In this video, you will hear the impressive testimony of Elias Hadar, an Israeli pastor who risked everything to obey a divine calling.

After losing his family and community when he converted to Christianity, Elias decides to preach the gospel in one of the most dangerous places in the world for a follower of Jesus, Saudi Arabia.

There he begins to disciple secret Christians until on one tragic night he is captured and set on fire alive by extremists.

But what happens next defies all laws of nature and transforms not only Elias’s life but the lives of everyone present.

This is an intimate, true, and deeply moving account of courage, faith, and liberation.

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May this story speak to your heart.

I was never the type of person who looked for miracles.

I grew up in Hifa, northern Israel, in a traditional Jewish home where faith was synonymous with discipline, not supernatural experiences.

When I met Jesus and decided to follow him, I thought the biggest break in my life had already happened.

Losing my family, being rejected by my parents, sleeping in borrowed basement.

But nothing, absolutely nothing, prepared me for what I experienced that night in Nadron.

Even today, when I close my eyes, I can still smell the fire.

However, as absurd as it sounds, it didn’t touch me.

And what happened next, I still lack the words.

I’m going to tell you how it was because even today, after everything, I still wonder why me? Why that way? That night seemed common, or at least what we learned to call common, while living in secret.

It was a Sunday, and we were gathered in Hassan’s small apartment.

Two cramped rooms hidden behind a decommissioned pharmacy.

The windows were covered with dark blankets.

The light was low.

Only a few candles and a portable lantern illuminated the room.

There were eight of us.

My wife sitting with the children in the corner.

Ila with a worn Bible on her lap.

Omar with a fresh cut on his forehead from a bump he sustained the week before trying to escape a police stop.

We prayed softly in circles and began reading John 15.

Everything seemed peaceful until the first bang came at the door.

It was dry, direct, and instantly the silence turned into panic.

The second knock came harder, and a voice in Arabic yelled for us to open.

No one moved.

A son just looked at me, pale, and whispered, “Don’t say anything.

” The sound of the door being broken down was like an explosion in my chest.

Five men burst in at once, all in simple clothes, but with an expression that said everything.

It wasn’t a visit.

It was a sentence.

Two carried wooden sticks.

One had a knife at his waist and the other.

The one who caught my attention the most was holding a yellow canister.

I already knew what it was.

Gasoline.

Jesus christ floating in the sky arms outstretched with clouds | Premium  AI-generated image

They didn’t ask names or give us time to react.

One of them grabbed my arm and pulled me to the center of the room.

Ila started screaming, but her mouth was quickly covered by another.

My wife tried to hold the children who were crying without understanding, and Omar was already on the floor, his face bleeding.

It was all very fast, but every second seemed to drag.

“This is the foreign preacher, isn’t it?” the leader said, pointing at me.

No one answered.

He spat on the ground and said, “Let’s see if his God saves him now.

” The man with the canister approached and without hesitation began to soak me with that cold, suffocating liquid.

The smell filled the room.

I stood there completely covered, drenched, with the eyes of the people I loved fixed on me.

The feeling was of the end.

But inside me, something strange was happening.

It wasn’t panic.

It was peace.

When the lighter was sparked, I saw the flame glow as if time had stopped.

There was a dry click, then another.

On the third, it caught.

The small tongue of fire flickered a few inches from my chest.

The man smiled like someone who knows he has won, and then he [clears throat] threw it.

The sound of the firecatching was terrifying.

a roar.

The flames spread quickly, licking my body, rising up my clothes.

The room turned orange.

The heat was intense, unbearable.

I felt everything except what I expected most, pain.

There was no burning, no stinging, nothing.

It was like being inside an oven, but protected by an invisible bubble.

I could hear Ila’s screams, my children’s crying, the panic in Hassan’s eyes.

But there, in the center of the burning room, I felt something I still can’t explain today.

A presence, strong, silent, unbreakable, as if Jesus was there with me inside the fire.

I remember closing my eyes, not out of fear, but out of reverence.

It was as if I had entered a sacred place in the middle of the chaos.

Inside, my prayer wasn’t desperate.

