The article below shows the type of bravery every  Christian pastor and church members should have.  One of the reasons we are in such a fix in  this nation is because of the failure of enough good men and women to stand up  for that which is right.   
Last Sunday I preached a sermon cautioning against  having the mentality that “we will be raptured soon so don’t do anything”  mentality.  Whether you think Christians  will face the Great Tribulation or be gone by then, I have the same thing to  say, be ready for adversary.  Tribulation  of some sort is going to come your way, Christian, no matter what you believe  the exit plan will be.  Remember that it  is NOW illegal to practice open  Christianity in more places in the world than most people think.  We are heading down that road right here in  these United States.  Let us pray and  WORK against  such.
Godspeed,
Gill  Rapoza
Veritas Vos  Liberabit
If You  Preach It, They Will Fall
by Bojidar Marinov
Dec 16, 2009
Exactly 20 years ago, on December 15, 1989, a small  crowd of parishioners of the Hungarian Reformed Church in Timişoara gathered in  front of the church flat where their pastor lived. The occasion was the eviction  orders to their pastor set for that day by a Romanian civil court. The group  formed a human chain around the flat. When the police arrived to remove the  pastor from the flat, the crowd had grown to several hundred strong; they were  singing hymns in the brutally cold weather and from their words the police  guards understood that the people were determined to stay and prevent the  eviction of their pastor. The police guards returned with agents of the dreaded  Communist secret police Securitate, but to no avail, the crowd  refused to let them pass. For the first time in the history of Communist Romania  someone was refusing to obey Securitate.
On the next day the mayor of Timişoara—the second  largest city in Romania—arrived and tried to persuade the crowd to disperse. He  arrived with the pastor’s family doctor to persuade the pregnant wife of the  pastor to come with them to the hospital. She refused. By that time the crowd  had grown beyond the numbers of the congregation, with young ethnic Romanians  joining the Hungarian Reformed believers in the vigil and the human chain in the  cold December day. The mayor then left, threatening to return with police  watercannons.
On December 17, instead of police watercannons, Army  troops took positions against the now significant demonstrations that had grown  from the humble crowd of Reformed parishioners. They fired into the crowd. This  did not stop the demonstrators. On December 18 tens of thousands of industrial  workers in Timişoara left their jobs to join the demonstrations. By December 20  the city was out of the control of the Communist government. The insurrection  spread to other cities in Romania, and on December 22 the most brutal and  maniacal Communist dictatorship in Eastern Europe—that of Nicolae  Ceausescu—fell.
The fall of the bloodiest and most inhumane Communist  dictatorship in Eastern Europe started there, in the small humble church of the  37-year old Pastor László Tökés. Dr. Joseph Pungur of the University of Alberta  in Canada writes about him:
And in the midst of all  this arose that one person, Reverend László Tökés, a minister of the Hungarian  Reformed Church in Romania in charge of the church of Timisoara (Temesvár) who,  with his heroic resistance to the dictatorial Church and State authorities,  single-handedly triggered a popular revolution in Romania. Within days it  toppled the Ceausescu regime.
Who was László Tökés? What made him so terrifying to the  regime to deserve such attention? Why did the Communist government have to send  agents of the Secret Police, and later the army, to make sure he is evicted?  What made those thousands of people keep vigil in the cold December nights  around his house to protect a humble, unimportant religious minister? Why was it  that even unbelievers were willing to lay down their lives but not let the  government troops pass to his house?
Was he a military organizer of the resistance? Did he  lead an opposition party? May be he was a skillful politician, experienced in  the art of bureaucratic machinations? Did he make explosives, blow bridges,  start insurrections in the army?
No. He was only a preacher. No, he wasn’t only a preacher. He was a preacher with a  heart for God, a preacher who believed that the pulpit was entrusted to him  to preach against principalities and  powers, no matter what the consequences were. He preached against the  Communist regime, he preached against the oppressive policies, against the  nationalist crackdowns of the regime on the Hungarian minority, and against the  lack of freedom, religious and political, in his country. László Tökés wasn’t  there just to preach “believe and get saved.” He was on the pulpit to speak for  King Jesus in every area of life, and especially in those areas where the  government was oppressive against those politically weak and poor. László Tökés  was there to tell Caesar that “there is another King, one  Jesus.”
