Saudi Arabia Sent 25 Christians to WORLD’S STRICTEST JAIL for Reading BIBLE – Then Jesus Intervened
My name is Miguel Reyes and I am a 38-year-old Filipino man who spent 11 years working as a construction worker in Dam, Saudi Arabia.
On November 8th, 2019, 24 other believers and I were thrown inside the walls of one of the world’s strictest prisons simply because we read our Bible.
What I am about to share with you is a story I never imagined I would live through.
It is a story of fear, persecution, and imprisonment. But more than that, it is a story of faith, miracles, and the undeniable power of Jesus Christ.

Before you continue listening, I want you to prepare your heart because what happened to us inside that dangerous prison will challenge everything you think you know about God’s ability to rescue his people.
Some of you may doubt. Some of you may question, but I was there. I saw it with my own eyes.
And I will carry this testimony with me until the day I take my last breath.
I first came to Saudi Arabia in 2008 when I was only 27 years old.
Back home in Pangasin, Philippines, life was difficult. My father had passed away when I was 19, leaving my mother to raise me and my three younger siblings alone.
We lived in a small wooden house near the rice fields and every day was a struggle to put food on the table.
I finished high school but could not afford to go to college. Instead, I worked odd jobs, construction, farming, fishing, anything to help my mother survive.
When a recruitment agency offered me a chance to work abroad in Saudi Arabia, I did not hesitate.
The salary they promised was more than I could ever earn in 10 years back home.
I signed the contract, kissed my mother goodbye, and boarded a plane to a land I knew nothing about.
The first few years in Dam were the hardest of my life. I worked on construction sites under the blazing desert sun, carrying cement bags, mixing concrete, and building towers that seemed to reach the sky.
The heat was unbearable, often exceeding 45° C during the summer months. My body achd every night, and my hands became rough and calloused from the endless labor.
I shared a small room with five other Filipino workers in a crowded labor camp on the outskirts of the city.
We slept on thin mattresses laid on the floor and the air conditioning barely worked during the hottest nights.
But I never complained. Every reel I earned was sent straight home to my mother.
And I knew that my sacrifice was building a better future for my family back in the Philippines.
What made life even more difficult was the spiritual emptiness I felt during those early years.
I grew up Catholic, attending mass every Sunday with my mother and praying the rosary before bed.
My faith was simple but real. It was the foundation of everything I believed. But in Saudi Arabia, Christianity was not welcome.
There were no churches to attend, no priests to confess to, and no community to worship with.
I was told during my orientation that practicing any religion other than Islam was strictly forbidden.
If caught, I could face imprisonment, deportation, or worse. So, I did what many Filipino workers did.
I hid my faith deep inside my heart and practiced it only in the silence of my own mind.
I prayed quietly before sleeping. I read Bible verses I had memorized as a child.
And I held on to the hope that one day I would return home and worship freely again.
Everything changed in my fourth year in Saudi Arabia when I met a man named Brother Thomas.
He was an Indian Christian who worked as an electrician on the same construction site as me.
He was older than me, perhaps in his mid-50s, with gray hair and kind eyes that seemed to carry a deep piece.
One afternoon, while we were eating lunch in the shade of an unfinished building, he noticed the small cross pendant hidden beneath my shirt.
He leaned closer and whispered carefully, “Brother, are you a believer?” My heart nearly stopped when I heard those words.
I did not know if he was testing me or if this was a trap set by someone who wanted to report me.
But something in his eyes told me he was sincere. I nodded slowly, and he smiled with a warmth that I had not felt since leaving my mother’s arms.
Brother Thomas became my closest friend and spiritual mentor in Saudi Arabia. He told me that there was a secret community of Christian believers scattered across Dam.
Filipinos, Indians, Nigerians, Nepales, Ethiopians, all of them hiding their faith while working in the kingdom.
Every Friday afternoon, while most of the city rested for Jumua prayers, a small group of believers would gather secretly in a tiny apartment in one of the worker housing compounds.
They called it the fellowship, and it was the only place where Christians could worship freely without fear of being seen.
Brother Thomas invited me to join them, warning me that the risk was great, but the reward was even greater.
I agreed without hesitation because my soul was starving for something I could not find anywhere else in this foreign land.
The first time I attended the fellowship, I wept like a child. The apartment was small, just one bedroom, a tiny kitchen, and a living room barely large enough to hold 20 people.
But when I stepped inside and heard the sound of believers singing hymns softly in multiple languages, something broke inside me.
I had not heard worship music in over 4 years. I had not prayed aloud with other Christians in what felt like a lifetime.
And now, surrounded by brothers and sisters from all over the world, I felt the presence of God fill the room like a warm embrace.
We sang quietly to avoid attracting attention from neighbors. We read the Bible together, taking turns holding the single worn copy that someone had smuggled into the country years ago.
And we prayed for each other for protection, for strength, for the courage to keep believing in a land that wanted to silence our faith.
The leader of the fellowship was a Nigerian man named Pastor Emanuel. He was tall and broad-shouldered with a deep voice that commanded attention, but also carried a gentleness that made everyone feel safe.
He had been in Saudi Arabia for over 15 years, working as a driver for a wealthy Saudi family during the day and shephering the secret Christian community at night.
He never called himself a pastor openly because titles like that could attract suspicion. Instead, we simply called him brother Emanuel or Papa M.
And he treated every believer like his own child. He taught us the word of God with passion and wisdom.
Always reminding us that Jesus knew what it meant to be persecuted and that we were never alone in our suffering.
His faith was unshakable and it inspired everyone who sat under his teaching. Among the 25 regular members of the fellowship, there was one woman who stood out to me.
Her name was Grace, a Filipina nurse who worked in a private hospital in the city.
She was in her early 30s, soft-spoken and always smiling despite the difficulties she faced at work.
Grace had a gift for encouragement. She could sense when someone was struggling and would always find the right words to lift their spirits.
She often led the prayer sessions, her voice gentle but filled with authority as she called on the name of Jesus.
I admired her faith deeply. And over the years, she became like a sister to me.
Whenever I felt weak or discouraged, Grace would remind me that God had a purpose for placing us in this difficult land.
She would say, “Miguel, we are not here by accident. We are here because God has a mission for us.
For 7 years, the fellowship met every Friday without interruption. We worshiped, studied the Bible, prayed, and supported each other through the challenges of living as hidden believers in an Islamic kingdom.
There were close calls, moments when neighbors knocked on the door during our meetings, or when police cars passed slowly through the compound.
Each time, we would freeze, lower our voices, and pray silently until the danger passed.
We became experts at hiding our faith, carrying our Bibles in secret compartments, deleting Christian content from our phones, and speaking in code when discussing spiritual matters in public.
It was exhausting, but it was also beautiful. In the midst of danger, our faith grew stronger.
In the midst of fear, our love for Jesus deepened. But we always knew that one day our secret might be discovered.
We prayed it would never happen. We hoped that God would protect us until we could return safely to our home countries.
But deep inside, every one of us understood the risk we were taking. We knew that reading the Bible in Saudi Arabia was considered a crime.
We knew that gathering to worship Jesus could lead to arrest, imprisonment, or worse. And we knew that if the authorities ever found us, our lives would never be the same again.
What we did not know was that the night of our greatest fear was closer than we ever imagined.
And when it finally came, nothing could have prepared us for what would follow. It was the second Friday of November 2019, and the evening air in Dam carried a coolness that signaled the approaching winter months.
I had just finished a long shift at the construction site, my body aching from hours of carrying steel rods and mixing cement under the supervision of our demanding Saudi foremen.
All I wanted was to shower, eat a simple meal, and rest before the weekend.
But Friday evenings were sacred to me and the other believers. No matter how exhausted we were, we never missed the fellowship.
It was the one time each week when we could remove the masks we wore in public and simply be who we truly were, children of God, worshippers of Jesus Christ, brothers and sisters bound by a faith that the world around us wanted to destroy.