I didn’t ask for help.

I just said, “Jesus, may this glorify your name.

” And immediately after, something changed.

The fire continued to surround me, but it didn’t come closer.

It was as if it had a limit, as if it had been forbidden to touch me.

I heard the crackling of the flames, saw the smoke rise, saw the wide open eyes of the men who had come to kill me.

One of them fell to the floor, unable to look away.

Another began to back away, the stick still in his hand, but trembling as if he had seen a ghost.

I stood there, unable to understand how my body wasn’t burning, how my skin remained intact.

My heart was pounding but without panic.

I felt a peace that did not come from me.

It was as if an invisible hand wrapped around me and said, “Be firm.

I am here.

” When I opened my eyes, the silence was more frightening than the fire.

No one moved.

The man who sparked the lighter had his mouth slightly open, unable to say anything.

The flames still surrounded my feet, danced over my clothes, but did not burn.

It was as if hell had been allowed to roar, but not to touch.

I brought my hand to my shirt.

It was warm, but it wasn’t burning.

I felt the fabric slightly singed, but my arm underneath was intact.

No blisters, no pain.

It was at that moment that I heard for the first time something come out of one of the aggressors mouths.

This is impossible.

His voice was no longer angry.

It was fearful.

A different kind of fear, one I knew well.

It was the fear of someone who had just seen something that doesn’t fit any human explanation.

The fear of someone who perhaps had just witnessed God himself intervene.

The man who had poured the gasoline on me began to retreat slowly.

He still held the unlit lighter, but seemed paralyzed, as if his mind could not accept what his eyes were seeing.

He took two steps back and stumbled over a chair, falling to his knees on the floor.

That’s when he looked straight at me and said with a trembling voice, “Allah, Allah does not protect like this.

” The silence that was already heavy became almost sacred.

Even the children stopped crying as if they had realized that something supernatural had taken over that place.

The man repeated now louder, “Allah does not protect like this.

” Those words in that tone coming from the person who seconds earlier wanted to kill me sent a chill through everyone.

Ila began to cry softly kneeling in the corner.

Omar slowly got up, blood running down his forehead, but with his eyes fixed on me as if trying to understand if I was still human.

And me, I could only say softly.

Jesus.

That name spoken with the little voice I had left seemed to hit everyone like lightning.

The man kneeling before me bowed his head and began to weep.

It wasn’t the cry of fear.

It was the kind of cry that comes when everything collapses.

When you realize that everything you believed might have been a lie, and that the truth was in front of you the whole time.

A second man, still holding the stick, let it fall to the floor with a dry thud.

He looked at me, then at the fire that was now slowly dying down as if it had fulfilled its function.

His lips trembled, but he couldn’t speak.

Beside him, a young man who looked like he was under 20 fell to his knees without saying anything, looking at the floor as if trying to hide from his own shame.

I didn’t say a word.

I didn’t need to.

The fire had spoken for me.

The man who set me on fire, the one who led the others, was now on his knees, his hands on his face, crying in a way I had never seen before.

It wasn’t a controlled cry.

It was a raw despair, as if everything inside him was crumbling.

He was mumbling something through his teeth, rocking his body back and forth.

I approached slowly, my feet were still wet with gasoline, the floor still slippery and dark from the smoke and soot.

When I was a few steps away from him, he raised his head.

His eyes were red, full of tears, and his face was stained with soot.

It was then that he asked me with a completely broken voice, “Who is your God?” I felt my body tremble.

It was as if the whole sky had paused to hear that question.

I took a deep breath and answered without shouting, without preaching, “His name is Jesus.

” The impact was immediate.

One of the men at the back of the room dropped what he was still holding, a knife, and fell to a seated position, his eyes lost.

Another leaned against the wall and let himself slide to the floor, murmuring, “Afila!” in a tone that mixed confusion and supplication.

But the leader, the one who had set me on fire, continued to look at me.

“I burned churches.

I killed Christians.

I thought I was doing it for God,” he said as if trying to hear himself.

That man who minutes ago was shouting with hatred and throwing fire was now crying like a child.