And that was enough to make him so dangerous to the  regime. Government institutions on all levels—police, courts, the secret  police—were employed to make him stop preaching. Members of his  congregation—fully supportive of their pastor—were “suicided” by the Securitate  agents. His pay was stopped and his ration-card was taken away, making it  impossible for him to buy even food (and his wife was pregnant at the time). One  night a group of thugs hired by Securitate broke into his apartment and Tökés  and members of the congregation had to fight them off with kitchen  knives.
The Bishop of Transylvania, László Papp, a puppet of the  Communists and a collaborationist with the government, ordered Tökés to stop  preaching and officially closed his church. Interestingly enough, he appealed to  the “separation of church and state,” and claimed that Tökés violated the laws  of both the church and the state. The congregation stood firm, and the young  pastor kept preaching. A few weeks before the events described above he wrote an  open letter explaining the situation he was in:
I speak out for I cannot do otherwise, or else the  stones themselves will speak, the stones of our demolished towns and monuments….  I am not a courageous man but I have overcome my fear. I am waiting for a trial  at a Romanian civil court, indicted by my own bishop in order to evict me from  the manse of the church at Temesvar, and to banish me in medieval style not only  from this “closed” town but also from the priesthood. . . The fight is no less  bitter than it was in the past, though this time the weapons are different. And  the price of the siege is the same; when the castle falls, a piece of our  country goes with it . . . The self-defence of the Reformed Church in Temesvár  symbolizes a “pars pro toto,” it  displays the “particular” as a representative of the “universal.” We are called  in question, one by one, as Calvinists and as Hungarians living here. To the  challenge the congregation tries to answer like David . . . it takes its stand  only on a tiny foothold of the Spirit, from of the Word of God: “Fight for your  brethren, your sons, your wives and your homes” (Nehemiah 4:14). “A mighty  fortress is our God” sings the church congregation on Sundays, identifying  themselves with its strength; they rely on that strength throughout the  week.
László Papp, the Bishop of Nagyvárad, has been besieging  the Church in Temesvár since April. He has banned services in the church and the  works of renovation. . .He has limited the activity of the minister and the  session; he has frozen a great deal of the congregational finances . . . This  was the introductory phase of the siege . . . the phase of “starve them into  surrender” . . . the mocking of Goliath.
But God’s plans trumped the mocking of Goliath, and the  giant fell within a week after the start of the final showdown. And it all  started with the humble sermons of a humble pastor in a small parish  church.
If you are a Christian, and if you care about teaching  your children in the way of our Lord, you should have a gallery of Christian  heroes for them to imitate and be inspired by. Add a name there: László Tökés.  He is part of your Christian history.
* * * * *
About a year ago I visited a worldview conference  organized in our town by Brannon Howse. Mr. Howse was outstanding. He didn’t  pull any punches. Nothing in this country was outside of God’s Sovereignty,  everything was a legitimate sphere for action for us Christians. Government?  Yes, government too.
On the way back a local pastor was with me in my car. I  was excited about the conference, and I naturally was optimistic about what we  as Christians could do to restore America to its Biblical  roots.
In the middle of the conversation the pastor just said,  “You know, this is all good, but I don’t think we can accomplish too much in  these last days. We may be able to save a few souls, but we can’t stop the drift  to darkness in this country. We should expect the times to be worse and worse  for us Christians.”
I thought of László Tökés. He was against the worst  political and government machine we can imagine. He couldn’t buy food, he was  about to be evicted from his house. There was no institution to come to his  defense, and there was no hope, humanly speaking. He was in a situation that no  American pastor in the 20th century has been or had to be. And yet he  compared himself to David against Goliath, firmly convinced of his victory,  against all human odds.
He just preached against the government, against the  principalities and powers, against the forces of darkness in the high places of  the land. And they fell. Our pastors should learn from his example.  
Gill  Rapoza
Veritas Vos  Liberabit

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