So, I washed the dust from my face, changed into clean clothes, and walked quietly toward the apartment where our family of believers waited.
The apartment was located on the third floor of a modest building in a worker housing compound about 20 minutes from my labor camp.
The compound was home to hundreds of foreign workers from different countries, most of them laborers, drivers, and domestic helpers employed by Saudi families and companies.
The building itself was old and unremarkable with cracked paint on the walls and narrow stairwells that smelled of cooking spices and cleaning chemicals.
But to us, it was a sanctuary. The apartment belonged to an Indian Christian couple who had been in Saudi Arabia for nearly two decades.
They had no children and their small home had become the unofficial gathering place for believers who had nowhere else to worship.
Every Friday they opened their doors and their hearts, risking everything so that others could experience the presence of God.
When I arrived that evening, most of the regular members were already there. I counted 23 people seated on the floor and on plastic chairs arranged in a tight circle around the small living room.
Brother Thomas was near the window, his Bible open on his lap, his lips moving silently in prayer.
Sister Grace sat beside two Ethiopian women helping them find a passage in the worn Amharic Bible they shared between them.
A group of Nepali brothers huddled in the corner, speaking softly in their native language while waiting for the service to begin.
Pastor Emanuel stood near the kitchen doorway, greeting each person who entered with a firm handshake and a warm smile.
The atmosphere was one of quiet joy and anticipation, the same feeling that filled the room every Friday when believers gathered to seek the face of Jesus together.
By 7:00, all 25 members had arrived and Pastor Emanuel signaled for the meeting to begin.
We started as we always did with a song. Someone had brought a small portable speaker and a soft instrumental hymn played in the background as we lifted our voices in worship.
We sang quietly, careful not to let our praise travel beyond the thin walls of the apartment.
The words of the hymn filled my heart with peace, and I closed my eyes, allowing the presence of God to wash over me like a gentle wave.
For those few moments, I forgot that I was in a country where my faith was forbidden.
I forgot the exhaustion in my bones and the fear that always lingered at the edges of my mind.
I was simply a believer standing before my creator offering the only thing I had to give my worship.
After the singing ended, Pastor Emanuel opened his Bible and began to teach. That night, he spoke about the story of Daniel in the lion’s den.
How Daniel refused to stop praying even when the king issued a decree forbidding prayer to anyone except himself.
Pastor Emanuel’s voice was steady and passionate as he reminded us that Daniel’s faith did not waver even when faced with death.
He told us that God had shut the mouths of the lions and delivered Daniel because Daniel trusted in him completely.
The message felt especially relevant to our situation, and I could see tears forming in the eyes of several believers around the room.
We were all Daniels in our own way. Faithful servants living in a land that wanted to devour us.
And like Daniel, we chose to keep praying, keep believing, and keep trusting that our God was greater than any law or threat that surrounded us.
The teaching lasted about 40 minutes, and when Pastor Emanuel finished, we transitioned into our prayer time.
This was always the most powerful part of our gatherings. We would break into small groups of three or four, share our burdens and requests, and then lift each other up in prayer.
That night, I prayed with brother Thomas and a young Nepali man named Rajesh, who worked as a cleaner in a shopping mall.
Rajes asked us to pray for his family back home. His mother was sick and he had not been able to send money for her treatment.
Brother Thomas prayed for strength to endure the long hours at work and for protection over his aging wife who remained in India.
I asked them to pray for my younger brother who was struggling to find employment in the Philippines.
We held hands and prayed fervently, our voices blending together in a symphony of faith and desperation.
In those moments, we were not strangers from different countries. We were family. It was shortly after 9:00 when the first sign of trouble appeared.
The prayer time had just ended and Sister Grace was preparing to lead a final worship song when we heard a loud noise outside the apartment door.
At first, I thought it was just a neighbor passing by or perhaps some children playing in the hallway, but the noise grew louder.
Heavy footsteps, urgent voices speaking in Arabic. The unmistakable sound of authority approaching. Pastor Emanuel raised his hand, signaling for everyone to remain calm and silent.
We had practiced this before. Whenever there was a disturbance outside, we would pause everything, lower our voices, and wait for the danger to pass.
But something felt different this time. The footsteps did not fade away. Instead, they stopped directly outside our door and a heavy pounding shook the entire frame.
The door burst open before anyone could react. Saudi police officers in dark uniforms flooded into the apartment, their faces stern and their voices commanding.
They shouted orders in Arabic, demanding that everyone remain seated and put their hands where they could be seen.
I felt my heart stop as the reality of what was happening crashed over me like a tidal wave.
This was the moment we had feared for years. The moment our secret was finally discovered.
I looked around the room and saw terror reflected in the eyes of every believer.
Sister Grace covered her mouth with her hands, tears already streaming down her cheeks. Brother Thomas closed his eyes and began praying silently, his lips moving rapidly as he called on the name of Jesus.
The Nepali brothers huddled closer together, their faces pale with shock, and Pastor Emanuel stood frozen near the kitchen, his Bible still clutched tightly in his hands.
The officers moved quickly and efficiently, as if they had rehearsed this raid many times before.
They ordered us to stand in a line against the wall while they searched the apartment.
Within minutes, they had found everything. The Bibles, the worship song books, the small speaker, the handwritten prayer requests, and the notebooks filled with sermon notes.
One officer held up a Bible and spoke to his colleagues in Arabic, his tone dripping with disgust.
Another officer photographed everything with his phone, documenting the evidence of our so-called crime. I watched helplessly as our sacred possessions were thrown into plastic bags like garbage.
These were not just books and papers to us. They were treasures smuggled into the country at great risk, shared among believers for years, and soaked with the tears of countless prayers.
And now they were being confiscated as proof of our guilt. The interrogation began immediately.
Officers pulled Pastor Emanuel aside and bombarded him with questions. Who organized these meetings? How long had they been happening?
Who else was involved? Pastor Emanuel answered calmly, refusing to give names or details that could endanger other believers outside our group.
His courage in that moment inspired me beyond words. Even as the officers raised their voices and threatened him with severe punishment, he did not waver.
He simply repeated that we were peaceful people who meant no harm to anyone. But the officers were not interested in peace.
They were interested in punishment. One of them grabbed Pastor Emanuel by the collar and pushed him against the wall.
Accusing him of leading an illegal religious gathering and corrupting Muslim society. I wanted to rush forward and defend him, but fear held me frozen in place.
One by one, we were handcuffed and let out of the apartment. The metal cuffs bit into my wrists as an officer tightened them behind my back.
I had never been arrested before in my life. I had never even received a traffic ticket back in the Philippines.
And now I was being treated like a dangerous criminal simply because I had gathered with other believers to read the Bible and pray.
As we were marched down the narrow stairwell, I could see neighbors peeking through their doors, their faces filled with curiosity and fear.
Some of them were fellow foreign workers who probably understood exactly what was happening. Others were locals who watched with cold indifference.
I lowered my head in shame, not because I was ashamed of my faith, but because I felt exposed and vulnerable in a way I had never experienced before.
Outside the building, several police vehicles waited with their lights flashing in the darkness. We were divided into groups and pushed into the back of the vehicles like cargo.
I found myself seated between brother Thomas and Rajesh. Both of them trembling with fear but trying to remain calm.
Sister Grace was placed in a separate vehicle with the other women, and I caught a glimpse of her tear stained face through the window before the doors slammed shut.
Pastor Emanuel was the last to be loaded, and I saw two officers holding him tightly by the arms as if he were a violent criminal.
The engines roared to life and the vehicles began moving through the dark streets of Dam.
I had no idea where we were being taken or what would happen to us next.
All I knew was that our lives had just changed forever. The drive felt endless, though it probably lasted no more than 30 minutes.
