F4S

Thursday, November 13, 2025

American P.O.W. Actor Steve McQueen (as Captain Virgil "The Cooler King") Enjoyed a Great Escape into Freedom. Man, you can too!

Factoid: There are currently 2 million people incarcerated in the USA (in jails and prisons, wanting freedom). No other nation on earth incarcerates more people than the USA, either in total numbers or per capita. 

I don't know the reasons for them being there. 

Me thinks many nations, like in the EU and Nigeria, should do better with their arrests (where countless Christians and others are being killed by Muslims. So SO much murder and rapes etc there in these places) need to do much better. America needs to do better too, that's why they're hiring. In 2022, the total number of people in state or federal prisons was over 1.2 million. The United States has 5% of the world's population but accounts for about 25% of the world's incarcerated people.

Factoid: By last October 2025, there've been 9,000 rapes covered up in England. Corrupt politicians need to be held accountable in every Land! I don't think I've seen a nation slide downwards faster. Over 12,000 people were arrested in Great Britain this same year for saying something (posting) in Social Media. Be salt and light anyway -- tell the truth in love. 

Paul and Silas got stuck in jail for no wrongdoing of their own. It was because they were out faithfully ministering the word together on the second missionary journey (Acts 15–18). 

British people are going to jail today for simply speaking the truth on Social Media. 

Paul and Silas didn't tweet on X or post on Facebook. They found themselves in prison, though they had committed zero crimes. Their only offense was faithfulness—faithfulness to the call of God to proclaim the gospel on their second missionary journey (Acts 15–18).

Paul and Silas were first mentioned working together after the Jerusalem Council in Acts 15, as both men were part of that group that took the council’s collective decision back to Syrian Antioch (verse 22). Silas was called a “prophet” who “said much to encourage and strengthen the believers” in Antioch (verse 32). After Paul and Barnabas disagreed in an area and parted ways, Paul chose Silas as a traveling companion, and they took off for Syria and Cilicia, where they ministered the Word to the churches there (Acts 15:41). 

After that, Paul and Silas took off for Derbe and Lystra, where they connected with and picked up another companion, Timothy (Acts 16:1–3). 

Following a journey through Asia Minor, the Holy Spirit led Paul and Silas into Macedonia to witness with the Word (verses 6–10). During the missionaries’ time in Philippi, people were saved by Jesus. A local church was started and established, but Satan opposed their work. He hates this type of work in the name of Jesus. 

Paul and Silas were arrested, beaten, and put in prison for their bold, clear preaching of the Gospel (Acts 16:16–24). While in prison, Paul and Silas sat with their feet in stocks singing hymns. yes, worshipping with songs of truth unto Jesus. They had the time and passionate hearts to do so. 

At midnight, an earthquake broke open the prison doors, setting the prisoners free. The jailer then feared greatly that his superiors would blame him for the jail break (as often happened), and he prepared to run himself through with his sword rather than face their punishment. Not a good decision at all, so Paul and Silas convinced him not to harm himself. They preached the gospel to him, and he was saved by the Lord, along with his entire household that night (Acts 16:25–34). God was indeed glorified. 

Qs: What percentage of people living in America have been incarcerated in jail or prison (deservingly or undeservingly)? What percentage of people living in the USA were citizens and non-citizens? Good questions! According to the most up-to-date, available recent data:

Incarceration / Arrests

  • About 14 % of U.S. adults say they've ever been held in jail or prison for one night or longer. KFF

  • About 0.7 % of the total U.S. population (roughly 1 in 100) was behind bars (in jail or prison) at a given time. 

  • In terms of lifetime, “have served time in state and federal prison” (not just jail stays) one study found about 3.8 % of a specific adult age cohort in 2001 had experienced imprisonment. Thomas P. Bonczar, Bureau Of Justice Statistics

  • Here's some Stats - Citizenship & Non-citizen

    • As of 2023, the foreign-born (i.e., those not U.S. citizens at birth) numbered about 47.8 million, representing ~ 14.3% of the U.S. population. 

    • Of that foreign-born population, about 52% (~25 million) are naturalized U.S. citizens. Congress.gov

    • A study of a healthcare-survey sample found among U.S. adults ~81.9% were U.S.-born citizens, ~10.1% naturalized citizens, and ~8.0% non-citizens. PMC

    Arrest / Criminal Record / Incarceration

    • The arrest rate in 2023 was about 2,232 arrests per 100,000 people (~2.23%) for all offenses. 

    • One source reports “over 80 million American adults” (~1 in 3) have a criminal record (arrest or conviction) and “around 10% of them (8 million) have been imprisoned at least once in their lifetime.” 

    • From the official FBI tables: in 2013, adults (18+) made up ~90% of all individuals arrested. UCR

    What's the takeaway?:

    • Roughly 14% of the U.S. population are foreign-born (with about half of those naturalized).

    • A non-trivial percentage of adults have been arrested or convicted (some sources say ~1 in 3), though exact reliable lifetime incarceration figures are harder to pin.

    • The arrest rate annually (~2.2%) gives a sense of new arrests per population per year, not lifetime risk.

Lost people and some saved people are behind bars. 

You already know how so many people behind bars claim to be innocent when they are not. Factually, there are only two kinds of people behind bars: those who are guilty of breaking the law and rightly facing punishment, and those who are truly innocent, ensnared by the injustice of human systems. 

Many Christians around the world have gone to jail for their faith (no sin at all), and others deservingly have gone to prison for their own wrongdoings (many consequences don't disappear, so such unbelievers and believers can properly learn to fear and obey God). 

Scripture speaks to both the guilty and the innocent. To the guilty, it offers the path of truth, repentance, and submission to lawful authority, alongside the promise of freedom from the prison of sin through Christ (Romans 6:18). To the innocent, it offers patience, peace, and hope—hope that is anchored not in earthly vindication but in the eternal reward of God’s justice.

God has established governments to maintain order and protect society. The Bible reminds us that breaking the law carries consequences (Romans 13:1–4), and that obedience to authorities is “good” (Titus 3:1). We are not to commit sin or crime (1 Peter 4:15). Yet, there are times when obedience to God itself brings conflict with human authority. Paul and the apostles faced imprisonment for preaching the gospel. When God’s Word is treated as a crime, Christians are called to continue in faithfulness, even if it leads to prison (Acts 5:29).