I took one step closer, crouched down to his level and said, looking into his eyes, “Jesus forgives you.

If you ask, he forgives right now.

” And at that moment, he collapsed onto my shoulder as if the weight of all the guilt he carried had finally given way.

As I hugged him, I felt his shoulders tremble as if he were emptying a lifetime of hatred.

He was no longer a dangerous man.

He was a broken man who had finally seen the truth.

The others began to approach slowly, without weapons, without hostility.

One of them knelt beside the leader and put his hand on his back.

“I want that too,” he said, his voice choked.

I want that peace.

The atmosphere in the room was no longer one of threat.

It was one of surrender.

It was as if suddenly all the spiritual weight hanging there had been ripped away and the place had become holy.

Even amidst the smoke, the gasoline, and the pieces of destroyed furniture.

I didn’t ask them to repeat any prayer.

I just said, “Talk to Jesus.

Tell him the truth.

He is listening.

And one by one, with simple heartfelt words, each one began to speak to God.

Some in a low voice, others through sobs.

There was no liturgy.

There was no music.

There was only true repentance.

My wife was still huddled with the children in the corner of the room, unsure if all of this was real.

I looked at her and made a gesture with my head as if to say, “It’s all right.

” She came slowly, tears streaming, hugging our children tighter than ever.

Ila cried non-stop, her hand over her mouth.

Hassan knelt beside me and began to pray softly.

And there, without anyone planning it, that place turned into a church.

Not one with a sign or stained glass, a church with a gasoline stained floor and hearts that had just been set free.

It was all so profound that no one wanted to leave the spot.

We stayed there kneeling for a time I can’t measure.

Maybe minutes, maybe hours.

I only know that when the tears dried, the silence that remained was not empty.

It was full.

It was the presence of God, as I had never felt it before.

When we finally stood up, the men who had invaded the place no longer looked the same.

One of them approached me and said, “My name is Abdul.

I have burned churches, but today I saw the fire stop in the air.

” He looked at his own hands as if they were still stained with blood.

I don’t want to be that man anymore.

Another younger said, “If my father finds out I’m here, he will hunt me down.

But even so, his eyes did not show fear.

They showed determination.

We knew that from then on nothing would be safe.

What had happened in that room could not be explained, but it also could not be hidden.

The fire did not burn me, and that was going to spread.

Outside, someone might have heard the noise, seen the smoke, but no one dared to move for hours.

We stayed there, cleaning the room like one cleans altar.

We threw away burned cloths, put out the last embers, wiped the floor with buckets of water brought from the kitchen.

Three of the men who had come to kill me offered to help.

One of them even wiped a cloth with such care that it seemed like he was cleaning an open wound.

Their look was no longer one of guilt, but of reverence.

It was as if that floor was now sacred.

Ila helped organize the chairs, even with her hands trembling.

Omar cleaned the blood from his own face without complaining.

No one spoke much.

Words seemed too small to explain what we had experienced there.

In the end, one of the new converts turned to me and said in hesitant Arabic, “Tell Jesus thank you.

” I smiled with a tight heart and replied, “He already knows.

” After that came the hardest part, understanding that it wouldn’t end there.

The miracle had ignited something that could no longer be extinguished, neither by threat nor by fire.

And that put all of us at risk.

In the days that followed, everything became quieter.

The meetings stopped, not out of fear, but out of prudence.

The news spread faster than we imagined.

First, as a rumor, a man survived the fire.

One, then as an accusation, a Jewish sorcerer is preaching false miracles.

When I first heard that, my heart froze.

Not because they called me a sorcerer, but because I knew what those words meant there.

Persecution.

In places like Nadron, a story like this becomes a death sentence.

The religious police start to investigate.

The mosques warn the faithful and people disappear overnight.

Ila disappeared from the stall where she sold fruit.

Hassan sent his son away to study in another city.

Omar sent a message through a known baker saying I needed to vanish.

My face was already being described by neighbors as the man of fire.

I became a legend, but I also became a target.

My wife cried every night in silence.

We tried to keep the children calm, but even they started to realize something was wrong.

