What if I told you that the most anti-Christian, isolated, and militarized nation on the face of the earth is hiding a massive and undeniable secret? A secret so powerful that Kim Jong-un’s regime is terrified that you might discover it.

Today, when you look at North Korea, you see a land of darkness, nuclear weapons, and supreme dictators who force their people to worship them like gods.

But they are lying to the entire world.

Behind the sealed borders, beneath the terrifying prison camps, a supernatural phenomenon is happening right now.

Because when a government destroys every single Bible and burns every physical church, heaven does not remain silent.

God steps in directly.

thumbnail

Today, we will uncover the ancient and shocking archaeological evidence of Christianity hidden in North Korean soil.

the unimaginable truth about the dictator’s family and the leaked and verified testimonies of thousands of defectors who are all reporting the same impossible miracle.

The man dressed in white is appearing in North Korea.

To understand the miracle that is happening today, you must first understand the colossal lie upon which the regime built its foundation.

The North Korean government wants its citizens and the entire world to believe that religion is a foreign poison.

But history tells a truth that sends chills down your spine.

Let us go back to the year 1907.

More than a century ago, the capital city of Pyongyang was not a fortress of communism.

It was known throughout the world by a completely different name.

It was called the Jerusalem of the East.

It was the beating heart of Christianity in Asia.

During what historians call the Great Pyongyang Revival, tens of thousands of Koreans gave their lives to Jesus Christ.

There were more than 3,000 thriving churches in the northern half of the peninsula.

The streets echoed with Christian hymns, not military marches.

The regime did not inherit an atheist nation.

It hijacked and violently crushed a deeply Christian nation.

But the roots of Jesus in Korea go back much, much earlier than the 1900s.

There is physical evidence that the regime cannot erase.

In the ancient capital of the Sila dynasty, archaeologists uncovered something that completely rewrites history.

Deep within ancient ruins, they found stone crosses and statues bearing unmistakable Christian symbols dating back more than a thousand years.

Long before European missionaries ever set foot in the Americas, ancient Assyrian Christians traveling along the Silk Road had already brought the gospel to the Korean Peninsula.

The evidence is literally carved into the rocks of the nation.

Jesus was known in Korea a millennium before the Kim dynasty was ever born.

But here is the detail for which the North Korean government would sentence you to death just for mentioning it.

The very founder of the brutal regime, Kim Ilsung, the grandfather of current leader Kim Jong-un, did not invent his ideology out of nothing.

He stole it and he stole it from the Bible.

Kim Ilsung’s parents were not atheists.

They were devoted practicing Christians.

His mother was a Presbyterian deaconist whose name was literally the Korean version of the Apostle Peter.

Rock Kim Ilsung grew up going to church, listening to sermons, and singing hymns.

When he took power, he did not merely ban Christianity.

He plagiarized it.

He replaced God the Father with himself.

He replaced Jesus the Son with his own son, Kim Jong-il.

He took the Ten Commandments and rewrote them as the regime’s 10 principles.

2,364+ Jesus Christ On The Clouds Pictures Photos, Pictures And Background  Images For Free Download - Pngtree

The entire North Korean dictatorship is a blasphemous, stolen copy of the Christian faith.

And that is exactly why they hate real Christians so much because believers know the regime is a fraud.

Because of this stolen theology, North Korea quickly became the most dangerous place on earth to speak the name of Jesus.

According to the respected international organization Open Doors, North Korea has been the world’s worst persecutor of Christians for more than 20 years.

In that country, simply owning a Bible is a crime punishable by death.

Or worse, three generations of your family being sent to a brutal political prison camp known as a quaniso.

Every physical church has been leveled.

Every pastor has been executed or disappeared into the goologs.

The regime believed that by destroying the buildings and burning the paper, it could kill God in North Korea.

For decades, the world believed that the North Korean church was completely dead, a black hole for faith.

But they made a fatal miscalculation.

They forgot that the word of God is not merely ink on paper.

It is alive.

When human beings destroy the written word and when no missionary is allowed to cross the border, the living word steps out of eternity to deliver the message in person.