History and Scripture are full of examples of the innocent suffering unjustly. Joseph was falsely accused of a terrible crime and thrown into prison (Genesis 39:6–20). Yet even in chains, “the Lord was with him” (v. 21). John the Baptist was confined and eventually executed because he spoke truth to power (Mark 6:17–18; Luke 7:22). Their stories remind us that injustice is not avoided by the righteous; suffering is often part of walking faithfully in an unjust world (Matthew 5:10–12; 1 Peter 4:12–13; James 1:2). And yet, spiritual freedom remains possible, even within prison walls: “Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom” (2 Corinthians 3:17).

Paul’s own imprisonments offer profound examples. His letters to Ephesus, Philippi, Colossae, and Philemon—the so-called prison epistles—were written during his Roman captivity (Acts 28:16, 30–31; Philippians 4:22). From his cell, Paul shepherded churches he had founded or known, offering doctrinal clarity, pastoral guidance, and heartfelt encouragement. Colossians combats heresy and instructs believers in Christ-centered living (Colossians 1:15–20; 2:2–10; 3), Ephesians illuminates the riches of God’s grace and the practical outworking of faith (Ephesians 1–6), and Philippians radiates joy, urging believers to rejoice even in suffering (Philippians 1:4,18,25; 2:2; 4:1,4,10).

Even in his personal relationships, Paul’s letters reflect God’s heart for reconciliation and forgiveness. Philemon illustrates the transformative power of the gospel: a runaway slave, Onesimus, is welcomed back not merely as a servant, but as a beloved brother in Christ (Philemon 1:10–11). Here, the chains of slavery are broken by the greater chains of Christ’s love and gospel truth.

Though Paul was physically imprisoned, his captivity was first and foremost for Christ (Philemon 1:9; Ephesians 3:1; Colossians 4:18; Philippians 1:12–14). His confinement became a vessel for spreading the gospel in Rome, the heart of the Gentile world. The Lord encouraged him: “Take courage! As you have testified about me in Jerusalem, so you must also testify in Rome” (Acts 23:11). His experience reminds us that God can turn even the hardest circumstances into instruments of eternal purpose.

The message for believers today is clear: whether in chains or walking freely, whether guilty or wronged, our ultimate liberation lies in Christ. The world may impose injustice, but God’s Spirit cannot be confined. In every cell, every courtroom, every struggle, we are free to live in obedience, hope, and joy. As John Bunyan wrote in Pilgrim’s Progress, “He who has God and everything else has no more than he who has God alone.”

1. Lawlessness and Sin

  1. 1 John 3:4 – “Everyone who practices sin also practices lawlessness; and sin is lawlessness.”
     → Sin is the root crime against God’s moral law.

  2. Matthew 24:12 – “Because lawlessness will abound, the love of many will grow cold.”
     → When sin multiplies, compassion dies; society chills spiritually.

  3. 2 Thessalonians 2:7–8 – “The mystery of lawlessness is already at work…”
     → Lawlessness prepares the way for the Antichrist spirit.

  4. Proverbs 28:9 – “If one turns away his ear from hearing the law, even his prayer is an abomination.”
     → Ignoring God’s commands corrupts worship itself.

  5. Romans 6:19 – “You presented your members as slaves to impurity and to lawlessness, resulting in further lawlessness.”
     → Sin snowballs when unchecked by repentance.


2. Crime and Human Injustice

  1. Exodus 20:13–15 – “You shall not murder… you shall not steal.”
     → God’s moral order begins with respect for life and property.

  2. Proverbs 6:16–19 – Lists the seven abominations the Lord hates—chiefly “hands that shed innocent blood.”

  3. Romans 13:3–4 – “Rulers are not a terror to good conduct, but to bad… for he does not bear the sword in vain.”
     → Civil authority exists to restrain evil and uphold justice.

  4. Ecclesiastes 8:11 – “When the sentence for a crime is not quickly carried out, people’s hearts are filled with schemes to do wrong.”
     → Delayed justice invites further evil.

  5. Isaiah 5:20 – “Woe to those who call evil good and good evil…”
     → Cultural confusion of morality breeds lawlessness.


3. Corrupt and Unjust Rulers

  1. Proverbs 29:2 – “When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice; but when the wicked rule, the people groan.”

  2. Isaiah 1:23 – “Your rulers are rebels, companions of thieves; everyone loves a bribe.”

  3. Micah 3:11 – “Her leaders judge for a bribe, her priests teach for pay, and her prophets tell fortunes for money.”

  4. Ecclesiastes 5:8 – “If you see the poor oppressed and justice denied, do not be surprised; one official is eyed by a higher one.”

  5. Habakkuk 1:4 – “The law is paralyzed, and justice never prevails. The wicked hem in the righteous.”

  6. Psalm 82:2–4 – “How long will you defend the unjust and show partiality to the wicked? Defend the weak and the fatherless.”

  7. Jeremiah 22:13, 17 – “Woe to him who builds his house by unrighteousness… but your eyes and your heart are only on your dishonest gain.”


4. God’s Judgment on Lawlessness

  1. Nahum 1:3 – “The Lord is slow to anger but great in power; He will not leave the guilty unpunished.”

  2. Psalm 37:9 – “Evildoers shall be cut off, but those who wait on the Lord shall inherit the land.”

  3. Romans 1:18 – “The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men.”

  4. Proverbs 11:21 – “Though hand join in hand, the wicked shall not go unpunished.”

  5. Isaiah 33:22 – “The Lord is our judge, the Lord is our lawgiver, the Lord is our king; He will save us.”


5. Justice, Mercy, and Righteous Rule

  1. Micah 6:8 – “He has shown you, O man, what is good: to act justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with your God.”

