We choose love over wealth, protection over power, Jesus Christ over family pressure.

You can keep your inheritance and your traditions.

We will build something new based on God’s actual design for marriage.

His face went white, then purple with rage, but I was already walking toward the door with my wife.

Guards moved to block our path.

But something extraordinary happened.

Several servants who had watched our love story unfold over the months created distractions throughout the palace.

fires that needed attention, urgent messages that required responses, sudden emergencies that drew security away from our route.

It was as if God was orchestrating our escape through people who recognized righteousness when they saw it.

We slipped through the servants’s entrance during the confusion, where a loyal driver waited with a car that took us to a private airirstrip outside Riyad.

David had arranged everything, including documents and safe passage to a country where we could claim religious asylum.

As our plane lifted off Saudi soil, Amir squeezed my hand and whispered a prayer of thanksgiving to Jesus Christ for our deliverance.

We had lost a kingdom, but we had gained our souls.

We had chosen love over tradition, protection over power, and discovered that sometimes the greatest victory requires the greatest sacrifice.

Behind us lay everything we had ever known.

Ahead lay uncertainty, but also the promise of a God who protects those who trust in him.

We became fugitives in the service of love, and it was the most righteous choice we ever made.

The airplane that carried us away from Saudi Arabia landed in a country where church bells rang freely and women walked unafraid through the streets.

David Thompson met us at the airport with tears in his eyes and a small group of Christians who had been praying for our safe arrival.

As we stepped off that plane into a world where no one knew our royal titles or cared about our family’s ancient traditions, I felt lighter than I had in months.

As if invisible chains had finally fallen away from my soul.

Our first weeks of freedom were spent in a small apartment above David’s church, surrounded by believers who treated us not as foreign royalty, but as beloved siblings in need of healing.

The contrast between this community and the palace life we had left behind was stunning.

Here, marriage was celebrated as a sacred bond between one man and one woman.

Here, protecting wives was considered a husband’s highest honor, not an obstacle to family unity.

Here, Jesus Christ was not merely a prophet to be acknowledged, but a living savior who actively intervened in the lives of those who called upon his name.

3 months after our arrival, Amamira and I made the decision that changed everything.

Standing in the baptismal pool at Grace Community Church, surrounded by dozens of believers who had become our new family, we publicly declared our faith in Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior.

The moment Pastor Williams lowered me beneath the water and raised me up again, I felt the weight of 28 years of religious obligation wash away, replaced by the joy of relationship with a God who loved me not for my performance, but for who I was in him.

Amira’s baptism moved everyone to tears.

As she emerged from the water, her face glowing with a peace that had been absent since our wedding day, she spoke words that I will carry in my heart forever.

Today I am no longer a possession to be shared or a burden to be endured.

Today I am a daughter of the King of Kings and my worth comes from him alone.

The congregation erupted in praise and I watched my wife discover her true identity for the first time in her life.

Learning to live as Christians transformed everything about our marriage.

Instead of the hierarchical relationship I had been taught in Islam, where wives submit to husbands who submit to family elders, we discovered biblical marriage built on mutual love, respect, and protection.

I learned that being Amira’s husband meant laying down my life for her welfare, not demanding her submission to my family’s desires.

She learned that being my wife meant partnering with me in building something beautiful together, not sacrificing herself for traditions that honored men while destroying women.

The healing process was neither quick nor easy.

Amira struggled with nightmares about Uncle Hassan for months after our escape.

Some nights I would wake to find her sitting by the window, shaking with memories of the horror we had left behind.

But slowly, through prayer, through counseling with Pastor Williams and his wife, through the love of our church family, the trauma began to lose its power over our lives.

Jesus Christ proved to be not only our savior but our healer.

Mending wounds that Islamic law had inflicted and human tradition had made worse.

We rebuilt our marriage from the foundation up.

This time on biblical principles that honored both of us as imagebearers of God.

Instead of a mirror serving my family’s needs, we served each other and served God together.

Instead of tradition dictating our choices, we sought Christ’s will through prayer and scripture study.

Instead of fearing family authority, we found security in divine love that no human power could threaten or destroy.

Our simple life bore no resemblance to the luxury we had known in Saudi Arabia, but it overflowed with the richness that only Christ can provide.

David helped me find work at an international trading company, while Amamira used her education to teach English to refugee children.

We lived in a two-bedroom apartment with secondhand furniture and cooked our own meals on a tiny stove.

Yet, every evening felt like a celebration compared to the fearfilled nights we had endured in the palace.

The church community embraced us completely, never treating us as exotic converts or former royalty, but as beloved family members who had paid a high price to follow Jesus.

They taught us how to study the Bible, how to pray with confidence rather than desperate pleading, how to recognize God’s voice in our daily decisions.

Under their loving guidance, we grew from desperate refugees into mature believers who could encourage others facing persecution for their faith.

Word of our story spread through Christian networks that helped persecuted believers around the world.

Soon we found ourselves counseling other Muslim converts who had faced family rejection, other wives who had escaped abusive religious traditions, other couples who had chosen love over cultural expectations.