What human rights organizations and missionaries in South Korea began to notice in the early 2000s defied all logic.

As desperate North Koreans managed to escape across the frozen Yalu River into China and eventually into South Korea, humanitarian workers began interviewing them.

These were people who had never seen a cross.

They had never heard the name Jesus.

They did not even know what a church was.

And yet, thousands of them were reporting the exact same supernatural experience.

The testimonies collected and verified by organizations such as Voice of the Martyrs are astonishing.

Defectors said that in their darkest moments, while freezing in solitary confinement, starving in labor camps, or contemplating taking their own lives to escape torture, their cells would suddenly be flooded with an impossible blinding light.

From that light, a figure would emerge.

All of them described him in exactly the same way, a man with a radiant face wearing a shining white robe.

He did not speak the regime’s propaganda.

He spoke with a voice that radiated overwhelming supernatural peace.

He touched their shoulders, told them not to be afraid, and promised them they had not been forgotten.

For others, this man in white appeared not only to comfort them, but to physically save their lives.

Countless defector testimonies describe in detail how they attempted the deadly escape across the heavily militarized border.

In total darkness, with armed guards patrolling and dogs barking, they were completely lost.

One wrong step meant execution.

Suddenly, in the darkness the man in white would appear before them.

He pointed out the exact path to take through the minefields.

He showed them the safest, shallowest parts of the frozen river to cross.

He literally guided them through the valley of the shadow of death.

But here is the most incredible part of this phenomenon.

These North Koreans survived and reached freedom.

When they finally arrived in South Korea, they were taken to integration centers.

Many of them entered a church for the first time in their lives.

And as they walked through the doors looking at stained glass windows or a painting of Jesus Christ, they froze.

They fell to their knees in tears.

Because in that exact moment they realized that the mysterious, radiant man who had visited them in the freezing cell, the man who had guided them safely across the deadly river, was Jesus.

They did not know his name then, but he knew theirs.

Jesus did not wait for Bibles to be smuggled in.

He crossed the hyper surveiled borders, ignored the nuclear missiles, and stepped directly into their nightmares to bring them salvation.

Because of these miraculous encounters and the indestructible spirit of the Korean people, the Kim regime’s worst nightmare has come true.

Christianity in North Korea is not dead.

It is alive, breathing, and growing underground.

Despite facing the threat of execution every single day, intelligence estimates suggest that there are between 300,000 and 500,000 secret Christians in North Korea today.

They pray in whispers.

They memorize scripture on scraps of torn paper and then swallow them so the guards cannot find them.

They pray with their eyes open so no one will suspect them.

They are the most persecuted church in the world.

Yet they are experiencing a level of supernatural intervention that directly recalls the book of Acts in the New Testament.

And the global body of Christ is fighting for them.

Just across the border in South Korea, brave activists and missionaries are defying the impossible.

In the middle of the night, they launch enormous GPS tracked balloons into the sky.

Attached to those balloons are thousands of waterproof New Testaments.

USB drives loaded with the gospel and sacks of rice.

The wind carries them directly across the border, raining the word of God down like mana from heaven into the hands of the starving North Korean people.

The regime tries to shoot the balloons down, but they cannot stop heaven.

Between Bibles falling from the clouds and Jesus appearing in their dreams, the light is violently breaking through the darkness of North Korea.

2,000 years ago, Jesus said, “I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it.

” If the gates of hell cannot stop him, neither can the borders of North Korea.

No dictator, no prison camp, and no army can stop the King of Kings when he decides to seek out his children.

The secret believers in North Korea are our brothers and sisters.

They are risking their lives right now today just to whisper the name of Jesus.

They do not have the freedom we have.

But they have a faith that moves mountains today.

They need our prayers more than ever.

We want to flood the comment section with a united prayer that will echo across the digital world.

If you believe in the power of prayer and if you stand with the persecuted church, I ask you to scroll down into the comments right now and write this exact phrase.

Lord, protect your secret church and let your light shine in the darkness.

Thank you for watching and thank you for standing for the truth.

If this testimony has strengthened your faith, share this video so the world will know what is really happening.

May God bless us all.