  2. Psalm 89:14 – “Righteousness and justice are the foundation of Your throne; mercy and truth go before You.”

  3. Isaiah 58:6–7 – True fasting is to loose injustice, free the oppressed, and feed the hungry.

  4. Amos 5:24 – “Let justice roll down like waters, and righteousness like a mighty stream.”

  5. Proverbs 21:3 – “To do righteousness and justice is more acceptable to the Lord than sacrifice.”

  6. Zechariah 7:9–10 – “Execute true justice, show mercy and compassion… do not oppress the widow or the foreigner.”

  7. Matthew 23:23 – “You neglect the weightier matters of the law: justice, mercy, and faithfulness.”


6. The Righteous Response of Believers

  1. Matthew 5:14–16 – “You are the light of the world… let your light shine before others.” (always see whole contect of verses)

  2. Romans 12:21 – “Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.”

  3. 1 Peter 2:13–17 – “Submit yourselves for the Lord’s sake to every human authority… honor all people, love the brotherhood, fear God.”

  4. Titus 2:11–14 – Grace teaches us to “deny ungodliness and worldly passions” and live self-controlled, upright lives.

  5. Psalm 15:1–2 – “Lord, who may dwell in Your sanctuary? He who walks uprightly, works righteousness, and speaks truth in his heart.”

Independent estimates say

  • According to the Pew Research Center, unauthorized (living in the U.S. without legal immigration status) immigrants make up about 4% of the U.S. population. Pew Research Center

  • In 2023 they estimated roughly 14 million unauthorized immigrants in the U.S. population. 

  • The total foreign-born (legal + unauthorized) population is higher (“well over 14%” of U.S. population, as you referenced).


What Tom Homan and This Trump Administration Truthfully Gave Us Real Facts

  • Tom Homan publicly stated his belief that there are more than 20 million illegal immigrants in the U.S. — a figure significantly higher than most independent estimates. New York Post. His exact words: “I believe over 20 million illegal immigrants are in the U.S.” — Tom Homan. New York Post


Remember This..

  • We are told that the best independent data: unauthorized population ≈ 4% of the U.S. population.

  • Homan’s claim: The unauthorized population here is possibly 15-20% (if 20 million of ~330 million) of U.S. population.

Here's a list of some believers in the Bible who were arrested and thrown into jail, into torture sessions (like with fire), into dungeons, or prisons for their faith by flawed human (delegated) authorities.

1. Joseph (Old Testament)

  • Story: Sold by his brothers, falsely accused, and thrown into an Egyptian prison.

  • Bible References: Genesis 39:20; Genesis 40–41

  • Key Point: Joseph’s faithfulness to God in prison eventually led to God’s promotion and provision.

  • What's been said: “Faith in God turns the prison into a palace, the dungeon into a hall of hope.” — Charles Spurgeon


2. Jeremiah (Old Testament)

  • Story: The prophet was arrested, put in a cistern (mud pit), and left to die for speaking God’s truth to Judah.

  • Bible References: Jeremiah 37:15–21; 38:6

  • Key Point: God’s prophets often faced human authority’s wrath for delivering His message.

  • What's been said: “The servant of God is never safe in the eyes of men, but always secure in the hands of God.” — John MacArthur


3. Daniel (Old Testament)

  • Story: Thrown into the lions’ den for praying to God instead of the king.

  • Bible References: Daniel 6:10–24

  • Key Point: Faithful obedience in the face of human law brings God’s protection and glory.

  • What's been said: “A man may be shut in by men, but he is never imprisoned by God.” — A.W. Tozer


4. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego (Old Testament)

  • Story: Threatened with fiery furnace for refusing to worship Nebuchadnezzar’s idol.

  • Bible References: Daniel 3:13–27

  • Key Point: God’s deliverance demonstrates that faithfulness surpasses human authority.

  • What's been said: “Faith refuses to bow to human fear; God turns the fiery trial into a throne of witness.” — Charles Spurgeon


5. Peter (New Testament)

  • Story: Arrested multiple times for preaching about Jesus; miraculously freed.

  • Bible References: Acts 4:3; Acts 5:18–19; Acts 12:1–11

  • Key Point: God can intervene supernaturally, and imprisonment often serves His plan.

  • What's been said: “If God opens a door in prison, it is a doorway to glory.” — John Piper


6. John the Apostle (New Testament)

  • Story: Exiled to the island of Patmos for preaching Christ.

  • Bible References: Revelation 1:9

  • Key Point: Even in exile, God gave him revelation and hope for the Church.

  • What's been said: “God’s prisons are never empty of purpose; His chains are never without meaning.” — Watchman Nee


7. Paul (New Testament)

  • Story: Arrested many times, whipped, imprisoned, shipwrecked, and ultimately executed for faith.

  • Bible References: Acts 16:23–40 (Philippi); Acts 21:27–36; 2 Corinthians 11:23–28

  • Key Point: Perseverance under persecution strengthens witness and spreads the Gospel.

  • What's been said: “Paul’s chains became the wings of the Gospel.” — Martin Luther


8. Silas (New Testament)

  • Story: Imprisoned with Paul in Philippi, beaten for casting out a demon.

  • Bible References: Acts 16:22–26

  • Key Point: Singing and prayer in prison leads to God’s miraculous intervention.

  • What's been said: “God turns prison doors into pulpits for the faithful.” — John Stott


9. James, brother of John (New Testament)

  • Story: Executed by Herod for his faith; part of early persecution.

  • Bible References: Acts 12:1–2

  • Key Point: Martyrdom is the ultimate witness for Christ.

  • What's been said: “Faith that endures unto death is the faith that conquers eternity.” — Charles Spurgeon


10. Apostles and Early Disciples (New Testament)

  • Story: Many were imprisoned repeatedly for preaching Christ in Jerusalem and beyond.

  • Bible References: Acts 5:17–42; Acts 21:30–36

  • Key Point: Human authority cannot stop the advance of God’s Word.

  • What's been said: “Chains cannot bind truth; prisons cannot silence the Spirit.” — John Calvin

- Faithful believers do experience mocking, scoffing, and fierce persecution for their faith. They often face imprisonment, torture, or exile, but God uses these trials, sufferings to use and promote them -- to test, to strengthen, and to glorify Himself. 
- Scripture repeatedly contrasts human lawlessness and flawed authority with divine justice (See Psalm 82:2–4; Romans 13:1–4).
- Christian teaching encourages steadfastness under persecution, trusting God’s deliverance or ultimate reward.

