
Standing Strong through Persecution
Finding encouragement, faith and hope in the face of suffering and persecution
From the Strengthen magazine issue:

Finding encouragement, faith and hope in the face of suffering and persecution
Prayer is not just a religious routine; it is the very lifeline of every child of God.
For our prayers to be powerful and effective, they must rise from a heart that is right with God and right with others. We often focus on being right with God (and rightly so), but we can easily forget that bitterness, malice, or unresolved offence toward another person can seriously hinder our prayers.
“If My people who are called by My name will humble themselves and pray and seek My face and turn from their wicked ways, then I will hear from heaven, and will forgive their sin and will heal their land.”
2 Chronicles 7:14
Beautiful promises are attached to clear conditions:
These promises are released when we do four things: humble ourselves, pray, seek His face, and turn from our wicked ways.
King David is a great example: a man of incredible achievement who made terrible mistakes, yet he humbled himself quickly and acknowledged his sin.
Jesus put prayer and forgiveness side by side:
“Therefore I say to you, whatever things you ask when you pray, believe that you receive them, and you will have them. And whenever you stand praying, if you have anything against anyone, forgive him…”
Mark 11:24-25
We must pray in faith, believing God hears and answers. But Jesus also warns that unforgiveness defiles the hands we raise in prayer. A heart harbouring bitterness cannot approach a holy God effectively.
Forgiveness does not mean pretending the hurt never happened; it means releasing the person to God so that your own soul can be free and your prayers remain unhindered. Forgiveness frees us to receive God’s mercy and then extend it to others.
Refusing to forgive doesn’t punish the other person; it chains me while they move on. Unforgiveness is the very thing that keeps my prayers from reaching the throne of grace.
Lord, make me a person of prayer. Give me a humble heart, a forgiving spirit, and unwavering faith. Where there is brokenness in me or around me, bring Your healing. Teach me to release others just as You have graciously released me. In Jesus’ name, Amen.

Christian faith does not claim that God watches suffering from a distance. In Jesus, God enters betrayal, injustice, pain, and abandonment. This means that those who suffer are not misunderstood by God. Christ has walked the storm from the inside and remains present with all who endure it.

When suffering feels overwhelming and God seems distant, Scripture reminds us that He is near to the brokenhearted. Even in the storm, you are seen, known, and not forgotten.

When churches are forced out of public view, faith does not disappear. From the earliest Christians to believers today, going underground has been a faithful and wise way to preserve community, protect one another, and continue following Christ when visibility brings danger.