None of us spoke during the journey. The silence was heavy, filled with unspoken fears and desperate prayers.
I stared out the small window at the passing street lights, wondering if I would ever see my mother again or walk freely under the Philippine sun.
Brother Thomas placed his hand gently on my knee, a silent gesture of comfort and solidarity.
Rajesh whispered something in Nepali, probably a prayer. And I closed my eyes to join him in spirit.
Even in the back of that police vehicle, surrounded by darkness and uncertainty, I felt a flicker of hope deep inside my chest.
It was faint, almost imperceptible, but it was there. And it whispered to me that Jesus had not abandoned us even in this moment of despair.
When the vehicles finally stopped, we were ordered to step out and line up in front of a massive gray building surrounded by high walls and barbed wire fencing.
The structure loomed against the night sky like a fortress of despair. I had heard stories about this place from other workers who spoke in hushed tones about those who had entered and never returned the same.
This was Al-Hir prison, one of the most notorious detention centers in all of Saudi Arabia.
It was known for its strict conditions, its harsh treatment of prisoners, and its complete isolation from the outside world.
As the heavy iron gates creaked open to receive us, I felt my knees weaken beneath me.
I had entered Saudi Arabia, seeking a better life for my family. Now I was entering a prison that might become my grave.
But even as fear gripped my heart, a quiet voice inside me whispered three words that I would cling to in the days ahead.
I am here. The iron gates of Alhire prison closed behind us with a sound that echoed through my entire body like a death sentence.
I stood in line with the other believers, my hands still cuffed behind my back, my heart pounding so loudly that I could hear it in my ears.
The prison compound stretched out before us like a concrete wasteland. Gray walls, gray buildings, gray watchtowers rising against the black sky.
Armed guards stood at every corner, their faces expressionless, their eyes scanning us like we were animals being led to slaughter.
Flood lights illuminated the entrance area with a harsh white glow that made everything feel cold and lifeless.
I had never seen a place so completely stripped of hope. Even the air felt different here, heavy with despair and fear, as if the very atmosphere had absorbed the suffering of everyone who had ever passed through these gates.
We were marched single file through a series of security checkpoints, each one more intimidating than the last.
At the first checkpoint, officers removed our handcuffs only to replace them with thick plastic restraints that cut even deeper into our wrists.
At the second checkpoint, we were forced to remove our shoes, belts, and any personal items we had in our pockets.
My wallet, my phone, and the small photograph of my mother that I always carried with me were all confiscated and placed in labeled plastic bags.
I watched helplessly as the officer tossed my belongings into a bin with dozens of other bags, and I wondered if I would ever see them again.
At the third checkpoint, we were photographed and fingerprinted like common criminals, our faces captured for prison records that would follow us for the rest of our lives.
The processing area was a long corridor lined with metal benches and barred windows that offered no view of the outside world.
We were ordered to sit and wait while officers reviewed our documents and made phone calls in rapid Arabic that I could not understand.
I looked around at my brothers and sisters in Christ, trying to find strength in their faces.
But all I saw was the same fear and confusion that gripped my own heart.
Sister Grace sat at the far end of the bench, her head bowed low, her lips moving silently in prayer.
Brother Thomas stared straight ahead with empty eyes, as if his mind had traveled somewhere far away from this nightmare.
Pastor Emanuel sat upright with his shoulders squared, still trying to project an image of strength, even though I could see his hands trembling slightly against his knees.
After what felt like hours of waiting, a senior officer appeared and began calling out names from a clipboard.
One by one, we were pulled from the benches and led down separate hallways toward the prison cells.
I was among the last to be called. And when I heard my name spoken in that harsh Arabic accent, my stomach dropped like a stone.
Two guards grabbed me by the arms and pulled me to my feet, their grip firm and unyielding.
They marched me through a maze of corridors, each one darker and more oppressive than the last.
The walls were bare concrete, stained with moisture and age. The floors were cold beneath my bare feet, and the smell of disinfectant mixed with something fowler filled my nostrils.
I tried to memorize the path we were taking, hoping it might help me escape someday.
But the corridors all looked the same. Endless passages of gray leading deeper into despair.
My cell was located in block 7, a section of the prison reserved for religious offenders and political prisoners.
The guard unlocked a heavy steel door and shoved me inside without a word. The cell was approximately 3 m by 2 m, barely large enough to contain the thin mattress on the floor, the metal toilet in the corner, and the small sink attached to the wall.
A single fluorescent light buzzed overhead, casting a sickly yellow glow that never seemed to fully illuminate the space.
There was one small window near the ceiling, covered with thick bars and frosted glass that allowed no view of the outside.
The door slammed shut behind me, and I heard the lock click into place with a finality that made my knees buckle.
I sank onto the mattress and buried my face in my hands, finally allowing the tears to fall freely.
For the first 3 days, I saw no one except the guards who delivered my meals through a small slot in the door.
The food was basic rice, bread, and a watery soup that tasted like nothing I had ever eaten before.
I forced myself to eat because I knew I needed strength. But every bite felt like swallowing sand.
The isolation was the worst part. I had no idea where the other believers were being held or if they were even still alive.
I had no way to contact my family in the Philippines or inform them of my arrest.
I had no Bible, no prayer book, no source of comfort except the words of scripture I had memorized over the years.
I repeated them constantly, whispering verses into the silence of my cell, clinging to them like a drowning man clinging to a rope.
The Lord is my shepherd. I shall not want. He makes me lie down in green pastures.
He leads me beside still waters. On the fourth day, the interrogations began. Two officers came to my cell early in the morning and led me to a small room with a metal table and two chairs.
They sat me down and began asking questions, the same questions over and over again, as if trying to catch me in a lie.
Who organized the gatherings? How many people attended? Where did the Bibles come from? Who else in Saudi Arabia was involved in spreading Christianity?
I answered as honestly as I could without betraying any believers outside our group. I told them I was just a construction worker who wanted to pray with other Christians.
I told them I meant no disrespect to Islam or to the kingdom. I told them I was not trying to convert anyone or cause any trouble.
But my answers were never enough. They accused me of lying, of hiding information, of being part of a larger conspiracy to undermine the Islamic faith.
The interrogation sessions grew more intense as the days passed. The officers used psychological tactics designed to break my spirit and make me confess to crimes I had not committed.
They told me that my friends had already given full confessions and blamed me for organizing the gatherings.
They told me that my family in the Philippines had been contacted and informed of my shameful arrest.
They told me that I would spend the rest of my life in this prison unless I renounced my faith and converted to Islam.
Each accusation felt like a knife twisting in my chest. But I refused to deny Jesus.
I remembered the words of Christ in the Gospel of Matthew. Whoever denies me before men, I will also deny before my father who is in heaven.
No matter how much pressure they applied, I could not bring myself to speak those words of renunciation.
After nearly 2 weeks of interrogation, I was finally allowed to leave my cell for a brief period each day.
The guards called it exercise time, but it was really just an hour of walking in a small concrete courtyard surrounded by high walls and barbed wire.
It was during one of these exercise periods that I finally saw some of my brothers and sisters again.
Brother Thomas was there, looking thinner and older than I remembered. But his eyes still held a spark of faith that had not been extinguished.
Rajesh was there too, walking slowly with a limp that suggested he had been treated roughly during his interrogations.
We were not allowed to speak to each other, but we exchanged glances that communicated everything words could not express.
We were still alive. We were still together. And we were still holding on to Jesus.
The conditions inside Alhayir prison were unlike anything I had ever experienced or imagined. The cells were designed to break the human spirit through isolation, monotony, and deprivation.
We were allowed to shower only twice a week using cold water that made our bodies shiver for hours afterward.
We were given no change of clothes, forced to wear the same prison uniform day after day until it became stiff with sweat and dirt.
We were allowed no visitors, no phone calls, no letters from family or friends. The only human contact we had was with the guards who treated us with contempt and the interrogators who treated us with cruelty.