"A prison cell, in which one waits, hopes, and is completely dependent on the fact that the door of freedom has to be opened from the outside, is not a bad picture of Advent". ~ Dietrich Bonhoeffer 

"In me there is darkness, But with You there is light; I am lonely, but You do not leave me; I am feeble in heart, but with You there is help". ~ Dietrich Bonhoeffer, regarding his Nazi concentration prison experience

"You can never learn that Christ is all you need, until Christ is all you have." ~ Corrie Ten Boom 

 "When he tells us to love our enemies, He gives, along with the command, the love itself." ~ Corrie T.B.

"There is no pit so deep that God is not deeper still". ~ Betsie Ten Boom (on her deathbed) regarding her Nazi concentration camp experience

Here are 30 Believers who were imprisoned, persecuted, or tortured for their faith.

Nr. Name Circumstances Bible References Teaching Point / Quote
1 Joseph Sold by brothers, falsely accused, imprisoned in Egypt Gen 39:20; 40–41 Faithfulness in prison leads to God’s provision. — Charles Spurgeon
2 Jeremiah Arrested, put in a cistern for prophesying God’s word Jer 37:15–21; 38:6 God’s servants are safe in His hands, not men’s. — John MacArthur
3 Daniel Thrown into lions’ den for praying to God Dan 6:10–24 Obedience brings God’s supernatural protection. — A.W. Tozer
4 Shadrach, Meshach, Abednego Threatened with fiery furnace for refusing idol worship Dan 3:13–27 Faith in God surpasses human authority. — Charles Spurgeon
5 Peter Arrested multiple times for preaching Jesus Acts 4:3; 5:18–19; 12:1–11 God can intervene miraculously in prison. — John Piper
6 John the Apostle Exiled to Patmos for preaching Rev 1:9 Exile can become a place of revelation and hope. — Watchman Nee
7 Paul Arrested, whipped, imprisoned, shipwrecked, executed Acts 16:23–40; 21:27–36; 2 Cor 11:23–28 Chains became wings of the Gospel. — Martin Luther
8 Silas Imprisoned with Paul for casting out a demon Acts 16:22–26 Singing and prayer in prison lead to miracles. — John Stott
9 James, brother of John Executed by Herod for faith Acts 12:1–2 Faith unto death conquers eternity. — Charles Spurgeon
10 Apostles / early disciples Imprisoned repeatedly for preaching Acts 5:17–42; 21:30–36 Chains cannot bind truth; prisons cannot silence Spirit. — John Calvin
11 Stephen Stoned for preaching Christ Acts 6:8–7:60 Martyrdom is ultimate witness. — William Wilberforce
12 Ezekiel Faced opposition, symbolic confinement by God’s vision Ezek 24:16–18 God can use symbolic imprisonment to reveal His plan. — Matthew Henry
13 Isaiah Threatened by King Manasseh 2 Kings 21:16; Isa 37:1 Prophets may face mortal danger for truth. — J.C. Ryle
14 Jonah Swallowed by fish Jonah 1:17 God’s “prison” prepares for obedience and mission. — Charles Spurgeon
15 John the Baptist Imprisoned by Herod for speaking truth Mark 6:17–29 Courage to speak truth may cost freedom. — John MacArthur
16 Anna the Prophetess While not jailed, endured oppression in silence Luke 2:36–38 Faithful waiting under societal opposition counts. — A.W. Tozer
17 Zechariah, son of Jehoiada Killed for prophesying against injustice 2 Chron 24:20–22 Speaking truth to power may lead to death. — Matthew Henry
18 Jeremiah’s companions Imprisoned for supporting him Jer 38:7–13 God honors those who stand with His messengers. — John MacArthur
19 Paul (Roman custody) Imprisoned in Caesarea, Rome Acts 23–28 God uses prison to advance mission. — John Piper
20 Peter (Herod’s prison) Guards posted, chained, freed by angel Acts 12:1–11 God’s timing is perfect for deliverance. — Watchman Nee
21 Daniel’s companions in Babylon Opposed culturally, faced death threats Dan 1:8–16 Resolve to honor God in hostile systems. — Charles Spurgeon
22 Elijah Threatened by Jezebel 1 Kings 19:1–3 Fear does not nullify God’s mission. — J.C. Ryle
23 Nehemiah Faced plots while rebuilding wall Neh 6:1–9 Opposition may appear as imprisonment. — Matthew Henry
24 John Mark Imprisoned by circumstances in ministry 2 Tim 4:11 (implied) Even setbacks can become preparation. — John Stott
25 Paul & Timothy Multiple imprisonments 2 Tim 1:16–18 God’s grace strengthens in chains. — Martin Luther
26 Cornelius (Roman soldier) Persecution in early Church Acts 10 God opens doors even under surveillance. — A.W. Tozer
27 Enoch / Noah’s contemporaries Spiritual imprisonment by corruption Gen 5:22–24; Heb 11:7 Walking with God separates from lawless culture. — Charles Spurgeon
28 Moses Flees Egypt, symbolic imprisonment under Pharaoh Ex 2:15–22 God’s call often passes through human-imposed limitation. — John MacArthur
29 Samson Captured and blinded by Philistines Judges 16:21–30 Weakness and captivity can precede God’s victory. — Watchman Nee
30 Apostles at the Jerusalem Council Faced civil and religious opposition Acts 15:1–35 Perseverance under persecution establishes truth. — John Calvin

Let their lives encourage you to pray and live boldly as they did. 

Did ya see that 1963 classic movie called The Great Escape starring Steve McQueen as Captain Virgil "The Cooler King" an American P.O.W. stuck in a German prison/concentration camp? (BTW Steve later got saved by Jesus. You can too, right here and now. Don't put it off. Refuse to wait any longer)

Paul and Silas had a much greater escape! Each could explain it was cuz they loved the Lord!
"I'm all shook up!"

The Apostle Peter's escape was also much greater. He was led by an angel out of his prison cell (can you envision him all groggy and blurry-eyed? Our great and faithful God was the real greatness part of that historic scene (See Acts 12:6-17).  

Sorry, but it reminds me of that ole song on the radio (that dates me):

"Well I said shake, rattle and roll
I said shake rattle and roll
I said shake, rattle and roll
I said shake rattle and roll
Well you won't do right to save your doggone soul
Shake rattle and roll!" ~ Elvis

What does it remind you of?

