Sue and warriors, Wish we were all this committed 
in liberty where it costs us almost nothing by comparison!
Thy Kingdom Come, Lord Jesus!  Maranatha!  Maranatha!
Vicki
<*}}}>< <*}}}><
The Lord's Prayer In Hell
http://article.nationalreview.com/?q=ODQ3YTRhNGRlYzY1YmFiNmNjNjUzYmY1MDE0ZTM2MmE=&w=MA==

by Col. Leo Thorsness

"...deliver us from evil..." (Matthew 6:13)

On April 30, 1967, Leo Thorsness was shot down 
over North Vietnam. He was held and tortured for 
six years. Today's devotional comes from Col. 
Thorsness' memoirs, "Surviving Hell."

The first Sunday at the Hanoi Hilton, someone 
said, "Let's have church service." Good idea, we 
all agreed. One POW volunteered to lead the 
service and we started gathering in the other end 
of the long, rectangular cell. No sooner had we 
gathered than an English-speaking Vietnamese 
officer who worked as an interrogator burst into 
the cell with a dozen armed guards. Ned Shuman, 
our Senior Ranking Officer, went to the officer 
and said there would not be a problem, we were 
just going to have a short church service. The 
response was unyielding: we were not allowed to 
gather into groups larger than three persons and 
absolutely could not have a church service.

During the next few days we all grumbled that we 
should not have backed down in our intention to 
have a church service and ought to do it the 
coming Sunday. Toward the end of the week, Ned 
stepped forward and said, "Are we really committed to having church Sunday?"

There was a murmuring of the assent throughout 
the cell. Ned said, "No, I want to know person by 
person if you are really committed to holding church."

We all knew the implications of our answer. If we 
went ahead with the plan, some would pay the 
price -- starting with Ned himself because he was 
the SRO. He went around the cell pointing to each of us individually.

"Leo, are you committed?"

"Yes."

When the 42nd man said "yes," it was unanimous. 
We had 100% commitment to hold church the next 
Sunday. At that instant, Ned knew he would end up 
in the torture cells. It was different from 
previous Sunday. We now had a goal and we were 
committed. We only needed to develop a plan.

Sunday morning came and we knew they would be 
watching us again. Once more, we gathered in the 
far end of the cell. As soon as we moved 
together, the interrogator and guards burst 
through the door. Ned stepped forward and said 
there wouldn't be a problem, we were just going 
to hold a quiet, 10-minute church service and 
then we would spread back out in the cell. As 
expected, they grabbed him and hauled him off for torture.

Our plan unfolded. The second ranking man, the 
new SRO, stood, walked to the center of the cell 
and in a clear, firm voice said, "Gentlemen," our 
signal to stand, "the Lord's Prayer." We got 
perhaps halfway through the prayer when the 
guards grabbed the SRO and hauled him out the door.

As planned, the number three SRO stood, walked to 
the center of the cell and said, "Gentlemen, the 
Lord's Prayer." We had gotten about to "Thy 
kingdom come" before the guards grabbed him. 
Immediately, the number four SRO stood, "Gentlemen, the Lord's Prayer."

I have never heard five or six words from the 
Lord's Prayer recited so loudly or so reverently. 
The interrogator was shouting, "Stop, stop!" but 
we drowned him out. The guards were now hitting 
POWs with gun butts and the cell was in chaos.

The number five ranking officer was way back in 
the corner and took his time moving toward the 
center of the cell. (I was number seven, and not 
particularly anxious for him to hurry.) But just 
before he got to the center of the area, the cell became pin-drop quiet.

In Vietnamese, the interrogator spat out 
something to the guards. They grabbed the number 
five SRO and they all left, locking the cell door 
behind them. The number six SRO began, 
"Gentlemen, the Lord's Prayer." This time we finished it.

Five courageous officers were tortured, but I 
think they believed it was worth it. From that 
Sunday on until we came home, we held a church 
service. We won. They lost. Forty-two men in 
prison pajamas followed Ned's lead. I know I will 
never see a better example of pure, raw 
leadership or will ever pray with a better sense of the meaning of those words.

This Week
Thank the Lord for the freedom we have to recite 
His Word without fear and for the brave men and 
women who continue to fight for this freedom.

Prayer
"Father, help me to not take our freedom for 
granted. Be with those who have sacrificed so 
much to protect our country and our liberty. 
Intercede on behalf of those who are in harm's 
way and bring peace to our world so that everyone 
can worship openly and freely."

­ Leo Thorsness is author of 
<http://www.nationalreview.com/redirect/amazon.p?j=159403236X>Surviving 
Hell: A POW's Journey, from which this chapter is excerpted.





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