christian mission, the ways Western Evangelicals decided to help Romanian Evangelicals ranged from spiritual issues (such as preaching, teaching, and counselling) to finances (for church buildings, schools, orphanages, hospices, clinics, hospitals, and often even the payment of salaries for the personnel working in these institutions). This paper investigates these missionary patterns of support in order to establish the positives and the negatives of these endeavors in order to highlight whether the mentality behind them is spiritual-ecclesiastical or political-imperialistic, or perhaps even a combination thereof. Alternatively, this article is an investigation into Western Evangelical spirituality as manifested in supporting Romanian Evangelicals in the first three decades following the collapse of Communism in 1989.