Sunday, January 18, 2009

Tortured for Christ


By all accounts, Christianity has been a religion of suffering from its very inception. It was birthed out of the ashes of Christ’s suffering and crucifixion and was spread through the sufferings and eventual violent deaths of all but one of the 13 Apostles. The Apostle Paul himself wrote of Christian suffering in Philippians 1:19, “For it has been granted to you that for the sake of Christ you should not only believe in him but also suffer for his sake….” In the second century, it was the noted Father Tertullian who wrote that, “The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the Church.”

While the persecution in the early centuries of the Church was certainly fierce, our modern period, with the Twentieth Century in particular, have seen the worst persecution of Christians on a global scale. The rise of the Totalitarian states and world Communism at the dawn of the Twentieth Century particularly signaled troubled times ahead for the Church who desired to remain faithful to their profession of Christ and His mission in the World. It was into this milieu that Richard Wurmbrand, a Lutheran pastor in Romania, began to minister. Because of his profession of faith and ministry involvement with the underground Church in the Soviet Bloc countries, he was imprisoned for a total for fourteen years and suffered intense periods of torture and solitary confinement. Eventually, his plight became known in the West and he was ransomed out of Romania so that he could be a spokesman for the suffering, underground Church worldwide. After leaving Romania, he recounted his experiences along with the vibrant faith of the underground Churches in his book Tortured for Christ. Three aspects of Wurmbrand’s testimony in this book particularly stuck me as lacking and needing work in my own life; first, the necessity of Christian suffering; second, the love of Christians for their enemies and third, the Gospel zeal that should be an enduring mark of every Christian.

As I read Wurmbrands portrayal his time of intense suffering under the Communists and the sufferings of his fellow Christians, I was struck not merely by their perseverance through suffering but their willingness to suffer. He wrote, “A man really believes not what he recites in his creed, but only the things he is ready to die for. The Christians of the underground Church have proved that they are willing to die for their faith.” Rather than deny Christ or remain private with their faith, the underground Christians in the Soviet countries were prepared to go public with their confession knowing full well that do to so was to invite prison, torture and likely death. How different is this from my faith, which is not really willing to suffer anything, let alone intense torture that could not have been conceived of even in the worst of nightmares? Yet, this is clearly the standard that the New Testament sets for followers of Christ. To follow Him is to take the way of the Cross. The path of suffering leading to the cross is not incidental to the Christian life, it IS the Christian life and is the main means by which God has appointed that the faith should spread. I pray that our faithful God would strengthen me individually and our Western Church corporate to be willing and eager to suffer in order to show the world the dazzling beauty of Jesus.

The Christians of the Underground Church were not only willing to suffer, they suffered in such a way that they have become a model for us of loving our enemies. At one point in the book Wurmbrand writes,
“I have seen Christians in Communist prisons with fifty pounds of chains on their feet, tortured with red-hot iron pokers, in whose throats spoonfuls of salt had been forced, being kept afterward without water, starving, whipped, suffering from cold- and praying with fervor for the Communists. This is humanly inexplicable! It is the love of Christ which was poured out in our hearts.”
In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus lists humble love for enemies as one of the marks of those who are truly a part of His New Creational rule. Such a mark is conspicuously absent from most of the Western Church and my life in particular. I want to see such a powerful demonstration of the Spirit’s power in my life and in the life of the Church here in the West but sadly we are so often consumed with our rights and we tend to cover our hatred for our enemies by calling it our “righteous indignation”. I desperately need God’s grace through His Spirit to produce this astonishing fruit that is so counter-cultural but so central to God’s purposes on Earth.

One of the astounding facets of Wurmbrand’s narrative is how zealous Soviet Christians were to tell of the grace of God through Jesus in their lives. In reality, both the suffering of those Eastern Christians and their passion to show Christ’s love to their enemies are ways in which the Gospel spread in the Soviet Bloc. However, their evangelism was not confined merely to this sort of “lifestyle evangelism”. They were very quick to want to be witnesses to the grace of God to the Communists. Wurmbrand writes of his own zeal for evangelism, “In the first days after my conversion, I felt that I would not be able to live any longer. Walking on the street, I felt a physical pain for every man and woman who passed by. It was like a knife in my heart, so burning was the question of whether or not he or she was saved.” In the midst of the suffering of the Communist nations, there was a blood earnestness about the work of evangelism and discipleship which is greatly lacking in my life. I greatly need God’s grace to push the reality of the Gospel deeper into my soul to feel this kind of passion and desire that Wurmbrand felt for the evangelism of the Communists around him.



1 comment:

Katie said...

Hi, great paper. I'm waiting for another post :)