Days blended into nights, and nights blended into days until time itself became meaningless inside those concrete walls.
But even in the darkest moments, small glimmers of hope appeared among us believers. We developed secret ways of communicating with each other.
Subtle hand signals during exercise time, whispered words when guards were not watching, messages scratched into the walls of our cells with bits of stone or metal.
Through these fragile connections, we encouraged one another to keep the faith and not give up.
Sister Grace somehow managed to pass a small scrap of paper to me during one exercise period.
On it, she had written a single verse in tiny letters. Fear not, for I am with you.
Be not dismayed, for I am your God. I hid that paper under my mattress and read it every night before sleeping.
It became my lifeline, my anchor, my reminder that God had not forgotten us. Pastor Emanuel became our unofficial leader even inside the prison.
Though we could rarely speak directly, his presence alone gave us strength. Whenever I saw him during exercise time, he would nod slowly and place his hand over his heart.
A gesture that meant, “Be strong. Jesus is with us.” The guards tried everything to break him.
Longer interrogation sessions, harsher conditions, threats against his family back in Nigeria, but he never wavered.
He later told me that during his darkest moments, he would close his eyes and imagine himself standing before the throne of God, surrounded by angels and saints who were cheering him on.
That image gave him the courage to endure whatever the guards threw at him. His faith became a beacon for all of us, a living testimony that the power of Christ was greater than any prison.
As the week stretched into months, I began to lose track of time completely. The fluorescent light in my cell buzzed constantly, never turning off, making it impossible to distinguish between day and night.
My body grew weaker from the poor nutrition and lack of proper exercise. My mind grew foggy from the isolation and the endless repetition of interrogation questions.
There were moments when I wondered if I would die inside these walls. Forgotten by the world, my bones buried in unmarked ground far from my beloved Philippines.
The despair was overwhelming, pressing down on me like a physical weight that made it hard to breathe.
I cried out to God in those moments, begging him to rescue me, or at least to give me the strength to endure.
It was during one of those desperate nights when my hope had reached its lowest point that something extraordinary happened.
I was lying on my thin mattress, staring at the ceiling, whispering prayers that felt like they were going nowhere.
My eyes were heavy with exhaustion. But sleep would not come. The buzzing of the fluorescent light seemed louder than ever, drilling into my skull like an instrument of torture.
I closed my eyes and tried to imagine my mother’s face. The smell of our small kitchen back home.
The sound of rain falling on our tin roof. But the images would not form clearly.
Everything felt distant and faded, like memories from another lifetime. Then, without warning, the light in my cell changed.
The harsh yellow glow of the fluorescent bulb softened into something warmer, something golden, something alive.
I opened my eyes slowly, unsure if I was dreaming or finally losing my mind.
But what I saw made me sit up immediately, my heart racing with a mixture of fear and wonder.
The entire cell was filled with a light that seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere at once.
It was brighter than anything I had ever seen. Yet, it did not hurt my eyes.
It was warm and gentle, wrapping around me like an embrace I had not felt since leaving my mother’s arms years ago.
And in the center of that light, standing at the foot of my mattress was a figure I recognized immediately.
Not because I had ever seen him before, but because my spirit knew him the moment he appeared.
I could not move. I could not speak. I could not even breathe. My entire body froze as I stared at the figure standing before me, bathed in a golden light that seemed to pulse with life and warmth.
He was taller than any man I had ever seen. Yet, his presence did not feel intimidating or frightening.
Instead, it felt like coming home after a long and painful journey. His robe was white, whiter than anything I had ever witnessed, glowing with a radiance that made the prison walls around me seemed to disappear.
His hair fell past his shoulders in gentle waves, dark and flowing, and his hands were open at his sides, palms facing toward me as if offering something precious and invisible.
But it was his face that captured me completely and held me in a trance I could not escape.
It was the face of pure love. His eyes were deep and endless containing oceans of compassion, rivers of mercy, and a tenderness so profound that tears began streaming down my cheeks before I even realized I was crying.
Those eyes saw everything. Every sin I had ever committed, every doubt I had ever harbored, every moment of weakness when I had questioned his existence or his love.
And yet there was no judgment in his gaze, no disappointment, no anger. There was only acceptance, only grace, only a love so vast and unconditional that my heart could barely contain it.
I wanted to fall at his feet and worship him, but my body would not respond to my commands.
I could only sit there on my thin mattress, tears pouring down my face, overwhelmed by the presence of the one I had served in secret for so many years.
He did not speak with his mouth. Yet I heard him clearly in the deepest part of my soul.
His voice was not a sound that entered through my ears, but a knowing that filled my entire being as clear and unmistakable, as if he had whispered directly into my heart.
Miguel, he said, and the way he spoke my name made me feel like the most beloved person in all of creation.
Do not be afraid. I have heard your prayers. I have seen your tears. I have counted every moment of suffering you have endured for my name.
The words flowed through me like warm water, washing away the fear and despair that had accumulated over the weeks of imprisonment.
For the first time since the night of our arrest, I felt peace. Real tangible supernatural peace that made no sense given my circumstances.
I tried to speak, to ask him why he had allowed us to be arrested, to beg him for rescue, to express the thousand questions that swirled in my mind.
But no words would come out. My lips trembled, my throat tightened, and all I could do was weep and stare at the glorious figure standing before me.
He seemed to understand everything I wanted to say without me speaking a single word.
He stepped closer to me and the light around him intensified, filling every corner of my small cell until the gray concrete walls seemed to vanish completely.
I no longer felt like I was in a prison. I felt like I was standing in the throne room of heaven itself, surrounded by a glory too beautiful for human eyes to fully comprehend.
Miguel, he spoke again, and his voice carried the weight of eternity. I have not abandoned you.
I have not forgotten you. I am with you in this place, just as I was with Daniel in the lion’s den.
Just as I was with Paul and Silas in the Philippian jail, just as I have been with every one of my children who has suffered for my name throughout the ages, the mention of Daniel struck my heart with sudden force.
I remembered Pastor Emanuel’s sermon on the night of our arrest. The story of Daniel refusing to stop praying even when faced with death.
The story of God shutting the mouths of the lions and delivering his faithful servant.
I had listened to that sermon just hours before the police burst through our door, never imagining that I would soon find myself in my own lion’s den, desperately needing the same miraculous deliverance.
As if reading my thoughts, Jesus continued to speak into my heart. What the enemy meant for evil, I will turn for good.
What was intended to destroy your faith will become a testimony that shakes nations. Do not fear those who can kill the body but cannot kill the soul.
Fear only him who has the power to save both body and soul. I am he, Miguel.
I am the resurrection and the life. And I have plans for you and your brothers and sisters that go far beyond these prison walls.
His words ignited something inside me. A flame of hope that had nearly been extinguished by weeks of darkness and despair.
I felt strength returning to my limbs, courage flooding back into my heart, and faith rising up within me like a mighty river breaking through a dam.
Then he showed me something I did not expect. In my mind’s eye, I saw images playing out like scenes from a movie, clear and vivid and more real than any dream I had ever experienced.
I saw the 25 believers gathered together, not in chains, but in freedom, their faces shining with joy as they lifted their hands in worship.
I saw prison guards falling to their knees, overwhelmed by a power they could not understand.
I saw doors swinging open without human hands touching them and chains falling away as if they were made of paper.
I saw us walking out of Alhhata prison. Not running, not hiding, but walking boldly in the full light of day, surrounded by a glory that made even the armed guard step back in fear.
And I saw something else that made my heart leap within me. I saw the warden of the prison, a man known for his cruelty and hatred of Christians, kneeling before an open Bible with tears streaming down his face.
The visions faded as quickly as they had appeared, but their impact remained burned into my memory forever.
I looked back at Jesus, desperate to understand what I had just witnessed. Was this a prophecy of things to come?