Here's what Paul and Salas went through: "Suddenly there was such a violent earthquake that the foundations of the prison were shaken. At once all the prison doors flew open, and everyone’s chains came loose." Acts 16"26

Listen, if you ever go to jail or prison for no wrongdoing of your own, praise the Lord anyway. Yeah, do like Paul and Silas did.

Check out the whole 16th chapter of Acts!

“But in all things we commend ourselves as ministers of God: in much patience” (2 Cor. 6:4). I love to look at the patience of Jail-bird Paul...

- In waiting for a helper (Acts 16:1–5). Timothy replaced John Mark and became a true son in the faith to Paul. God has the right person ready at the right time, so be patient.

- In seeking God’s will (6–10). He was an apostle, yet he did not always know the direction God wanted him to take. He took steps, God closed doors, so he waited; and then God showed him the way.

- In ministering the Word (11–15). They waited “some days” before seeking a place to witness, and God had hearts all prepared.

In bearing annoyance (16–18). Paul put up with the demonic promotion as long as he could and then cast out the demon. Paul knew that his action would create problems for him, and it did.

- In enduring suffering (19–25). Paul did not use his Roman citizenship to protect himself from pain (22:22–29), but later he used it to protect the new church (vv. 35–40). When you hurt, ask God to give you songs in the night (Ps. 42:8).

- In winning a lost soul (26–34). Paul had his eyes on the keeper of the prison and in kindness won him to Christ. How much are we willing to suffer to win someone to the Lord, especially someone who has hurt us?

“Patience is power. With time and patience, the mulberry leaf becomes silk!” ~ Chinese Proverb

Even in chains, their devotion and worship unto Jesus Christ shone. With their feet secured in stocks, they lifted their voices up in song for their first-love, hymns of praise echoing in the darkness there. 

At midnight, an earthquake shattered the prison doors, freeing every prisoner. The jailer, fearing the penalty for their escape, was ready to take his own life. But Paul and Silas intervened, guiding him to safety, and in that very night, he and his household came to faith (Acts 16:25–34). Scripture hints that Silas, like Paul, was a Roman citizen (v. 37), yet citizenship could not shield them from suffering for the gospel.

Their mission continued. In Thessalonica, Paul and Silas preached boldly in the synagogue. Many Jews were convinced, and Greeks, including prominent women, were drawn to faith (Acts 17:1–4). But opposition followed. Unbelieving Jews stirred up trouble, accusing Jason, a new believer, of hosting “men who have turned the world upside down” (Acts 17:5–8). Undeterred, Paul and Silas traveled to Berea, where they found “more noble” listeners who examined the Scriptures daily, proving the truth for themselves (Acts 17:11–12).

The final mention of Silas in Acts comes in Corinth (Acts 18:5). Paul stayed there for a year and a half (v. 11) before returning to Antioch, leaving Silas’s later movements unrecorded. Tradition suggests he remained in Corinth as a pastor. Peter honors him as “a faithful brother” (1 Peter 5:12), and Paul references him in 2 Corinthians 1:19 and the greetings of his letters to the Thessalonians.

The story of Paul and Silas reminds us of the value of faithful companions in God’s work. Their hearts were aligned, their commitment unwavering, and their ministry inseparable. Whether seeking the Spirit’s guidance, blazing trails across continents, preaching in synagogues, or singing in the darkness of a jail cell, they acted in unity. Their loyalty—to Christ, to the gospel, and to one another—sets a model for believers today. As Ecclesiastes 4:9–10 reminds us, “Two are better than one…if either of them falls, one can help the other up.” Faithful companions, like Paul and Silas, are gifts from God, partners in the tireless labor of spreading His truth.

Praise God I've never been behind any bars -- used to go to a few bars (in the 70s). Really don't need those either. 

God has wisely set specific boundries for you to live within. 

I say try not to go to jail (at least not for any wrongdoin's you know, like sneekin' into some country unlawfully), but earnestly seek to know, obey, and tactfully minister the gospel for God's glory. There is indeed a good place of blessing for you live in the will of God and that spot won't include lawbreaking on your part.  Regardless of the costs, and if you go, you go. He will guide and keep you no matter what. 

Tuesday, November 11, 2025

Light has come into the world, but men loved the darkness rather than the Light because their deeds were evil. Everyone who does evil hates the Light, and does not come into the Light

Is your country under judgment? Sorry about that. What can we do?

It is a good day to repent of sin and pray. We each can do this and get right with God

"And this is the verdict: The Light has come into the world, but men loved the darkness rather than the Light because their deeds were evil. Everyone who does evil hates the Light, and does not come into the Light for fear that his deeds will be exposed. But whoever practices the truth comes into the Light, so that it may be seen clearly that what he has done has been accomplished in God.” John 3:19-20

When a nation begins to crumble, when a society begins to collapse, it isn’t merely a political problem—it’s a spiritual one too. 

The real spiritual sickness beneath every broken culture is a rejection of the Light. Jesus declared, “This is the verdict: Light has come into the world, but men loved darkness rather than light because their deeds were evil” (John 3:19). 

Every moral decline or crash is rooted in that truth. When people turn away from God and the Word of God ..the dark shadows lengthen over the land.

As Vance Havner once warned, “At the rate we are going, we will soon reach the point where sin is a crime and crime is not.” 

When a society celebrates what God condemns, it’s because hearts have grown calloused to His voice. The apostle Paul described it perfectly: 

“Although they knew God, they neither glorified Him as God nor gave thanks to Him… their foolish hearts were darkened” (Romans 1:21).

How should a Christian view all these bad things happening in our world and politics?

When you see bad things happening in your culture, it's because (citizens or non-citizens) voted the wrong way.. or an ungodly leader was installed.

When you see really terrible things happening in your culture, it's because people love darkness rather than light. (Read some more on this...)

Saturday, November 8, 2025

Who Were Some Notable Preachers In The Bible? How Did They Feel About What They Did?

The godly ones felt it was to be a top horizontal priority. 

We are to witness for Jesus and preach Jesus in a non-pushy or preachy sort of way where people feel pressured. 

Preaching Must Be Our Horizontal Priority As Well, Believer.

How is hearing by the Word of God (Romans 10:17)?

