With God in Solitary Confinement
Richard spent three years alone in a prison cell. He had moments of knowing the victory of faith in prison. He had moments of despair. In both, he learned his limitations and learned to rely only on the atoning blood of Jesus Christ. He had no Bible, nor paper on which to write his thoughts, so he passed the hours in spiritual exercises and prayer. Every night he composed a sermon and delivered it. His unusually good memory retained them, even after periods of forced drugging. Here are just a few of those sermons.
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With God in Solitary Confinement
Richard spent three years alone in a prison cell. He had moments of knowing the victory of faith in prison. He had moments of despair. In both, he learned his limitations and learned to rely only on the atoning blood of Jesus Christ. He had no Bible, nor paper on which to write his thoughts, so he passed the hours in spiritual exercises and prayer. Every night he composed a sermon and delivered it. His unusually good memory retained them, even after periods of forced drugging. Here are just a few of those sermons.
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With God in Solitary Confinement

With God in Solitary Confinement

by Richard Wurmbrand
With God in Solitary Confinement

With God in Solitary Confinement

by Richard Wurmbrand

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Overview

Richard spent three years alone in a prison cell. He had moments of knowing the victory of faith in prison. He had moments of despair. In both, he learned his limitations and learned to rely only on the atoning blood of Jesus Christ. He had no Bible, nor paper on which to write his thoughts, so he passed the hours in spiritual exercises and prayer. Every night he composed a sermon and delivered it. His unusually good memory retained them, even after periods of forced drugging. Here are just a few of those sermons.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940149108015
Publisher: Living Sacrifice Book Company
Publication date: 11/06/2013
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 123
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Pastor Richard Wurmbrand (1909–2001) was an evangelical minister who endured fourteen years of Communist imprisonment and torture in his homeland of Romania. Few names are better known in Romania, where he is one of the most widely recognized Christian leaders, authors, and educators.

In 1945, when the Communists seized Romania and attempted to control the churches for their purposes, Richard Wurmbrand immediately began an effective, vigorous “underground” ministry to his enslaved people as well as the invading Russian soldiers. He was arrested in 1948, along with his wife, Sabina. His wife was a slave-laborer for three years on the Danube Canal. Richard Wurmbrand spent three years in solitary confinement, seeing no one but his Communist torturers. He was then transferred to a group cell, where the torture continued for five more years.

Due to his international stature as a Christian leader, diplomats of foreign embassies asked the Communist government about his safety and were informed that he had fled Romania. Secret police, posing as released fellow-prisoners, told his wife of attending his burial in the prison cemetery. His family in Romania and his friends abroad were told to forget him because he was dead.

After eight-and-a-half years in prison, he was released and immediately resumed his work with the Underground Church. A couple of years later, in 1959, he was re-arrested and sentenced to twenty-five years in prison.

Mr. Wurmbrand was released in a general amnesty in 1964, and again continued his underground ministry. Realizing the great danger of a third imprisonment, Christians in Norway negotiated with the Communist authorities for his release from Romania. The Communist government had begun “selling” their political prisoners. The “going price” for a prisoner was $1,900; their price for Wurmbrand was $10,000.

In May 1966, he testified before the U.S. Senate’s Internal Security Subcommittee and stripped to the waist to show the scars of eighteen deep torture wounds covering his torso. His story was carried across the world in newspapers throughout the U.S., Europe, and Asia. Wurmbrand was warned in September 1966 that the Communist regime of Romania planned to assassinate him; yet he was not silent in the face of this death threat.
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