Was this a promise from God that we would be delivered? Or was this simply a comforting dream meant to give me strength to endure whatever suffering lay ahead?
The question swirled in my mind. But Jesus answered with words that settled deep into my spirit.
What I have shown you will come to pass. Not by human power, not by political influence, not by any strategy of man, but by my spirit, says the Lord of hosts.
I will shake this prison. I will confound those who persecute my children. And I will receive glory in this place where my name has been forbidden.”
Before I could respond, he reached out his hand and touched my forehead gently. The moment his fingers made contact with my skin, a surge of warmth flooded through my entire body, starting from my head and flowing down to my feet.
It was like being immersed in liquid fire that did not burn but healed, that did not consume but restored.
Every ache in my bones disappeared. Every wound from the rough treatment of the guards vanished.
Every trace of exhaustion and weakness melted away as if I had just awakened from a year of perfect rest.
I gasped as the power flowed through me and I heard myself crying out in a language I did not recognize.
Words of praise and worship that came from somewhere deep within my spirit, bypassing my mind entirely when the surge of power finally subsided.
I found myself lying on my back on the mattress. My chest heaving with deep breaths, my face wet with tears of joy.
I sat up slowly and looked around the cell, expecting to see the gray walls and the buzzing fluorescent light.
But Jesus was still there, standing a few feet away, his eyes fixed on me with a love that made me want to weep all over again.
He smiled, a smile so warm and radiant that it seemed to illuminate the entire universe.
And he spoke one final time. Tell the others what you have seen and heard.
Encourage them to stand firm. The hour of your deliverance is closer than you think.
And when you walk out of this prison, you will carry a testimony that will spread to the ends of the earth.
Then he began to fade. The golden light around him softened gradually, becoming fainter and fainter until it resembled the last rays of sunset disappearing below the horizon.
I reached out my hand instinctively, not wanting him to leave, desperate to hold on to his presence for just a moment longer, but he continued to fade.
And soon the light was gone completely, leaving me alone in my cell once again.
The fluorescent bulb buzzed overhead as it always had, casting its harsh yellow glow across the concrete walls.
The thin mattress pressed against my back, and the smell of the prison filled my nostrils.
Everything looked the same as before, but everything had changed inside me. I was no longer the broken, desparing prisoner who had cried out to God just moments before.
I was a man filled with supernatural hope, armed with a promise from the lips of Jesus himself.
I did not sleep for the rest of that night. I sat on my mattress with my back against the wall, replaying every moment of the encounter over and over again in my mind.
I whispered prayers of thanksgiving, praising God for visiting me in my darkest hour, for speaking words of comfort and promise into my desperate soul.
I thought about the visions he had shown me, the believers worshiping in freedom, the guards falling to their knees, the warden kneeling before a Bible.
Could such things really happen in a place like Alhhatyear prison? Could God really move so powerfully in the heart of a kingdom that rejected his name?
My human mind struggled to comprehend such possibilities. But my spirit had no doubts. I had seen Jesus with my own eyes.
I had heard his voice in my heart. And I knew with absolute certainty that he was about to do something miraculous.
When morning came, I felt an urgency to share what had happened with the other believers.
During our exercise period that day, I managed to catch Brother Thomas’s attention across the courtyard.
He looked at me with tired, questioning eyes, and I placed my hand over my heart, the same gesture Pastor Emanuel used to encourage us.
But then I added something new. I pointed upward toward the sky and smiled with a joy that must have seemed completely out of place in such a hopeless environment.
Brother Thomas’s eyes widened with confusion at first, then with curiosity, then with something that looked like the faintest spark of hope.
He nodded slowly, understanding that something had happened, even if he did not yet know what it was.
Over the next several days, I found ways to communicate fragments of my encounter to the other believers.
Through whispered words during brief moments when guards were distracted, through hand signals and facial expressions during exercise time, through small notes scratched onto scraps of paper and passed from cell to cell during meal distribution.
The message spread slowly but surely. Jesus had appeared to Miguel. Jesus had spoken promises of deliverance.
Jesus was about to move in power. At first, some of the believers were skeptical.
How could such a thing be possible? Were the isolation and stress finally causing me to lose my grip on reality?
But as they heard more details and saw the transformation in my demeanor, the peace in my eyes, the strength in my posture, the joy that radiated from my face despite our terrible circumstances, their doubts began to fade.
Sister Grace was the first to fully embrace the message. She sent me a note through the underground communication network we had established, and her words brought tears to my eyes.
She wrote, “Brother Miguel, I believe you. Last night, I dreamed of a great light filling this prison, and I heard a voice saying, “Fear not, my children.”
When I woke up, I felt a piece I cannot explain. Jesus is with us.
He has not forgotten us. Let us hold on together until he completes what he has begun.”
Her words confirmed what I already knew in my heart. That the encounter I had experienced was not just for me alone, but for all of us.
God was moving among his people, preparing our hearts for the miracle that was about to unfold.
Pastor Emanuel received the news with tears streaming down his weathered face. Though we could not speak directly, I saw him during exercise time the day after the message reached him.
He stood at the far end of the courtyard, his hands clasped in front of him, his eyes closed, his lips moving in silent prayer.
When he opened his eyes and looked at me, I saw something I had not seen since the night of our arrest.
Hope. Not the fragile, desperate hope of a man grasping at straws, but the solid, unshakable hope of a man who had heard from God.
He raised both hands slightly, palms facing the sky and mouthed two words that I understood perfectly, even from across the courtyard.
Thank you. It was a prayer of gratitude to the God who had not abandoned us.
The God who was about to shake the foundations of the world’s strictest prison. The days following my encounter with Jesus felt different in a way I could not fully explain.
The prison walls were still gray and oppressive. The guards were still harsh and cold.
The interrogation still continued with their endless questions and accusations. But something had shifted in the atmosphere around us believers, as if an invisible hand had reached into our circumstances and begun stirring the waters of change.
I noticed at first in the small things, a guard who usually shouted at us, suddenly speaking in a softer tone, an interrogation session that ended earlier than expected, an extra portion of bread appearing on my meal tray without explanation.
These details might seem insignificant to someone who has never been imprisoned, but to us they were signs that something was happening behind the scenes, something supernatural that our human eyes could not fully perceive.
The other believers noticed the changes, too. Brother Thomas told me through our secret communication network that he had experienced an unusual moment during his most recent interrogation.
The officer questioning him had suddenly stopped mid-sentence, stared at the wall behind Thomas for several seconds, and then abruptly ended the session without explanation.
The officer’s face had turned pale, and his hands had trembled slightly as he gathered his papers and left the room.
Thomas said he had felt a warm presence surrounding him during that moment, like an invisible shield had formed between him and his accuser.
He believed that an angel had appeared in that room, visible only to the officer, and had caused him to flee in fear.
I believed it, too. After what I had witnessed in my own cell, nothing seemed impossible anymore.
Sister Grace reported similar experiences through the notes she passed to other believers. She wrote that one of the female guards, who had been particularly cruel to the Christian women, had suddenly fallen ill and been removed from duty.
The illness came without warning. Severe headaches, unexplained fever, and a weakness that made it impossible for her to stand.
Doctors examined her but could find no medical cause for her condition. She was transferred to a hospital outside the prison and a different guard took her place, one who treated the women with far more dignity and respect.
Grace saw this as direct intervention from God, a sign that he was fighting battles on our behalf that we could not see.
She encouraged everyone to keep praying and believing because the hour of our deliverance was drawing near.
But the most dramatic sign came approximately 2 weeks after my encounter with Jesus. It happened on a Tuesday night when the prison was quiet and most of the inmates and guards were sleeping.
I was lying on my mattress, praying silently as I did every night when I heard a sound that made my blood run cold.
It was a scream. Not the scream of a prisoner being punished, but the scream of a man experiencing absolute terror.
