Letter by Corrie Ten Boom in 1974
The world is deathly ill. It is dying. The Great Physician
has already signed the death certificate. Yet there is still a great work for
Christians to do. They are to be streams of living water, channels of mercy to
those who are still in the world. It is possible for them to do this because
they are overcomers.
Christians are ambassadors for Christ. They are representatives from Heaven to
this dying world. And because of our presence here, things will change.
My sister, Betsy, and I were in the Nazi concentration camp at Ravensbruck
because we committed the crime of loving Jews. Seven hundred of us from Holland,
France, Russia, Poland and Belgium were herded into a room built for two
hundred. As far as I knew, Betsy and I were the only two representatives of
Heaven in that room.
We may have been the Lord’s only representatives in that place of hatred, yet
because of our presence there, things changed. Jesus said, “In the world you
shall have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.” We
too, are to be overcomers—bringing the light of Jesus into a world filled with
darkness and hate.
Sometimes I get frightened as I read the Bible, and as I look in this world and
see all of the tribulation and persecution promised by the Bible coming true.
Now I can tell you, though, if you too are afraid, that I have just read the
last pages. I can now come to shouting “Hallelujah! Hallelujah!” for I have
found where it is written that Jesus said, “He that overcometh shall inherit all
things: and I will be His God, and he shall be My son.” This is the future and
hope of this world. Not that the world will survive – but that we shall be
overcomers in the midst of a dying world.
Betsy and I, in the concentration camp, prayed that God would heal Betsy who was
so weak and sick. “Yes, the Lord will heal me,”, Betsy said with confidence.
She died the next day and I could not understand it. They laid her thin body on
the concrete floor along with all the other corpses of the women who died that
day.
It was hard for me to understand, to believe that God had a purpose for all
that. Yet because of Betsy’s death, today I am traveling all over the world
telling people about Jesus.
There are some among us teaching there will be no tribulation, that the
Christians will be able to escape all this. These are the false teachers that
Jesus was warning us to expect in the latter days. Most of them have little
knowledge of what is already going on across the world. I have been in countries
where the saints are already suffering terrible persecution. In China, the
Christians were told, “Don’t worry, before the tribulation comes you will be
translated – raptured.” Then came a terrible persecution. Millions of Christians
were tortured to death. Later I heard a Bishop from China say, sadly, “We have
failed. We should have made the people strong for persecution rather than
telling them Jesus would come first. Tell the people how to be strong in times
of persecution, how to stand when the tribulation comes – to stand and not
faint.”
I feel I have a divine mandate to go and tell the people of this world that it
is possible to be strong in the Lord Jesus Christ. We are in training for the
tribulation, but more than sixty percent of the Body of Christ across the world
has already entered into the tribulation. There is no way to escape it. We are
next.
Since I have already gone through prison for Jesus’ sake, and since I met the
Bishop in China, now every time I read a good Bible text I think, “Hey, I can
use that in the time of tribulation.” Then I write it down and learn it by
heart.
When I was in the concentration camp, a camp where only twenty percent of the
women came out alive, we tried to cheer each other up by saying, “Nothing could
be any worse than today.” But we would find the next day was even worse.
During this time a Bible verse that I had committed to memory gave me great
hope and joy. “If ye be reproached for the name of Christ, happy are ye; for the
spirit of glory and of God resteth upon you; on their part evil is spoken of,
but on your part He is glorified.” (I Peter 3:14) I found myself saying,
“Hallelujah! Because I am suffering, Jesus is glorified!”
In America, the churches sing, “Let the congregation escape tribulation”, but in
China and Africa the tribulation has already arrived. This last year alone more
than two hundred thousand Christians were martyred in Africa. Now things like
that never get into the newspapers because they cause bad political relations.
But I know. I have been there. We need to think about that when we sit down in
our nice houses with our nice clothes to eat our steak dinners. Many, many
members of the Body of Christ are being tortured to death at this very moment,
yet we continue right on as though we are all going to escape the tribulation.
Several years ago I was in Africa in a nation where a new government had come
into power. The first night I was there some of the Christians were commanded to
come to the police station to register. When they arrived they were arrested and
that same night they were executed. The next day the same thing happened with
other Christians. The third day it was the same. All the Christians in the
district were being systematically murdered.
The fourth day I was to speak in a little church. The people came, but they were
filled with fear and tension. All during the service they were looking at each
other, their eyes asking, “Will this one I am sitting beside be the next one
killed? Will I be the next one?”
The room was hot and stuffy with insects that came through the screenless
windows and swirled around the naked bulbs over the bare wooden benches. I told
them a story out of my childhood.
“When I was a little girl, “ I said, “I went to my father and said, “Daddy, I am
afraid that I will never be strong enough to be a marty for Jesus Christ.” “Tell
me,” said Father, “When you take a train trip to Amsterdam, when do I give you
the money for the ticket? Three weeks before?” “No, Daddy, you give me the
money for the ticket just before we get on the train.” “That is right,” my
father said, “and so it is with God’s strength. Our Father in Heaven knows when
you will need the strength to be a martyr for Jesus Christ. He will supply all
you need—just in time…”
My African friends were nodding and smiling. Suddenly a spirit of joy descended
upon that church and the people began singing, “ In the sweet, by and by, we
shall meet on that beautiful shore.” Later that week, half the congregation of
that church was executed. I heard later that the other half was killed some
months ago.
But I must tell you something. I was so happy that the Lord used me to encourage
these people, for unlike many of their leaders, I had the word of God. I had
been to the Bible and discovered that Jesus said He had not only overcome the
world, but to all those who remained faithful to the end, He would give a crown
of life.
How can we get ready for the persecution? First we need to feed on the word of
God, digest it, make it a part of our being. This will mean disciplined Bible
study each day as we not only memorize long passages of scripture, but put the
principles to work in our lives.
Next we need to develop a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. Not just the
Jesus of yesterday, the Jesus of History, but the life-changing Jesus of today
who is still alive and sitting at the right hand of God.
We must be filled with the Holy Spirit. This is no optional command of the
Bible, it is absolutely necessary. Those earthly disciples could never have
stood up under the persecution of the Jews and Romans had they not waited for
Pentecost. Each of us needs our own personal Pentecost, the baptism of the Holy
Spirit. We will never be able to stand in the tribulation without it.
In the coming persecution we must be ready to help each other and encourage each
other. But we must not wait until the tribulation comes before starting. The
fruit of the Spirit should be the dominant force of every Christian’s life.
Many are fearful of the coming tribulation, they want to run. I, too, and a
little bit afraid when I think that after all my eighty years, including the
horrible nazi concentration camp, that I might have to go through the
tribulation also. But then I read the Bible and I am glad.
When I am weak, then I shall be strong, the Bible says. Betsy and I were
prisoners for the Lord; we were so weak, but we got power because the Holy
Spirit was on us. That mighty inner strengthening of the Holy Spirit helped us
through. No, you will not be strong in yourself when the tribulation comes.
Rather, you will be strong in the power of Him who will not forsake you. For
seventy-six years I have known the Lord Jesus and not once has He ever left me,
or let me down. Though He slay me, yet will I trust Him, for I know that to all
who overcome, He shall give the crown of life. Hallelujah!
—Corrie Ten Boom-1974
This letter was taken from a post at The Hiding Place Message Board.