What happens to those who have never heard about Jesus?

How can I witness, tell my own story, and evangelize my friends and family without pushing them away?

 This message must first be heard - those who preach it will have “beautiful feet.” 

What is the difference between preaching and teaching? Preaching is predominantly for the lost, so they will decide to come to the Lord, and teaching the Word is predominantly for the saved (disciples) so they can opt to grow and mature in the Lord.

What does “how can they hear without a preacher” even mean?

"So then faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the word of God." Romans 10:17

For over forty years, I have had the privilege of ministering God’s Word—in a couple mega churches and in humble classrooms and living rooms. I'm a grayheaded guy now, but I pray and do my best to encourage people in the Lord.. and to come to the Lord.. or come back to Him. I want people to be edified by the Holy Spirit from the Scriptures. 

One truth becomes undeniable: it is the preaching of God’s Word that changes lives. This is how He chooses to make Himself known.

God left behind a preaching church and not a chain of restaurants or law offices. Nothing more.. a church. 

God could have come to us in endless ways. Jesus could have painted the skies up with clear images of His glory. I love all the colors he puts accross our skies! 

Psalm 19:1 tells us, “The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands.” 

Nature whispers of God and His truth, yet it is preaching the gospel that God has prioritized for His people, it's the channel through which His Spirit touches hearts most powerfully and God gets all the credit for that. 

Paul affirms this: “For since, in the wisdom of God, the world through wisdom did not know God, it pleased God through the foolishness of the message preached to save those who believe” (1 Corinthians 1:21).

Stirred to Use Your Gift and Speak What's True.

Have you ever felt righteous indignation at sin in your life on in the life of another who is hurting others? That holy unrest, the grief that grips your soul when you see a world drifting farther and farther away into lies and darkness.. should be there! 

Paul felt it when in Athens. Acts 17:16 says, “While Paul was waiting for them in Athens, he was greatly distressed to see that the city was full of idols.” Some translations call it “provoked in his spirit,” ..“exasperated” by the sin, or even “hot and mad” ..not at people. This was holy zeal, not anger, a divine stirring that compelled him to good actions.

Does it grieve you to see generations ripped off spiritually? To see them repeating the same old destructive paths their parents or forefathers did? To see people buying so many lies the previous generation believed? That grief is of God. It's part of His call as he calls each of us closer and closer to Himself: “Woe to me if I do not preach the gospel!” (1 Corinthians 9:16). Without a burden (a genuine heartfelt concern) for the lost, no amount of professional training or memorized verses will matter, or amount to a hill of beans (and I am not against good education or training. Hundreds around me have much better education than I have had. So many around me are very effective fishers of men and women).

John Wesley once said, “Give me one hundred preachers who fear nothing but sin and desire nothing but God, and I care not a straw whether they be clergymen or laymen; such alone will shake the gates of hell and set up the kingdom of heaven on Earth.” 

What's your prayer life like? Do you pray for opportunities to witness and preach or teach the Bible to people who are willing to listen? You have not because you ask not. Could that be said of you regarding your prayers? The urgency to proclaim and minister God’s Word must rise from deep within us--from the indwelling Holy Spirit cuz that's His passion to see us preaching Christ without watering it down. 

The Power of the Preached Word is Unmeasureable -- God Can Do More With It Than We Think He Can

On Mars Hill, Paul could have relied on drama skills or music more—the Greeks loved a public spectacle. But he preached the gospel in a creative way. He built a bridge and didn't burn a bridge. He had an understanding with them, reasoning, so they would fail to have a misunderstanding. 

Could you preach through song if you were gifted to sing? Man, I think you could. Nothing rivals the power of God’s Word bodly proclaimed. Herr Martin Luther called music the “handmaiden of theology.” This could be an aid to help it, this is beautifully illustrating the point: worship can inspire people, but clear preaching can be used of God to regenerate and transform them. Pray, don't just say what others have said. You want God to bless others through you with anointed preaching or witnessing. 

I confess: I never wanted to preach. I wanted to surf until I was too old to surf. As a religious altar boy in the Roman church, I didn't have anything to say in regards to public speaking and winning souls. Religion says do good, be good and hope you get into heaven one day. 

I'm not interested in religion anymore. Yet the first times I preached on a beach and a Jamaican street and then in their churches for a summer, God’s Spirit moved, not just in others, but in me too. Lives were touched (I was told) and they responded to the gospel message. This is the power Paul described: “It pleased God through the foolishness of the message preached to save those who believe.”

You might not be called into a full-time career ministry (like on some far away mission field or here in the USA domestically), but all Christians are called to minister the word and witness for Jesus. Everyone whom Jesus called, He called openly and publicly. I've enjoyed doing both far away in Eastern and Western Europe, in South America full-time, and as a tent-maker minister domestically. All Christians are to be full-time, yes full-time ministers. It's mostly fun to serve the Lord and it's hard work as well. There are times when the Lord might lead you to preach and teach, or teach and preach some with the same message. 

Daily there is a time to live for Jesus and add words

Who is Joel Osteen, doesn't he have the biggest church in the USA and are his teachings biblical?

Like Jesus and many others did, why did John the Baptist preach repentance?

What does it mean to proclaim good news to the poor (Isaiah 61:1)?

When is it right to criticize my pastor?

Why was Paul, the excellent preacher, thrown into prison?

Who is the Preacher in Ecclesiastes?

Why do so many preachers' kids walk away from the faith? Have they just seen too many weird churches in areas, and too many false and greedy preachers?

What does the Greek New Testament mean by kerygma?

Why do so many of us Christians at times fail at that “practice what you preach" command?

What is the gospel of Paul?

What does 2 Timothy 4:3 mean by itching ears?

Who was George Whitefield and what kind of preacher was he?

What does the “foolishness of the message” mean?

What is the significance of Jesus saying, “You will be my witnesses?

What is expositional preaching?

What is topical preaching? (I enjoy both types, verse by verse or on topics)

What is hellfire preaching? Is that preaching even biblical?

On Christian witnessing unto martyrdom - what does the Bible say?

What is the Great Commission.. not Omission?

What are some Bible verses about preaching?

What does it mean to preach the Word?

Who are the two witnesses in the book of Revelation?