The sound echoed through the corridors of block 7, bouncing off the concrete walls and piercing through the heavy steel doors of every cell.
I sat up immediately, my heart pounding, straining my ears to understand what was happening.
More screams followed, coming from different directions as if multiple people were experiencing the same terror simultaneously.
Then came the running footsteps. Dozens of them, heavy boots pounding against the concrete floors, guards shouting orders in Arabic, doors slamming open and closed throughout the building.
I pressed my ear against the cold metal door of my cell trying to catch fragments of conversation that might explain the chaos.
I heard words I recognized. Light, fire, someone there. And my spirit leaped with sudden understanding.
God was moving. The visions Jesus had shown me were beginning to unfold. The guards of Alhhatier prison were encountering something supernatural, something they could not fight with weapons or authority, something that was shaking the very foundations of their unbelief.
The chaos lasted for nearly 2 hours before the prison finally returned to an uneasy silence.
I spent the rest of the night praying and praising God, certain that the breakthrough we had been waiting for was finally beginning.
The next morning during our exercise period, the atmosphere in the courtyard was completely different.
The guards stood at their posts as usual, but their faces were pale and their eyes were wide with something I had never seen in them before.
Fear, they whispered among themselves in hushed tones, glancing nervously at the prisoners as if seeing us for the first time.
Some of them avoided eye contact entirely, staring at the ground or the walls instead of watching us with their usual stern authority.
Whatever had happened during the night had shaken them to their core. Over the following days, information began to filter through the prison about what had occurred that terrifying night.
Through conversations overheard by prisoners who worked in the administrative areas. Through guards who spoke carelessly with an earshot of inmates, through the underground network of communication that connected believers across different blocks.
We pieced together a picture that confirmed everything I had seen in my vision. Multiple guards had reported seeing figures of light moving through the corridors of the prison.
Tall, radiant beings that appeared and disappeared without warning. Passing through walls as if they were made of air.
Some guards described feeling an overwhelming presence of power that made their knees buckle and their weapons fall from their hands.
Others spoke of hearing voices in languages they did not understand. Voices that seemed to come from everywhere and nowhere at once.
But the most significant report concerned the warden himself, a man named Colonel Fad al-Mutri.
Known throughout the prison as the harshest and most merciless authority figure in the entire facility, Colonel al-Mutri had been a prison administrator for over 20 years.
And during that time, he had developed a reputation for crushing any sign of religious deviation with brutal efficiency.
He despised Christians especially viewing them as corrupting influences who threatened the Islamic purity of the kingdom.
He had personally ordered the harshest treatment for our group of believers, demanding that we be isolated, interrogated relentlessly, and given minimal food and comfort until we renounced our faith.
He was the last person anyone would expect to be touched by God. Yet, according to multiple sources, Colonel Al- Mutaryi had experienced something extraordinary on the night of the disturbances.
He had been sleeping in his private quarters within the prison compound when he was suddenly awakened by a brilliant light filling his room.
At first, he thought there was a fire and jumped out of bed to escape.
But the light did not behave like fire. It did not burn or consume. Instead, it gathered in the center of his room and took the form of a man.
A man wearing a white robe with eyes that seemed to pierce through every wall the colonel had built around his soul.
The figure spoke a single sentence in perfect Arabic. Why do you persecute my children?
Then the figure vanished, leaving the colonel trembling on the floor of his quarters, unable to move or speak for nearly an hour.
The encounter with the mysterious figure transformed Colonel Al-Mutari in ways that no one could have predicted.
In the days that followed, he became withdrawn and contemplative, spending long hours alone in his office instead of prowling the corridors and terrorizing prisoners as he usually did.
He stopped ordering harsh punishments and began questioning his subordinates about the treatment of inmates.
Most surprisingly, he requested a meeting with Pastor Emanuel, not for interrogation, but for conversation.
The request shocked everyone who heard about it. Why would the most anti-Christian official in the prison want to speak privately with the leader of the arrested believers?
What could he possibly want to discuss? The questions spread through the prison like wildfire, and speculation ran wild among guards and inmates alike.
Pastor Emanuel was brought to the warden’s office under heavy guard 3 days after the nighttime disturbances.
He later told us what happened during that extraordinary meeting, and his account confirmed that God was working in ways beyond our wildest imagination.
When Emanuel entered the office, he found Colonel Al-Muteri sitting behind his desk with a look of haunted confusion on his face.
The colonel dismissed the guards and closed the door, leaving himself alone with the Nigerian pastor he had once treated as an enemy.
For a long moment, neither man spoke. Then the colonel leaned forward and asked a question that would have been unthinkable just weeks before.
Who is the man in white? The one your people worship? The one who appeared in my room and asked why I persecute his children?
Pastor Emanuel felt his heart nearly burst with joy when he heard those words. He recognized immediately that God had done something miraculous.
That the same Jesus who had appeared to me in my cell had also appeared to the warden of the prison with trembling voice and tears in his eyes.
Emanuel began to share the gospel with Colonel Al-Muteri. He told him about Jesus, the son of God, who came to earth as a man who died on a cross for the sins of humanity and who rose from the dead on the third day.
He explained that Jesus was not just a prophet as Muslims believed, but the savior of the world, the king of kings, the only way to eternal life.
He shared scripture verses he had memorized passages about God’s love, forgiveness and the promise of salvation for all who believe.
The colonel listened in silence, his face unreadable, his eyes never leaving Emanuel’s face. When Emanuel finished speaking, the colonel sat back in his chair and stared at the ceiling for what felt like an eternity.
Then he reached into his desk drawer and pulled out something that made Emanuel gasp audibly.
It was a Bible, one of the Bibles that had been confiscated from our fellowship on the night of the raid.
The colonel placed it on the desk between them and said quietly, “I have been reading this book for 3 days.
I cannot stop. Every word feels like it was written for me. He paused, his voice cracking with emotion.
I have done terrible things to your people. I have hated you without reason. But the man who appeared to me, your Jesus, he did not come with judgment.
He came with a question. And that question has been echoing in my heart every moment since.
Pastor Emanuel reached across the desk and placed his hand gently on the Bible. He looked into the eyes of the man who had been his greatest enemy and spoke words that could only have come from the Holy Spirit.
Colonel, Jesus did not appear to you to condemn you. He appeared because he loves you.
He is calling you to himself just as he called Paul on the road to Damascus.
Paul was a persecutor of Christians just like you. But Jesus transformed him into the greatest apostle the world has ever known.
The same transformation is available to you if you will only receive it. The colonel’s shoulders began to shake and tears streamed down his weathered face.
For the first time in his life, the harsh and merciless warden of Alhyier prison broke down and wept like a child.
What happened next would have been impossible to believe if I had not seen the evidence with my own eyes.
Colonel Al-Muteri gave his life to Jesus Christ right there in his office, kneeling on the floor beside Pastor Emanuel while the Nigerian pastor led him in a prayer of repentance and faith.
The transformation was immediate and unmistakable. The colonel who had once ordered our harsh treatment now became our advocate and protector.
He could not openly declare his new faith without facing severe consequences himself. But he began working behind the scenes to change our circumstances.
He reduced the frequency and intensity of our interrogations. He improved our food rations and allowed us more time in the exercise courtyard.
He even arranged for Bibles to be secretly returned to some of the believers, hidden inside packages marked as legal documents.
But the colonel’s most significant action came approximately one week after his conversion. Using his authority and connections within the Saudi government, he began filing reports that questioned the validity of the charges against us.
He argued that we were peaceful foreign workers who posed no threat to the kingdom, that our gatherings were private and did not involve any attempt to convert Saudi citizens, and that holding us indefinitely would create diplomatic problems with the Philippines, Nigeria, India, Nepal, and other countries whose citizens were among the detained.
These arguments alone might not have been enough to secure our release, but combined with the supernatural events that had shaken the prison.