“Why can’t we go out anymore?” my daughter asked.

“What happened to Uncle Hassan?” my son wanted to know.

I didn’t know how to answer.

I started to go out only before dawn with my face covered to get food or water.

The footsteps in the street seemed louder, the glances longer, and at all times the same feeling returned.

It’s only a matter of time.

One day, Omar rushed to our door, his face sweaty, his breathing heavy.

They saw you.

One of the men from the market recognized you.

He already told his brother who is connected to the authorities.

It was no longer a suspicion.

It was a warning.

You have to leave, Elias.

Now, that night, some brothers secretly gathered in our small apartment.

The lights were off, only the weak flame of a candle illuminating their faces.

Leila, Hassan, Omar, and two more men I didn’t know well, but who trusted those who trusted me.

They brought an alreadym made plan.

A truck would leave before dawn to transport goods to the Jordanian border.

The driver was a secret Christian and had already helped others escape.

He will hide you between the boxes.

No one asks him questions.

My wife held my hand so tightly it hurt.

She didn’t cry, but her eyes said everything.

If they catch you, they won’t just kill you, Elias.

They will do it in front of our children.

I swallowed hard.

Hearing that, I realized that the miracle had come with a price.

I couldn’t stay there.

I had to leave.

And the worst part was leaving mine behind.

My children were sleeping when I started packing the small backpack.

A change of clothes, my New Testament, my passport rolled in an old cloth.

I took nothing but the necessary.

One of the brothers lent me simpler clothes, and I covered my face with a worn scarf.

Just before leaving, my daughter woke up and saw me kneeling beside her.

She rubbed her eyes and asked, “Daddy, are you coming back tomorrow?” That question destroyed me inside.

I hugged her, kissed her forehead, and answered with a voice that failed me.

I’ll try, my love.

Then I turned to my wife.

She hugged me like someone trying to keep someone inside their chest.

We didn’t say anything.

We just stayed like that for long seconds until she whispered in my ear, “Go with God and don’t look back.

” The truck was old, noisy, and already loaded with sacks of rice and dried fruit when I arrived at the meeting point.

The driver, a stout man with a thin beard named Yousef, didn’t say a word.

He just pointed with his chin to the back of the vehicle.

I curled up between the sacks, breathing the smell of dust and diesel, and he closed the canvas.

The journey to the border would take two days with risky stops and at least three checkpoints.

With every sudden break, my heart raced.

With every voice I heard outside, I prepared for death.

At one of the posts, I heard the soldiers talking.

They hit the truck with something metal and then told it to proceed.

When we got back on the road, I exhaled forcefully.

I hadn’t even realized I was holding my breath.

Yousef spoke for the first time through the canvas.

My brother died because of a Bible.

You are lucky.

God wants you alive.

I didn’t answer.

I just cried in silence.

When we finally got close to Alcara on the border with Jordan, it was night.

The air was dry, sharp, and the silence of the desert seemed to scream in the rocks.

I was handed over to another man, Samir, who gave me some water and a cloth to cover my head.

We’ll walk now through the trails that the shepherds use.

We walked for hours in silence, avoiding distant lights, passing through dry bushes and gravel that seemed to pop under our feet.

My knees hurt and my whole body seemed to have been squeezed by tension.

But at no point did I feel fear like before.

It was as if that crossing was a continuation of the miracle, a prolongation of the protection.

When we finally crossed the border without signs, without fences, Samir simply said, “You are in another country.

” And for the first time since that night, I breathed without a burden.

I stayed in a simple house on the outskirts of Mafra in Jordan along with other refugees.

There were three rooms of rough cement, a bathroom, and silence.

A lot of silence.

I ate little, spoke almost nothing.

I spent my days sitting on the floor with an open Bible on my lap and a heart tight with longing.

At night, I connected via VPN using an old cell phone to send coded messages.

I started recording brief audios with small Bible studies, short prayers, and words of encouragement.

Nothing elaborate, just the necessary to keep the fire burning.

Hassan would reply from time to time using false names and coded phrases.

We meet in groups of two now, he wrote once.