Are all prosperity preachers charlatans or false teachers? There sure have been too many of them.

What is the meaning of the name Jesus?

Since women preachers can be just as good as men.. should they do that? There are indeed people for each of us to minister to. 

What does the Bible say about women pastors?

What is a good process for preparing a sermon?

What is homiletics?

What does it mean to preach Christ from envy and strife? Don't do it with wrong motives.

What are some Bible verses about witnessing?

I enjoy much of the arts, not all that's call art. Yes, some have their place with real art. Some of it needs to go into the trash can. Some music lifts the heart, and some design inspires the eye, and I'm convinced that good creativity celebrates God’s glory. But preaching the Word opens ears, softens stony hard hearts, and saves souls (God blesses His Word to people, and uses it that way). 

Be accurate, be compassionate, be saved! Don't preach until you are really saved and have an assurance of this. Come as you are to Christ in repentance and faith, so called reverends and ministers. Don't preach another time until the great preacher -- the Holy Spirit lives big on the inside of you. Good churchy works, titles, or "seniority" shouldn't give you an assurance inside

People from every land matter. Charles Spurgeon was a preacher and he reminded other preachers, “A sermon is not a lecture, it is a message from God to man.” When you pray and deliver God's message as it is written, it carries God’s full authority; the Word is unstoppable.

I Respectfully Challenge You To Witness And Preach The Gospel.. To Win Souls

Statistics during these last days remind us that our world is increasingly indifferent to truth. George Barna reports that fewer than one in four Americans regularly read the Bible, and only 1 in 10 share their faith with non-believers. Yet every generation needs the gospel anew. 

Every heart needs the living hope that only the living Word (Christ) can bring. There is not spiritual growth for anyone apart from the Word of God. 

You mission is clear, and my mission is clear: 1.) Live the life in relationship with God through Christ and 2.) Proclaim the Word boldly, lovingly, tactfully, respectfully, and persistently for decisions so that people will start wanting to get saved. That's who Jesus saves. Let your heart be stirred by the serious plight of the lost, really moved by righteous indignation at how sin and Satan rip people off, and filled with holy zeal to see God's churches planted -- yes, Kingdom expansion. Ask God to use you. Ask Him to ignite a fire within you -- that same passion that drove/compelled Paul to preach under the shadow of dumb idols.

What does it mean that the love of Christ compels us?

What does it mean to contend for the faith?

What does the Bible say about talking too much -- some people go too long when they need to wind it up sooner. 

How can I know if I am being called to preach as a layman or a career preacher? 

Sadly, some preachers love a big crowd, but they don't love individual people. That's just wrong.. even if the prep and delivery of a message can be more pleasurable (it's like an art) than hearing their painful problems. It's true, see how they do one one-on-one before or after the service. Do they always quickly ditch individuals? Shepherds are to love and feed God's sheep, not fleece, beat, or ditch them. They are not to be competitive or mean with each other.

“All the world is awake with the sound of music, but the Word of God alone awakens the soul.” Fanny Crosby

“Preach the Gospel at all times. When necessary, use words.” Billy Graham 

Christian, you are to be a tool in God's hand, a vessel to pour through. And words are the vessel too, but the Spirit is the power.

Need a takeaway from all my peachiness here? 

Preaching the word (all the counsels of God) is not optional for the local church. It is central to God’s plan for making Himself known around the world. It is the heartbeat of the church, the lever of soul-winning transformation, and the conduit (God uses for) salvation. Whether we stand on grand stages, street corners, or in intimate lecture rooms, the call remains the same: God and His promises haven't changed, and proclaiming God’s Word with courage, with love, with accuracy, with care for His people, and with unwavering faith is imperative.

Let us give and commit ourselves anew to Him, to His Book, to trusting that the Gospel we preach is alive, is powerful, and is sharper than any two-edged sword. Cuz that's what God says:

"For the word of God is living and powerful, and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the division of soul and spirit, and of joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart." Hebrews 4:12

Help us Lord, to be faithful and fruitful in witnessing this way. I know that's what you expect freom us believers. Let our lives be a testament to Your truth and Love, our preaching a spark that lights a big blaze of faith in lonely hearts longing for hope. 

“There are over 190 Bible verses that refer to preaching” — thus preaching is a core biblical phenomenon, not optional.

Preaching across the ages has held both warning (judgment) and hope (kingdom of God)

I. Old Testament Preachers — Heralds of God’s Message

1. Noah – “A preacher of righteousness.”


Verse: 2 Peter 2:5 – “[God] did not spare the ancient world, but preserved Noah, a preacher of righteousness, with seven others…”

Message: Warned of judgment and preached repentance before the Flood.

“Noah preached for 120 years and saw no converts—yet he obeyed God.” – Unknown

2. Moses – Proclaimed God’s law and deliverance.

Verses: Deut 32:1–3; Ex 3:10–12.

Message: Declared God’s covenant, redemption, and warnings to Israel.

“Moses was not eloquent, but obedient—and God made his rod mightier than Pharaoh’s sword.” – Charles Spurgeon

3. Samuel – Called Israel to repentance and holiness.

Verse: 1 Sam 7:3–4 – “If you are returning to the LORD with all your heart…serve Him only.”

“The preacher’s task is not popularity but purity.” – Vance Havner

4. Elijah – Bold prophet confronting sin and idolatry.

Verse: 1 Kings 18:21 – “How long halt ye between two opinions?”

“Elijah’s sermons were short, sharp, and straight—thunder before the rain.” – R.G. Lee

5. Elisha – Preached God’s power and mercy.

Verse: 2 Kings 6:17 – “LORD, open his eyes that he may see.”

Message: Demonstrated the living God through miracles and truth.

6. Jonah – Preached repentance to Nineveh.

Verse: Jonah 3:2 – “Preach to it the message that I tell you.”

“God can take a reluctant preacher and bring a city to its knees.” – Billy Graham

7. Isaiah – Preached holiness, judgment, and hope.

Verses: Isa 6:8–9; Isa 61:1–2.

“Isaiah preached with the grandeur of heaven and the gravity of eternity.” – J. Vernon McGee

8. Jeremiah – Weeping prophet proclaiming judgment and renewal.

Verse: Jer 1:7, 10.

