Today's promise: God is a refuge for the
oppressed
Facing the furnace
"If we are thrown
into the blazing furnace, the God whom we serve is able to save us. He will
rescue us from your power, Your Majesty."
Daniel 3:17 NLT
A candle in the darkness
"In 1989, Lazlo
Tokes was the pastor of a fast-growing reformed church in the city of
Timisoara, Romania. His powerful preaching had caught the attention of
communist officials, and they began a strategy of suppression. Just before
Christmas, they decided to send him into exile.
But when the police arrived to hustle Pastor Tokes away, they were stopped cold. Around the church stood a wall of humanity. Christians from around the city — Baptist, Pentecostal, Orthodox, Catholic — had joined together to protest.
All through the day they held their post. As it grew dark, a Baptist student named Daniel Gavra pulled out a packet of candles, lit one, and passed it on to his neighbor.
Then he lit another. One by one the burning candles were passed out among the crowd. Soon the darkness of the December night was pierced by the light of hundreds of candles. When Pastor Tokes looked out his window, he saw a sea of faces lit up by a warm glow.
Two days later, police finally broke through the crowd and dragged Pastor Tokes away. But that was not the end. People streamed to the city square. Hundreds were shot, Young Daniel's leg was blown off. Yet the brave example set in Timisoara inspired the rest of the nation. Within days, the entire population of Romania had risen up and the bloody dictator Ceausescu was gone."
Adapted from How Now Shall We Live? Devotional by Charles Colson (Tyndale) pp 711-12
But when the police arrived to hustle Pastor Tokes away, they were stopped cold. Around the church stood a wall of humanity. Christians from around the city — Baptist, Pentecostal, Orthodox, Catholic — had joined together to protest.
All through the day they held their post. As it grew dark, a Baptist student named Daniel Gavra pulled out a packet of candles, lit one, and passed it on to his neighbor.
Then he lit another. One by one the burning candles were passed out among the crowd. Soon the darkness of the December night was pierced by the light of hundreds of candles. When Pastor Tokes looked out his window, he saw a sea of faces lit up by a warm glow.
Two days later, police finally broke through the crowd and dragged Pastor Tokes away. But that was not the end. People streamed to the city square. Hundreds were shot, Young Daniel's leg was blown off. Yet the brave example set in Timisoara inspired the rest of the nation. Within days, the entire population of Romania had risen up and the bloody dictator Ceausescu was gone."
Adapted from How Now Shall We Live? Devotional by Charles Colson (Tyndale) pp 711-12
Content is derived
from the Holy Bible, New Living Translation and other publications of Tyndale
Publishing House
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