Events that many officials wanted to bury and forget as quickly as possible. They created an opening that no one had anticipated.
The news reached us on a Thursday afternoon, delivered by a guard who looked almost as shocked as we were.
The Saudi government had decided to release all 25 Christian prisoners immediately. We would not face trial.
We would not serve prison sentences. We would simply be deported back to our home countries with orders never to return to Saudi Arabia again.
The deportation was presented as an act of mercy by the kingdom, a gesture of goodwill toward the foreign nations whose workers had been detained.
But we knew the truth. This was not the mercy of a government. This was the hand of God moving through impossible circumstances, fulfilling the promise that Jesus had spoken to me in my cell.
The hour of our deliverance had finally arrived. I will never forget the moment when the doors of Alha prison opened and we walked out into the blazing Saudi sun.
25 believers, thin and weary from months of imprisonment, stepped through those iron gates as free people.
We did not run. We did not hide. We walked boldly, just as I had seen in the vision, surrounded by a glory that made even the armed guards step back in silent awe.
Sister Grace lifted her hands toward the sky and began singing a hymn of praise in Tagalog, her voice cracked but beautiful.
Brother Thomas fell to his knees on the hot sand and wept tears of joy.
Pastor Emanuel stood tall with his eyes closed, his lips moving in silent prayer, his face radiating a peace that transcended all understanding.
And somewhere behind us, watching from his office window, stood a warden who had encountered Jesus and would never be the same again.
The bus that carried us away from Alhier Prison was old and uncomfortable with torn seats and windows that barely opened to let in the desert air.
But to me, it felt like a chariot sent from heaven itself. I sat near the back with brother Thomas on one side and Rajesh on the other.
Watching through the dusty glass as the massive gray walls of the prison grew smaller and smaller behind us.
Every meter of distance we traveled felt like another chain falling away from my soul.
Another weight lifting from my shoulders, another confirmation that the miracle Jesus had promised was truly unfolding before our eyes.
I pressed my forehead against the window and let the tears flow freely, not caring who saw me weeping like a child.
These were not tears of sorrow, but tears of overwhelming gratitude to the God who had heard our prayers and moved heaven and earth to set us free.
The other believers on the bus were experiencing the same flood of emotions. Sister Grace sat near the front with the other women, her hands raised toward the ceiling of the bus, her lips moving in continuous prayer and praise.
The Ethiopian sisters beside her joined in softly, their voices blending together in a harmony that transcended language and culture.
Pastor Emmanuel sat alone in a seat near the middle, his eyes closed, his weathered face peaceful and serene.
I knew he was communing with God. Offering thanks for the deliverance we had received and perhaps interceding for those we were leaving behind, the guards who had witnessed supernatural events, the warden who had secretly given his heart to Christ, and the countless other souls in that dark place who might one day encounter the same light that had transformed our lives.
The atmosphere on that bus was thick with the presence of the Holy Spirit. And I knew that angels were riding with us, celebrating the victory that God had won.
We were taken directly to a government processing center in Riad, where immigration officials handled our deportation paperwork with surprising speed and efficiency.
The officials treated us with cold professionalism, stamping our documents and issuing our exit visas without asking questions about what had happened inside the prison.
It was clear they wanted us out of the country as quickly as possible. Eager to close the file on an incident that had caused more confusion and fear than anyone in authority wanted to acknowledge.
We were photographed, fingerprinted one final time, and given strict warnings never to return to Saudi Arabia under any circumstances.
Our names would be permanently flagged in their immigration system, and any attempt to reenter the kingdom would result in immediate arrest and imprisonment.
I accepted these conditions without hesitation. I had no desire to return to a land that had caused me so much suffering.
The processing took several hours and by the time we were finished, night had fallen over Riyad.
We were transported to King Khaled International Airport and escorted to a secure waiting area where we would remain until our flights departed.
The believers from different countries would be traveling on separate planes to their respective homelands, which meant this was our last time together as the complete group of 25.
The realization hit us all at once, and suddenly the joy of our freedom mixed with the sorrow of imminent separation.
We had entered Alhai prison as strangers from different nations. But we were leaving as family, brothers and sisters bound together by shared suffering, shared faith, and a shared miracle that none of us would ever forget.
The bonds we had formed in those dark cells could never be broken by distance or time.
Pastor Emanuel gathered us together in a corner of the waiting area, away from the watchful eyes of the airport security officers.
He spoke quietly but with the same authority and warmth that had guided us through the darkest days of our imprisonment.
My brothers and sisters, he began his deep voice thick with emotion. Tonight we part ways in the physical realm.
Some of you will return to the Philippines, some to India, some to Nepal, some to Ethiopia, and I will return to Nigeria.
We may never stand together in the same room again on this side of eternity.
But I want you to know that what we experienced together was not ordinary. It was not coincidence.
It was not luck. It was the sovereign hand of Almighty God reaching into an impossible situation and performing a miracle that the world will talk about for generations to come.
He paused to wipe tears from his eyes before continuing. Each of you carries a testimony now.
A testimony of God’s faithfulness in the fire. A testimony of Jesus appearing in a prison cell.
A testimony of hearts being transformed and chains being broken. Do not keep this testimony to yourselves.
Share it everywhere you go. Tell your families, your churches, your communities. Tell anyone who will listen that our God is alive, that he still performs miracles, and that no prison on earth can hold those whom he is destined to set free.
The enemy meant to silence us by throwing us into that place. But God has turned his weapon into our platform.
What Satan meant for evil, God has used for good and the story of what happened in Alhhatyear prison will spread to the ends of the earth.
We spent the next few hours praying together, sharing memories, and exchanging contact information so we could stay connected after returning to our home countries.
Sister Grace wrote down addresses and phone numbers in a small notebook, promising to create a group where we could communicate and encourage one another in the years ahead.
Brother Thomas shared verses from scripture that had sustained him during the darkest moments. And we all committed to memorizing them as reminders of God’s faithfulness.
Rajesh sang a worship song in Nepali. His voice soft but filled with a passion that moved everyone to tears.
The Ethiopian sisters prayed over each person individually, laying hands on our shoulders and speaking blessings in their native language despite the sterile airport surroundings and the armed officers watching from a distance.
We created a sacred space filled with the presence of God. The first group to leave was the Indian contingent, including brother Thomas.
When his flight was called, I embraced him tightly, unable to find words adequate for the moment.
This man had been my first connection to the underground church in Saudi Arabia. He had introduced me to the fellowship and had walked beside me through years of secret worship and months of imprisonment.
He had held my hand during the darkest nights in Alha prison and had believed the message about my encounter with Jesus when others might have dismissed it as madness.
Saying goodbye to him felt like saying goodbye to a part of myself. But as we separated, he looked into my eyes and spoke words that would stay with me forever.
Miguel, this is not the end. It is the beginning. God has great plans for you.
Do not waste the testimony he has given you. Go and tell the world what Jesus has done.
The Ethiopian sisters left next, followed by the Nepali brothers, including Rajesh. Each departure was painful, each goodbye accompanied by tears and promises to pray for one another daily.
By the time the Filipino group was called to board our flight to Manila, only a handful of believers remained in the waiting area.
I hugged Pastor Emanuel last, holding on to him for a long moment, drawing strength from his steady presence one final time.
He whispered in my ear, “Remember, Miguel, the same Jesus who appeared to you in that cell is going with you to the Philippines.
He will never leave you. He will never forsake you. And he will use your testimony to bring many souls into his kingdom.
I nodded through my tears, unable to speak, and then turned to walk toward the boarding gate.
The flight to Manila lasted approximately 9 hours, but it felt like mere minutes. I sat in a window seat, staring out at the darkness below as we flew over the Arabian Sea and then across South Asia toward home.
Sister Grace sat beside me, and we spent much of the journey talking quietly about everything we had experienced.
