The world remembers kings, conquerors, and empires. But heaven remembers men and women who walked by faith.
After the apostles of the Lamb of God, God never stopped raising witnesses. They preached when it was illegal.
They believed when it was dangerous. They endured when it cost them everything.
You are reading the heroes of faith. The true stories of believers whose lives proved that God is real. His power is timeless and faith still changes the world.
The electric battery connected with his body for the third time that morning, and the guards laughed as he crashed into the frozen mud of the prison courtyard. His legs had already been deliberately shattered by a baton wielding officer who wanted to make sure he would never escape again. He was barely more than skin and bones, having eaten nothing for over 70 days. His ears had shriveled. Most of his hair had been torn out. His own wife, standing just feet away, looked at this broken creature and declared to the guards, "This is not my husband. There must be some mistake." But it was him.
And in just a few weeks, this same man, this prisoner who could not even crawl to the toilet without help, would walk out of a maximum security prison through a series of locked iron gates, past dozens of armed guards, not one of whom would say a single word to stop him. He would step out onto a busy street, hail a taxi, and disappear. This is the story of Lu Xening, the man China's Communist government called the most dangerous Christian criminal in the nation.
The man whom his brothers and sisters called brother Yun, the man the world would come to know simply as the heavenly man.
To understand how a boy from a tiny farming village in the heart of China became one of the most extraordinary figures in the history of the modern church, you have to understand the world he was born into.
The year was 1958. China was in the grip of Mao Zedong's communist revolution and the province of Hunan where young Lu Jianing came into the world was a place of almost unimaginable hardship. Nearly 100 million people lived in Hunan, making it the most populated province in all of China. And yet the village where Yun was born, a small settlement called Lu Laoang in Nanyang County, contained just 600 souls, all of them farmers.
Their home was made of compacted dried mud. The roof was straw. In winter, icy winds blew through the gaps in the walls. They could not afford coal, so they burned leftover corn husks to stay warm. In summer, it was so hot the entire family dragged their beds outside and slept under the open sky. Yun was the fourth of five children. His father was a former captain in the Nationalist Army, a man with 12 bullet wound scars on one leg and a reputation so fearsome that neighbors crossed the street to avoid him. Because of his father's past, the family was a target during the cultural revolution. Red guards came and interrogated and beat his father repeatedly. But the old soldier, stubborn as the Hunan people were known to be, refused to confess to anything.
Christianity had come to Hunan with Protestant missionaries back in 1884.
For nearly 40 years, they had labored with minimal visible success. By 1922, after almost four decades of effort, there were barely 12,000 Protestant believers in the entire province. Those who accepted the faith were ridiculed, beaten, and sometimes killed. The missionaries themselves were considered agents of foreign imperialism.
The Boxer Rebellion, also known as the Boxer Uprising, Boxer Movement, Yihetuan Movement, or Boxer War, was an anti-foreign, anti-imperialist, and anti-Christian uprising in North China between 1899 and 1901, towards the end of the Qing dynasty, by the Society of Righteous and Harmonious Fists. Its members were known as the "Boxers" in English, owing to many of them practicing Chinese martial arts, which at the time were referred to as "Chinese boxing". It was defeated by the Eight-Nation Alliance of foreign powers. Following the First Sino-Japanese War, villagers in North China feared the expansion of foreign spheres of influence and resented Christian missionaries who ignored local customs and used their power to protect their followers in court. In 1898, North China experienced natural disasters, including the Yellow River flooding and droughts, which Boxers blamed on foreign and Christian influence .
