Global prayer movement highlights pastor's stunning survival in Indian prison
In a world increasingly silent about faith under fire, November’s spotlight on persecuted Christians is anything but quiet.
The International Day of Prayer for Persecuted Christians kicked off on November 2, and churches have been rallying throughout the month to lift those targeted simply for believing the Bible is true, as CBN reports.
Backed by Voice of the Martyrs (VOM), a ministry supporting the global underground church, the movement urges congregations to prioritize prayer—not hashtags or slogans—for brothers and sisters paying a steep price for their stand.
Calls for Prayer, Not Performative Activism
Todd Nettleton, VOM’s chief of media relations, made it clear that this initiative isn’t about visuals for social media feeds. “This is what persecuted Christians ask us to do,” Nettleton said. “The first thing they ask us to do is to pray.”
No gimmicks. Just bold spiritual support for those facing down tyranny in places where religious liberty doesn’t exist—because it’s never been recognized in the first place.
Churches across denominations are participating in different ways, but the mission stays the same: pray for the persecuted, not just discuss them. It’s about doing right, not merely looking right.
Pastor Faces Beatings, Sees Hearts Change
During his recent travels, Nettleton recorded firsthand stories that paint a gut-wrenching, faith-filled picture of what persecution looks like in 2025. One such account came from an Indian pastor arrested for continuing to preach the Gospel after warnings from local authorities.
He was imprisoned under an anti-conversion law, accused of evangelizing, where freedom of speech apparently disappears at the church door. For the first seven days, guards didn’t just punch a time card—they punched him.
The pastor was reportedly hung upside down and beaten repeatedly until the guards themselves were too tired to continue. Yet, in a story that defies medical intuition, he felt nothing.
Authorities Couldn’t Stop the Word
“God intervened and protected him,” Nettleton said. “He didn’t feel the pain of that, which, again, is mind-blowing.” Call it divine anesthesia or a miracle—either way, good luck explaining it to the bureaucrats behind India’s anti-faith policies.
Even more astonishing, the same prison warden who ordered the beatings eventually gave the pastor freedom to speak about Good Friday to the entire inmate population. Only something—or Someone—bigger softens a heart that hard.
The pastor took the opportunity. He preached about Easter and the power of resurrection, not knowing what might come next but trusting in a better Kingdom than bars and walls could contain.
God Works Behind Bars and Beyond
“God changed the warden’s heart,” Nettleton said. “He assigned two prisoners to take care of that pastor, to make sure he had food, to do his laundry.” In a facility that tried to break him, the pastor was instead honored and enabled to minister freely among other inmates.
The warden’s reward? A miracle. After the pastor prayed for the warden’s son—who was seriously ill—the boy recovered in a way that, in Nettleton’s words, was “mind-blowing” and “amazing.”
This narrative isn’t cozy. It doesn’t fit neatly on a Sunday school flannelgraph. But it radiates a rugged faith that burns brighter when pressed.
From Forced Relocation to Future Hope
In another case, Nettleton told of a man whose family fled religious persecution. Far from a sob story, the hostile move led to greater opportunity. The family landed in a village with better schooling, opening doors they never expected.
“I’m thankful for that persecution that pushed our family out,” the man reportedly said, underscoring a hard truth: sometimes the worst of what man does is used for the best of what God intends.
Nettleton highlighted China and Nigeria as current hotspots for Christian persecution—nations where bold faith still stands defiant in the face of increasingly statist and often hostile ideologies.
Faith That Endures Under Fire
This powerful season of prayer encourages believers not to focus only on relief from suffering, but also to ask what God might be speaking through it.
“We don’t often pray, ‘Lord, who are you putting in my path that you want me to reach?’” Nettleton noted. It's a challenge many in the comfortable West might struggle to understand, let alone act on.
Still, this monthlong focus reminds the faithful that persecution isn’t just a theme from ancient Rome. It’s modern. It’s global. And it’s something worth more than performative tears or fleeting online outrage.