Faith is firm, but we miss you.

I read those messages with tearfilled eyes.

Even far away, I knew that the church was still alive.

One of the audios I sent reached Abdul, the man who had set me on fire.

I learned from Hassan that he not only remained firm, but started leading secret meetings in Nadron.

He tells what he saw that night.

says the fire stopped in the air because it obeyed Jesus.

When I read that, I cried like a child.

I started sending specific lessons to him, how to disciple, how to baptize, how to protect the brothers and sisters.

Everything in files disguised with names like engine manual or bread recipe.

The network spread.

Converts I had never met started sending me messages with simple questions.

How do I pray? How do I know if God has forgiven me? How do I teach my wife? These were voices coming from the darkness with a thirst for light.

And I understood finally that my mission hadn’t ended when I fled.

It had only changed shape.

5 years later, I received a coded message that would change everything.

You need to see with your own eyes.

It is different.

It is alive.

It was Abdul.

He was leading a small secret church in Nadron.

Against all odds, the gospel continued to grow in that soil where they had once tried to burn me alive.

They organized my return with a level of caution that seemed like something out of a movie.

False documents, an alternative route, combined codes, and constant vigilance.

I re-entered the country with a pounding heart and tearful eyes.

The smell of the sand, the dry heat on my face, the details of the streets, everything was the same.

But I knew that behind that facade of normality, there was a flame burning.

That night I knocked three times, two quick, one slow, on the rusted gate of a house hidden among abandoned buildings.

A crack opened, and I saw Abdul’s face.

He pulled me inside and hugged me tightly.

“You came back,” he whispered, his voice choked.

We entered a small room in silence, lit by candles.

15 people kneeling, heads bowed, Bibles in their hands.

When they realized I was there, they looked up as if they were before a survivor.

But I wasn’t the focus, nor did I want to be.

It was Jesus.

It always was.

Ila was there.

Omar, too.

Even Ila, now with a simple white scarf on her head, was softly singing a song of worship.

Abdul led the meeting with reverence.

He read Matthew 5, spoke about forgiveness, about fire that purifies, not that destroys.

As he spoke, my eyes wandered over the faces.

Some I knew, others I didn’t, but all of them were there for a single reason.

They had seen or heard what God had done that night, and that was enough to transform their lives forever.

After that night, I didn’t need to preach.

My presence said it all.

The room where we met had no cross, no pulpit, no loud praise, but it had faith.

A faith that was not born of beautiful speeches, but of real fire.

I stayed for a short time.

It was dangerous, risky for them and for me.

But before I left, I sat with Abdul in the house’s kitchen.

He served me strong tea as he always did before his conversion.

He looked at me and said, “That night I saw you in the middle of the flames, and I didn’t understand.

Today, I understand that fire was not meant to destroy you.

It was meant to save me.

I didn’t answer right away.

I just stood there looking out the cracked window, listening to the sound of a city that still seemed hostile, but that now also held a living church in silence, and I knew that everything had been worth it.

The next morning, I said goodbye with a strong hug for everyone.

A handed me a piece of cloth with something hand embroidered.

The light of Christ gives life.

I put it in my pocket close to my chest.

When I walked out the same door I had entered, it was still dark.

The streets were quiet.

But inside me there was a noise that never stopped.

The sound of certainty.

I still can’t explain why that fire didn’t burn me.

I can’t say how everything happened with such precision.

I only know that it did happen and that no human explanation will change what we saw with our own eyes.

The miracle was not just that I survived.

It was what was born from it.

A hidden church, yes, but alive.

And the more they try to extinguish it, the more it grows.

Because the fire of God, when it comes, no one can contain it.

This story showed us that when God decides to act, even fire cannot fulfill the enemy’s plan.

Elias survived not by luck, but because there was a purpose.

And that purpose reached even the hardest hearts.

The impossible happened before the eyes of everyone.

And no one left that place the same way.

It’s the And you.

Do you believe that God still does miracles like this today? Have you experienced something you can’t explain? Share with us in the comments.

We would love to read your testimony or your opinion on this story.

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