In 1900, the Boxer Rebellion erupted and more than 150 missionaries were massacred along with thousands of Chinese converts. Brave men and women who had come to build hospitals and orphanages and schools were repaid with death, but they came back. One of them was a small Norwegian woman named Marie Monson, who stepped off a boat onto Chinese soil on the first day of September 1901, just months after the bloodshed. She would spend the next 30 years in China. And she would change everything. She was unlike any missionary the Chinese church had ever seen. She didn't flatter the local church leaders. She confronted them. She stood in their meetings and told them to their faces that they were hypocrites. That they confessed Jesus with their lips while their hearts were far from him. She told them they must be radically, personally, genuinely born again or they would perish. And when she said it, the Holy Spirit moved and people fell to their knees weeping and revival fires swept from village to village across central China. Marie Monson spent time in Nanyang County, the very county where decades later, a boy named Yun would be born. She poured the fire of God into a small group of Chinese believers there. And then in 1932, she went home to Norway to care for her aging parents. And she never returned to China. But what she lit could not be extinguished. Years later, in the 1940s, a western missionary preached the gospel to a 20-year-old woman in Nanyang. She didn't fully understand it, but she loved the songs and the Bible stories. She began attending a small church and gave her life to Jesus Christ. Her name was Yan's mother. Then in 1949, China became a communist nation and everything changed.
Within years, missionaries were expelled at gunpoint, church buildings were shut down, and pastors were imprisoned by the thousands. In one city alone, 49 pastors were sent to labor camps near the Russian border. Of those 49, only one ever came home. The other 48 died in prison. In Nanyang, believers were crucified on the walls of their own churches for refusing to deny Christ.
Others were chained to horses and dragged through the streets to their deaths. One pastor was lifted high into the air by a makeshift crane. And when he was asked one final time to renounce Jesus and refused, they dropped the rope and let him fall. He survived the first fall. So they lifted him again and dropped him a second time. In the years that followed, Yan's mother, starved of fellowship and cut off from the word of God, gradually drifted from the faith. She forgot most of what she had learned.
The church in Nanyang was scattered.
They were sheep without shepherds, and the darkness over China grew heavier until the night a voice spoke in a bedroom in a small mud house in Lu Laoang village. Yans father was dying. The cancer had started in his lungs and spread to his stomach. Doctors gave him no hope. The family had sold everything of value to pay for medicine.
They were begging food from neighbours just to survive. His father, a superstitious man, had brought in Taoist or Daoist priests to cast out demons. Nothing worked. The nights were filled with the sounds of a man who could barely breathe. One night, Yan's mother lay on her bed, barely awake, exhausted beyond words, and she heard a voice, clear and tender and full of compassion. It said simply, "Jesus loves you." She fell off her bed onto her knees. She wept. She repented of every sin she could name.
She rededicated herself to the Lord Jesus Christ whom she had known in her youth and then abandoned in her despair.
And then she called her family. They prayed all night. Five children and a dying man, laying hands on their father, crying out one simple prayer over and over, "Jesus, heal father. Jesus, heal father." The next morning, for the first time in months, Yun's father woke up hungry. Within a week, the cancer was completely gone. The man who had 12 bullet wounds in his leg and a reputation that made his neighbours tremble stood up from his death bed healed. And his entire family fell in love with Jesus on the spot.
Now, watch what this family did next. They couldn't hold a public gathering. It was illegal in communist China. So, they sent the children out to invite every relative and neighbour to the house without explaining why. People arrived dressed in funeral clothes, assuming the old soldier had finally died. Instead, they found him standing at the door, healthy and grinning. His parents locked the doors, covered the windows, and told everyone what Jesus had done. The entire room fell to its knees. A small house church was born in Lu Laoang village.
Yun was 16 years old. His father's healing had set his heart on fire for Jesus, but he wanted more. He wanted the Bible. He wanted God's written word in his hands. And in the China of 1974, during the height of the cultural revolution, a Bible was not just rare. It was illegal. Possession of one Bible could get your entire family publicly beaten.
The few old believers who still had copies had buried them in the ground in sealed cans to protect them. Yun asked everyone he knew if they had a Bible. No one did. Finally, an old pastor who had already spent nearly 20 years in prison for his faith looked at this barefoot, tattered young boy and said to him, "The Bible is a heavenly book. If you want one, you must pray to the God of heaven. He is faithful. He always answers those who seek HIM with all their heart." So, Yun went home and brought a stone into his room. And every evening, he knelt on that stone and prayed one prayer. "Lord, please give me a Bible". For more than a month, nothing happened.
