“We cannot leave
the Bible behind,” murmured the deacon to his neighbor. “It will
be heavy to carry, but it is too precious to leave. I will leave
something else behind, but we must have the Bible!”
The two men belonged to a little Armenian church in the
mountains of Syria. Terrible persecution had come to the
Christians in that land, as the Turks tried to wipe out all who
believed in Jesus.
“The Turks are coming this way!” a terrified messenger had
cried, and now the whole village was getting ready to leave
their valley.
Men, women, and children, all of the families of the church must
flee over the mountains. The people were poor. Very few owned a
donkey to carry their possessions, so they walked, carrying only
the most necessary things. Soon a long line of people straggled
along the track to the mountain, pulling their children with
them. “Hurry! The Turks are coming — the Turks will kill us!”
they repeated over and over.
The church deacon walked with the rest, carrying the treasured
Bible. In those days, most Armenian Christians had no Bibles of
their own at home, so the church Bible was very precious. And
this Bible was an extra-special one, a big, heavy pulpit Bible
which had been a gift from the missionary, Elias Riggs.
As the refugees hurried on, the mountain trail grew steep and
rocky. “Daddy, carry me!” weary children sobbed. Soon many tired
people began leaving their bundles of food and clothing beside
the path, for they had no strength left to carry them. The
deacon carried the Bible as long as he could. But finally his
strength gave out. Tears of weariness rolled down his cheeks as
he gently laid the Bible on a rock near the trail.
“Lord, forgive me,” he prayed. “Take care of our Bible now, for
I cannot!”
Picking up his whimpering child, the deacon staggered on. Night
was coming, and the Christians must hurry!
As darkness fell upon the mountainside, a lone mother came up
the path with her two children. She had been left behind, for
she could not keep up with the others.
“I must rest again,” the
woman groaned. “We can go no farther.” Tired legs trembling, she
sank down on a rock beside the road. But something was in the
way! Feeling about her in the dark, her hands explored the
object’s fine leather cover. “This is our church Bible!” she
gasped in dismay. “Who could have left it here? Somehow I must
take it with me.”
After a short rest, the woman wearily rose to her feet. Leaving
behind the blanket which she had brought to keep her children
warm, she carried the Bible instead. And so, with her baby in
one arm and the big Bible in the other, she trudged wearily on.
At last she arrived at the next village. But what was happening?
The enemy must be here already! An angry mob of men in red fez
hats, waving torches and big knives, milled about in the
streets. The church — I must go to the church, thought the
frightened mother. Maybe the other Christians will be there.
Slipping among the dark shadows of buildings, she made her way
with her children to the back of the village church. Creeping
cautiously up to a side door, she knocked softly. “It’s me,” she
said and whispered her name.
Someone unlocked the door and opened it just enough for the
woman to slip in with her children. On the floor in the dark
church house, several hundred Christians huddled together, their
faces terrified.
“Fear not, neighbors — I have our Bible!” whispered the woman,
holding up the Book. “She has our Bible!” whispered a man. “She
brought the Bible!” glad whispers spread around the room.
“Here is a little candle I found,” someone murmured softly.
“And I have a match,” said another hushed voice.
The Bible was carried into the center of the group, and someone
lighted the one little candle with the match. Women close by
shaded the small flame with a circle of long skirts, lest its
light be seen outside the church. And then into the darkness and
fear came a new feeling of God’s presence, as one of the
Christians began to read in a low voice from Psalm 91:
“He that dwelleth in the secret place of the Most High, shall
abide under the shadow of the Almighty. I will say of the Lord,
He is my refuge and my fortress: my God, in Him will I trust.
Surely He shall deliver thee . . . thou shalt not be afraid for
the terror by night, nor for the arrow that flieth by day . . .
”
And so they read the promises of God’s Word, until the little
candle finally burned itself out. Then the people, full of
renewed faith in God, lay down and fell asleep where they were
on the floor of the church.
For two days and nights the Christians remained in the church.
The Turks soon discovered their hiding place, and threatening
shouts filled the air. “Come out, Christians, or we’ll burn you
out! You’ll never escape from us!”
But the Christians did not reply. “We will stay here,” their
leaders whispered to one another. “Better to die by fire,
together, than to fall into the hands of the cruel Turks. And
God is able to save us. He is our refuge and fortress!”
On the third morning, there was silence outside the church. At
last there came a timid knock at the door. “The Turks are gone!”
called a sympathetic villager. “They left in the night. You are
safe, you may come out now!”
It was true. The Turks were gone, and what thanksgiving filled
the hearts of the Christians as they came out into the sunshine!
“It was very strange,” the villager said to the Christians.
“They tried again and again to set the church on fire! Once they
even tried to pour kerosene through a hole in the roof to burn
you all out. But their fires would never light and every effort
failed. I cannot understand it.”
But the Christians understood! “God is our refuge and our
fortress,” they reminded one another happily. “He gave His
angels charge over us, and we were safe.”
Historical Note:
This miracle happened in
1909, during the massacres of
Christians in Armenia by the Turks.
Dr. Elias Riggs, the missionary, died eight years before the
story took place. During his sixty-eight years of missionary
service, he translated the Bible into the Armenian and Turkish
languages. He is said to have had a working knowledge of
twenty-one different languages!
To order this
wonderful book,
Missionary Stories with the Millers,
please contact
Don L. Martin at Green Pastures Press.
Email:
greenpastures@emypeople.net
Phone 717-436-9119
Copyright 1993. All Rights Reserved. Published on this website by permission
of Green Pastures Press. No part of this chapter may reproduced in any
manner without written permission from the publisher.