“Jeremiah had fire in his bones; may every preacher have the same.” – Leonard Ravenhill

9. Ezekiel – Preacher to exiles, warning and restoring hope.

Verse: Ezek 2:7 – “You shall speak My words to them, whether they hear or refuse.”

“The true preacher speaks whether men will hear or not, because God has spoken.” – A.W. Tozer

10. Amos – Shepherd-preacher declaring justice.

Verse: Amos 3:8 – “The Lord GOD has spoken; who can but prophesy?”

“A man with a message from God cannot remain silent.” – John Wesley

11. Micah – Preached against corruption, calling for mercy and humility.

Verse: Mic 6:8.

12. John the Baptist – The voice crying in the wilderness.

Verse: Matt 3:1–2 – “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!”

“John the Baptist was a burning and shining light; may God make us the same.” – D.L. Moody


II. New Testament Preachers

13. Jesus Christ – The Supreme Preacher

Verses:

Mark 1:14–15 – “Jesus came preaching the gospel of the kingdom of God.”

Luke 4:18 – “The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, because He has anointed Me to preach…”

“Jesus Christ was the greatest preacher who ever lived; He spoke as one having authority.” – Charles Spurgeon

14. Peter – Preached boldly after Pentecost.

Verses: Acts 2:14–41; Acts 3:19.

“The fisherman became a fisher of men through the power of the Holy Ghost.” – R.A. Torrey

15. Stephen – The first martyr-preacher.

Verse: Acts 7:2–60 – A powerful sermon recounting Israel’s history and pointing to Christ.

“Stephen’s sermon was his death sentence—and his crown.” – John Stott

16. Philip the Evangelist – Preached in Samaria and to the Ethiopian.

Verses: Acts 8:5, 35.

“True preaching always leads souls to Jesus, not to the preacher.” – Vance Havner

17. Paul – The apostle-preacher to the Gentiles.

Verses: Acts 20:24; 2 Tim 4:2.


“Woe is me if I do not preach the gospel.” – (1 Cor 9:16)

“A prepared preacher is better than a polished one.” – Charles Spurgeon

18. Apollos – Eloquent preacher mighty in the Scriptures.

Verse: Acts 18:24–28.

Quote: “Apollos was mighty in Scripture before he was mighty in the pulpit.” – John MacArthur

19. Barnabas – Preacher of encouragement and faith.

Verse: Acts 11:22–24.

20. Timothy – Paul’s son in the faith, called to preach faithfully.

Verse: 2 Tim 4:2 – “Preach the word; be instant in season and out of season.”

Quote: “Timothy was to preach the Word, not opinions, not fables, not trends.” – John Stott

21. Titus – Preacher on Crete establishing sound doctrine.

Verse: Titus 2:1, 15.

III. Great Christian Quotes on Preaching


“The preaching of the Word of God is the Word of God.” – Martin Luther

“It is not a sermon if it does not make the devils tremble.” – John Knox

“Preaching is theology coming through a man who is on fire.” – Martyn Lloyd-Jones

“If you have no passion for souls, you have no business preaching.” – Leonard Ravenhill

“The pulpit is never to be used to display the preacher, but to exalt the Redeemer.” – Charles Spurgeon

“Preach as a dying man to dying men.” – Richard Baxter

“A sermon born in the head reaches the head; a sermon born in the heart reaches the heart.” – John Wesley

Preaching Passages & Statistics

PassageContentInsight/Statistic
Jesus Christ – Matthew 4:17: “From that time Jesus began to preach, ‘Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.’” Wikipedia+1The commencement of Jesus’s public preaching ministry.Shows that preaching is central to His ministry from the start.
John the Baptist (Luke 3:3) – “He went into the whole region around the Jordan, proclaiming a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins.” Jesus Everyday+1Example of preaching of repentance and the coming kingdom.A model for the preacher’s call to declare God’s message.
Apostle Paul the Apostle – 1 Corinthians 9:16: “For if I preach the gospel, I have nothing to boast of, for necessity is laid upon me. Woe to me if I do not preach the gospel!” Sarata+1The sense of urgency and obligation in Christian preaching.A strong reminder of our responsibility in proclaiming the Word.
Preaching-verses overall – There are over 190 Bible verses that reference preaching (not counting all instances of proclamation in narrative) propreacher.com+1Indicates the weight of preaching throughout Scripture.Useful for sermon-preparation: we are well-grounded in the biblical text.
Sermon topics usage (2021 data) – According to analysis of more than 91,000 sermons: the most popular passages were John 3:16, Matthew 28:18-20, Ephesians 2:8, Acts 1:8 etc. Lifeway ResearchInsight into what pastors are preaching on now.For your teaching/concierge role this helps align with current Christian conversation.


* Preacher Profiles – Key Figures & Their Messages

Here are a few selected from the exhaustive list, refined for teaching use:

NamePreaching Passage(s)Key MessageDistinguishing Quote
Noah2 Peter 2:5 – “Noah… a preacher of righteousness.”Preaching in advance of judgment; righteousness before God.“Noah preached for 120 years and saw no converts — yet he obeyed God.”
MosesExodus 3:10-12; Deuteronomy 32:1-3Deliverance, covenant, law and mercy.“Moses was not eloquent, but obedient — and God made his rod mightier than Pharaoh’s sword.”
IsaiahIsaiah 61:1-2; Isaiah 6:8-9Holiness, judgment, hope, the coming Messiah.“Isaiah preached with the grandeur of heaven and the gravity of eternity.”
Jesus ChristMatthew 4:17; Mark 1:14-15The good news of the kingdom, repentance, God’s reign.“Jesus Christ was the greatest preacher who ever lived; He spoke as one having authority.”
Peter (apostle)Acts 2:14-41Arrival of the Holy Spirit, Christ’s resurrection, call to repent.“The fisherman became a fisher of men through the power of the Holy Ghost.”
Paul the Apostle2 Timothy 4:2; 1 Cor 9:16; Romans 10:15Evangelism, the gospel of grace, necessity of preaching.“Woe is me if I do not preach the gospel.”
ApollosActs 18:24-28Eloquent in Scriptures, ministry of doctrine and boldness.“Apollos was mighty in Scripture before he was mighty in the pulpit.”