He went back to the old pastor who told him this time that he needed to not just pray, but fast and weep. The more he wept, the sooner he would receive. So Yun went home and for 100 days he ate almost nothing. Just a small bowl of rice in the evenings, and he cried out to God like a hungry child crying to a father. His parents thought he was losing his mind. 100 days. Then at 4:00 in the morning, after months of desperate prayer, Yun received a vision.
He saw himself on a hillside struggling to push a heavy cart. He saw an old man with a long white beard coming toward him pulling a cart full of fresh bread.
The old man asked if he was hungry, and when Yun said yes and wept, the man gave him a red bag containing a bun of fresh bread. Yun put it in his mouth, and it instantly transformed into a Bible. He woke up and searched the house. Nothing.
It had been a dream. He broke down weeping with grief, and his parents rushed in. And all three of them knelt together and wept. His father praying that God would give his son a Bible before the boy lost his mind. And then, in the still darkness before dawn, there was a knock at the door. A gentle voice called Yun's name. He ran to the door and asked, barely daring to breathe,
"Are you bringing the bread to me?" The voice answered, "Yes, we have a bread feast to give you." He opened the door.
Two men stood there. They were the same two men he had just seen in his vision.
One held a red bag. Inside the bag was a Bible. The men departed into the darkness without even giving their names. Yun fell to his knees outside the the door of his mud house, clutching the book to his chest, thanking God until the words dissolved into tears. He slept with that Bible on his chest every night. During the day, he wrapped it inside his clothing when he worked in the fields, taking every opportunity to read it. He had only 3 years of education, and his Bible was written in traditional Chinese script while he had learned simplified Chinese characters. So, he worked through it one character at a time using a dictionary. And when he finally finished reading it, he began to memorize it a chapter a day. After 28 days, he had memorized the entire Gospel of Matthew by heart, word for word. He was 16 years old and had barely attended school and he was memorizing entire books of the Bible. Then came the morning that changed everything. Yun was reading the first chapter of Acts and he stopped at verse 8. You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you and you will be my witnesses. He didn't know what the Holy Spirit was. He ran to ask his mother. She couldn't explain it.
She simply told him to pray for the Holy Spirit the same way he had prayed for his Bible. So he did and the spirit of God fell on him. A revelation of God's love flooded him. Songs of worship poured from his lips in words he had never learned. And then that night as he lay down, he felt someone tap him on the shoulder and heard a voice say, "Yun, I am going to send you to the west and south to be my witness." He jumped up, checked his parents' room. They hadn't called him. He went back to bed. 30 minutes later, the voice came again, unmistakable, clear, commanding, "Yun, you shall go to the west and to the south to proclaim the gospel." Before the sun rose the next morning, he told his mother he was going to preach the gospel. She begged him to reconsider. He was 16 years old. He had no training. He had no money. He had no connections. But he had heard the voice of God three times in one night, and that was enough. He walked west. Within hours, everything the Lord had shown him in a dream began unfolding with stunning precision. He met an old believer named Brother Yang on a bridge who had been sent specifically to bring him to a village called Gao Village. When he arrived, 30 or 40 people crowded around him, hungry for the word of God. Yun sat down, closed his eyes, held his Bible above his head, and did the only thing he knew how to do. He recited the entire Gospel of Matthew from memory. Chapter 1 to chapter 28. Every word. When he finished, the Holy Spirit swept the room. People wept. Dozens gave their lives to Jesus that day. But what happened next is something that defies explanation. When Yun left Gao village to return home, knowing someone was waiting for him there, he began to run while reciting Bible verses. And then suddenly, without any sense of time passing, he found himself entering his home village. A journey that should have taken 2 hours happened in moments. Like Philip in the book of Acts, who was supernaturally transported by the spirit of God, the young man from Nanyang County had been carried home. In his first year as a Christian at the age of 16, Yun led more than 2,000 people to Jesus. What followed was not a comfortable life of spiritual blessing.
It was the beginning of a war. The authorities took notice. The