28 April 1948 A.D. Rev. Richard Wurmbrandt Nabbed by Communists—Author of Tortured for Christ
28 April 1948 A.D. Rev. Richard Wurmbrandt Nabbed by Communists—Author of Tortured for Christ
Graves, Dan. “Prison Number One: Richard Wurmbrandt.” Christianity.com. May 2007. http://www.christianity.com/church/church-history/timeline/1901-2000/prisoner-number-one-richard-wurmbrandt-11630791.html. Accessed 27 Apr 2015.
Tne beautiful
Sunday morning--it was on this date, February 29, 1948--pastor Richard
Wurmbrand of Rumania set out on foot for church. He never arrived. For eight
and one half years his wife and son did not know where he was or even whether
he was alive or dead. "Ex-prisoners" assured Sabrina Wurmbrand they
had witnessed her husband's funeral in a Communist prison. Sabrina was
heartbroken and yet she had her doubts. The men might be government stooges.
Wurmbrand's
disappearance was expected. Anyone who acted contrary to the regime could
expect imprisonment or death. At a "Congress of Cults" held by the
Communist government, he had asked for it. Religious leaders stepped forward to
swear loyalty to the new regime. Sabrina asked Richard to "wipe the shame
from the face of Jesus." Richard replied that if he stepped forward, she
would no longer have a husband. "I don't need a coward for a
husband," she answered. And so Richard stepped forward and told the 4,000
delegates that their duty as Christians was to glorify God and Christ alone.
He returned
home to pastor an underground church and promote the gospel among Rumania's
Russian invaders. He smuggled Bibles into Russia, disguised as Communist
propaganda. And then he disappeared.
What had
actually happened? As Richard walked to Church, a van full of secret police
stopped in front of him. Four men jumped out and hustled him inside. He was
taken to their headquarters and later locked in a solitary cell where he was
designated Prisoner Number 1.
His years of
imprisonment consisted of a ceaseless round of torture and brainwashing. For
seventeen hours a day, repetitious phrases were dinned into his ears: Communism
is good. Christianity is stupid! Give up. Give up! Over the years, his body was carved in a
dozen places and burned. "I prefer not to speak about those [tortures]
through which I have passed. When I do, I cannot sleep at night. It is too
painful." His jailers also broke many of his bones, including four
vertebrae. Miraculously, he survived. Other martyrs did not.
Eight and one
half years later, in 1956, Wurmbrand was released. Sabrina herself was
brutalized for three years in prison. The Wurmbrand's nine- year-old son Mihai
was orphaned during this time. Released, the Wurmbrands immediately recommenced
secret church work. Wurmbrand was returned to prison, not released again until
1964.
In 1965,
Western churches ransomed Wurmbrand from Rumania for $10,000. Richard and
Sabrina immediately spoke out for those still suffering in Communist hands.
Wurmbrand was asked to testify before the US Senate. He displayed eighteen
holes cut in his body. Afterward, he was invited to speak before hundreds of
groups. By 1967, "Prisoner Number 1" had incorporated the mission
organization that is now known as Voice of the Martyrs, dedicated to assisting
those who suffer for Christ throughout the world.
Richard and
Sabina were able to survive their ordeal through the power of love. "If
the heart is cleansed by the love of Jesus Christ," wrote Wurmbrand, "and
if the heart loves him, you can resist all tortures. What would a loving bride
not do for a loving bridegroom? What would a loving mother not do for her
child? If you love Christ as Mary did, who had Christ as a baby in her arms, if
you love Jesus as a bride loves her bridegroom, then you can resist such
tortures. God will judge us not according to how much we endured, but how much
we could love. I am a witness for the Christians in communist prisons that they
could love. They could love God and men."
Bibliography:
Wurmbrand,
Richard. Tortured for Christ. Middlebury, Indiana: Living Sacrifice
Books, 1976.
Last updated
May, 2007.
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