God transformed our pain into a ministry that brought hope to hundreds of people trapped in situations similar to what we had endured.

Amir bloomed like a desert flower after rain.

The confident, intelligent woman I had fallen in love with during our engagement returned.

But now she was strengthened by the knowledge that her [snorts] worth came from Christ rather than from family approval or social status.

She started a support group for women who had escaped religious oppression, sharing her testimony with courage that inspired everyone who heard it.

Watching her help other women discover their value in Christ became one of my greatest joys.

5 years after our escape, we renewed our wedding vows in a ceremony that reflected our new understanding of marriage.

This time, instead of hundreds of diplomatic guests and political obligations, we were surrounded by spiritual family who loved Jesus and celebrated love.

Pastor Williams performed the ceremony under an oak tree in the church garden with spring flowers blooming around us and children from our Sunday school class throwing rose petals.

When I promised to love, honor, and protect a mirror until death separated us.

I meant every word with a depth that my first wedding vows had never possessed.

Our life was simple but abundant, peaceful but purposeful.

We had traded palaces for apartments, servants for church family, royal titles for identity in Christ.

The exchange was so overwhelmingly in our favor that I often marveled at my former blindness.

How could I have thought that wealth and status mattered more than love and faith?

How could I have valued family tradition more than my wife’s dignity?

How could I have served Allah for decades without discovering the personal protective love that Jesus offered freely?

The car accident that ended my earthly life came on March 15th, 2018.

During what should have been a routine drive home from our Wednesday evening Bible study, a drunk driver ran a red light and struck our car at an intersection just three blocks from our apartment.

In the moments before impact, I remember feeling no fear, only perfect peace.

I knew where I was going and I knew that Amira would be cared for by our church family until we were reunited in heaven.

My last conscious words to Amira as paramedics worked frantically around our destroyed vehicle were words of absolute confidence.

He saved us, beloved.

Jesus saved us from everything that threatened to destroy us.

Do not be afraid.

I am going home to prepare a place for you.

Her tears fell on my face as my vision faded, but they were tears of sorrow mixed with hope.

Grief tempered by faith in reunion.

Look inside your own heart right now and ask yourself this question.

What chains is Jesus asking you to break?

What traditions is he calling you to abandon for the sake of love?

What family expectations is he inviting you to release in order to follow him?

I traded a kingdom for a cross, wealth for faith, family approval for divine love, and it was the most profitable exchange any man could make.

If Jesus Christ could save a Saudi prince from the prison of religious tradition, he can save you from whatever holds you captive.

If he could protect a terrified wife from abuse disguised as honor, he can protect you from those who use authority to harm the innocent.

If he could give us new life after we lost everything familiar, he can give you hope beyond your current circumstances.

This is Prince Khaled al- Rahman speaking to you from eternity.

And Jesus Christ is Lord of all.

He is the protector of the innocent, the defender of love, the breaker of chains that bind the human heart.

Trust him with your life and discover that losing everything for his sake means gaining everything that truly matters.

– ONE MORE BELOW-

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Saudi Preacher Burned Alive and Left for Dead — What Happened Next Shocked Everyone !!!

My name is Ahmed and I need to tell you what happened to me.

I’m sitting here today because of a miracle.

5 years ago, I was set on fire and left to die in the desert outside Riyad.

The men who did it were certain I would burn to death.

They were certain Allah would judge me for my betrayal.

They were certain my story would end that night.

But I’m still here and I need to tell you why.

>> Hello viewers from around the world.

Before Ahmed continues his story, we’d love to know where you are watching from and we would love to pray for you and your city.

Thank you and may God bless you as you listen to this powerful testimony.

>> I was born in Riyad, Saudi Arabia into a family that loved Allah more than anything in this world.

My father was a respected imam at our local mosque.

From the time I could walk, I walked to prayer.

From the time I could speak, I spoke the words of the Quran.

This wasn’t forced on me.

This was my life, and I loved it.

I remember being 7 years old, sitting cross-legged on the carpet in our home, rocking back and forth as I memorized verses from the Quran.

My father sat across from me, his eyes closed, listening to make sure I got every word exactly right.

When I finished the surah perfectly, he would smile and touch his hand to his heart.

That smile meant everything to me.

It meant I was making him proud.

It meant I was pleasing Allah.

By the time I was 12, I had memorized significant portions of the Quran.

By 15, I could lead prayers.

By 20, I was teaching other young men.

This was my path, and I never questioned it.

Why would I?

I had purpose.

I had respect.

I had Allah.

My mother would prepare our meals and we would eat together as a family.

But always there was talk of faith, of the prophet, peace be upon him, of how to live righteously.

My younger brothers looked up to me.

I was the eldest son of an imam.

I had a responsibility to set an example.

When I was 23, I married Ila.

She was beautiful and devout from a good family.

Our marriage was arranged, but I grew to care for her deeply.

She gave me two sons and a daughter.

I watched them grow, teaching them the same verses my father had taught me.

I watched my oldest son, Khaled, memorize his first surah, and I felt my father’s pride flowing through me to him.

This was how it was supposed to be.

Generation after generation, faithful to Allah.

I became a preacher and teacher at our mosque.

Young men would come to me with questions about faith, about marriage, about how to live according to Islamic law.

I had answers for everything.

The Quran had answers for everything.

I was certain of this.

My days had a rhythm that felt like peace.

I woke before dawn for fajgera prayer.

I went to the mosque.

I taught classes.

I counseledled men.

I led prayers.

I came home to my family.

I studied late into the night.

Every day was devoted to Allah.

And I thought this made me close to him.

But something was wrong, though I didn’t want to admit it.

It started small.

A feeling during prayer that I was speaking into emptiness.

A question from a student that I answered with memorized responses.

But later alone the question would come back to me and my answer would feel hollow.

A restlessness in my spirit that I tried to pray away.

I was doing everything right.

I prayed five times a day every day.

I fasted during Ramadan.

I gave to the poor.

I studied the Quran and the hadith constantly.

I followed every rule, every teaching.

But there was no peace inside me.

Only duty, only effort, only the constant work of being righteous enough.

One night, I couldn’t sleep.

My wife was breathing softly beside me.

My children were asleep in their rooms.

The house was quiet.

I got up and went to pray, thinking this would help.

I knelt on my prayer mat in the darkness and pressed my forehead to the ground.

But the words felt like stones in my mouth.

I was saying them, but was anyone listening?

I pushed the thought away.

This was dangerous thinking.

This was doubt.

And doubt was from shaitan.

I prayed harder.

I made myself focus.

But the emptiness remained.

The next day, I taught my class as usual.

A young man asked me how we could be certain Allah loved us.

I gave him the answer I had been taught.

Allah loves those who follow his commands, who submit to his will, who pray and fast and give arms.

Do these things and you earn his favor?

But as I said it, I wondered, was Allah’s love something we had to earn?

And if we earned it, could we lose it?

Was I doing enough?

Would I ever do enough?

These questions frightened me.

So I buried them.

I threw myself into my work at the mosque.

I memorized more hadith.

I became stricter in my observance.

I thought if I could just be devout enough, the emptiness would go away.

It didn’t.

Then came the day that changed everything, though I didn’t know it at the time.

I had taken my car to be repaired and while I waited I walked to a nearby shop to buy tea.

The man working there was a foreigner probably from the Philippines or maybe India.

We have many foreign workers in Saudi Arabia.

Usually I didn’t pay much attention to them.

They were there to work not to socialize.

But this man had something different about him.

When he gave me my tea, he smiled and there was a piece in his face that I noticed.

I don’t know why I noticed it.

Maybe because I had been searching for peace myself and had not found it.

As I paid him, he thanked me, and there was kindness in his voice.

Not the subservience that foreign workers usually show to Saudis, but genuine kindness, as if he truly wished me well.

I left the shop thinking about that smile, that peace.

What did this poor foreign worker have that I, an imam’s son and a religious teacher, did not have?

The thought bothered me for days.

A few weeks later, I was on my computer late at night.

I had been researching something for a class I was teaching, but I got distracted and started browsing.

I don’t remember exactly how it happened, but I found myself reading about Christianity.

My first reaction was anger.

Christianity was false.

Everyone knew this.

The Christians had corrupted their scriptures.

They worshiped three gods.

They believed God had a son, which was blasphemy.

I had been taught all of this my entire life.

But I kept reading.

I told myself I was only reading so I could better refute Christianity when I taught about other religions.

I told myself I was being a better teacher by knowing what the enemy believed.

But the truth was I was curious.

I read about Jesus who Christians called Isa.

I knew about Issa from the Quran.

He was a prophet, a good man, but only a man, nothing more.

But Christians believed something different.

They believed he was God who became human.

They believed he died for the sins of all people.

They believed that salvation was a gift, not something you earned.

This last part caught my attention.

A gift, not earned, just given.

I thought about my whole life of trying to earn Allah’s favor.

I thought about the uncertainty, the fear that I might not be good enough.

I thought about the rules and the rituals and the constant effort.

What if it was all a gift instead?

I shook my head.

This was foolish.

I closed my computer and went to pray.

But the question stayed with me.

Over the next few months, I found myself returning to that computer late at night when everyone was asleep.

I will read about Christianity for an hour, sometimes two, always careful to clear my brows in history afterward.

I knew what I was doing was dangerous.

If anyone found out I was reading about Christianity with interest rather than to refute it, there would be consequences.

But I couldn’t stop.

I read the Gospel of John.

I don’t know why I chose that one first.

Maybe because it was recommended on one of the websites I found.

As I read, something strange happened inside me.

The words felt alive.

They felt true.

I read about Jesus saying he was the way, the truth, and the life.

I read about him saying he came to give abundant life.

I read about him touching lepers and eating with sinners and forgiving people their sins.

In Islam, I had learned that Allah was distant, transcendent, unknowable.

We submitted to him, but we did not know him.

We could not know him.

But Jesus spoke about God as a father.

He taught people to pray, calling God their father.

He spoke about God’s love as if it was personal, as if it was for each individual person, not just for those who earned it.

Continue reading….
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