We discussed the night of the arrest, the horrors of the prison, the appearance of Jesus in my cell, the transformation of the warden, and the miraculous release that had defied all human logic.
We marveled at how God had orchestrated every detail. How he had used our suffering to accomplish purposes we were only beginning to understand.
And we made plans for how we would share our testimony when we returned home.
Knowing that the story we carried was too powerful to keep hidden. As the plane descended toward Nino Ayino International Airport, I felt my heart swelling with emotions I could barely contain.
11 years. I had been away from my homeland for 11 years, missing birthdays, holidays, funerals, and countless ordinary moments that make up the fabric of family life.
I had left as a young man seeking economic opportunity and was returning as a survivor of religious persecution, marked forever by an encounter with the living God.
I did not know what awaited me on the ground below. Whether my mother was still alive, whether my siblings would recognize me, whether I would be able to rebuild a life in a country that might feel foreign after so long abroad.
But I knew one thing with absolute certainty. I was not returning empty-handed. I was carrying a testimony that had the power to transform lives.
And I would spend the rest of my days sharing it with anyone who would listen.
The moment I stepped off the plane and walked into the arrival hall of the Manila airport, I heard a sound that made my knees buckle beneath me.
It was my mother’s voice calling my name. I looked up and saw her standing behind the security barrier, older and grayer than I remembered, but with the same loving eyes that had watched over me since childhood.
Beside her stood my younger brother and two younger sisters, all of them grown now, all of them weeping and waving and calling out to me.
I ran toward them, abandoning all dignity, pushing past other passengers who probably thought I was crazy.
When I finally reached my mother and wrapped my arms around her frail body, I broke down completely.
Years of separation, months of imprisonment, and the overwhelming miracle of my release all crashed together in a tidal wave of emotion that I could not control.
My family had received word of my arrest months earlier through contacts in Saudi Arabia who had learned about the raid on our fellowship.
They had been praying continuously ever since, gathering relatives and church members for daily intercession on my behalf.
They had contacted the Philippine embassy, human rights organizations, and anyone else who might be able to help.
They had prepared themselves for the worst. The possibility that I might spend years in a Saudi prison or never return home at all.
When news of my sudden release reached them, they could hardly believe it. They had expected a long legal battle, diplomatic negotiations, perhaps intervention from international organizations.
Instead, I was simply coming home, freed without explanation, carrying a story that would take weeks to fully share.
The days following my return to the Philippines were filled with reunions, tears, and endless conversations about everything that had happened.
I told my family about the arrest, the prison, the interrogations, and the suffering we had endured.
But most of all, I told them about Jesus. How he had appeared in my cell, how he had spoken promises of deliverance, how he had touched my forehead and filled me with supernatural strength, and how every word he had spoken had come true exactly as he had promised.
My mother listened with wide eyes, her rosary beads clutched tightly in her hands, occasionally interrupting to praise God or ask clarifying questions.
My siblings sat in stunned silence, struggling to process a story that sounded like something from the Bible rather than the experience of their own brother.
But they believed me. They had seen the transformation in my eyes, the peace in my voice, and the fire of faith burning in my heart.
They knew I had encountered something real. Word of my testimony spread quickly through our local community.
Our parish priest invited me to share my story during Sunday mass, and the church was packed with people who had heard rumors about what had happened.
I stood before the congregation and spoke for over an hour. Describing every detail of the miracle from the night of the arrest to the moment I walked out of Alhhatyear prison, a free man.
People wept openly as I spoke. Some fell to their knees in worship. Others approached me afterward with their own stories of suffering, asking me to pray for them because they believed that the same God who had rescued me could rescue them from their circumstances.
The testimony that had been born in a Saudi prison was already beginning to bear fruit in the Philippines.
In the months that followed, I received invitations to speak at churches, conferences, and prayer gatherings throughout the country.
The story of the 25 Christians who were arrested for reading the Bible and then miraculously released through divine intervention captured the imagination of believers everywhere.
I traveled from Luzon to Visayas to Mindanao, sharing my testimony in cathedrals and small chapels, in megaurches and humble home fellowships.
Everywhere I went, the response was the same. Awe, wonder, tears, and renewed faith in a God who still performs miracles today.
Many people gave their lives to Christ after hearing my story. Others recommitted themselves to following Jesus with greater passion and courage.
The ripple effects of what God had done in Alhayer prison were spreading far beyond anything I could have imagined.
I stayed connected with the other believers from our group through the communication network Sister Grace had established.
We shared updates about our lives, our ministries, and the ongoing impact of our testimony in our respective countries.
Brother Thomas had returned to India and was now leading a ministry that supported persecuted Christians throughout South Asia.
Pastor Emanuel was back in Nigeria where he had planted a new church and was training young believers to stand firm in the face of opposition.
The Ethiopian sisters had become evangelists in their homeland, traveling to remote villages and sharing the gospel with people who had never heard the name of Jesus.
Rajesh was working with an underground network that smuggled Bibles into countries where scripture was forbidden.
Each of us had been transformed by our experience. And each of us was using our testimony to advance the kingdom of God.
Perhaps the most remarkable ongoing development came from an unexpected source. Colonel Fad al-mutari, the warden who had given his life to Christ in his office at Alhaya prison.
Through a series of encrypted communications that reached us through trusted intermediaries, we learned that the colonel had continued to grow in his faith despite the enormous risks he faced.
He was secretly reading the Bible every day, praying to Jesus in the privacy of his home, and quietly protecting other Christian prisoners who came through his facility.
He had even begun sharing his faith cautiously with a few trusted individuals, planting seeds of the gospel in hearts that might one day bloom into full belief.
The man who had once been our greatest enemy was now a brother in Christ, a living testimony to the transforming power of Jesus and a secret agent of the kingdom operating behind the walls of one of the world’s strictest prisons.
Today, as I conclude this testimony, I am sitting in my mother’s house in Pangasan, surrounded by the sounds and smells of my childhood home.
The rice fields stretch out beyond the window, swaying gently in the afternoon breeze. My mother is cooking in the kitchen, humming an old hymn that she used to sing when I was a boy.
My nieces and nephews are playing in the yard, their laughter filling the air with innocent joy.
Life has returned to a rhythm of normaly that once seemed impossible during those dark months in Alhier prison.
But I am not the same man who left this village 11 years ago seeking fortune in a foreign land.
I am a witness now. I am a testimony. I am living proof that Jesus Christ is alive.
That he hears the prayers of his children and that no power on earth can stand against his purposes.
If you are reading this story and facing your own impossible situation, I want you to know that the same God who rescued us from that Saudi prison is able to rescue you from whatever darkness surrounds you.
He sees your tears. He hears your prayers. He knows exactly where you are and what you need.
Do not give up hope. Do not stop believing. The same Jesus who appeared in my cell and spoke promises of deliverance is with you right now, ready to move on your behalf if you will only trust him.
The hour of your miracle may be closer than you think. Hold on. Keep praying.
Keep believing because our God is faithful and what he has promised he will surely accomplish.
And to those who have never encountered Jesus personally, I invite you to open your heart to him today.
He is not just a figure from ancient history or a character in religious stories.
He is the living son of God, the savior of the world, the one who died and rose again so that you could have eternal life.
He is knocking at the door of your heart right now, waiting for you to invite him in.
Do not turn him away. Say yes to his love. Accept his forgiveness and begin a journey that will transform your life just as it transformed mine.
Just as it transformed a hardened prison warden in the heart of Saudi Arabia. Just as it is transforming countless souls around the world every single day.
The miracle that began in Al-Hir prison has not ended. It continues to ripple outward, touching lives, changing hearts, and bringing glory to the name of Jesus Christ.
And I believe with all my heart that this story, our story, will continue to spread until it reaches the ends of the earth.
Because that is what miracles do. They do not stay contained. They do not remain hidden.
They burst forth into the world like light breaking through darkness, unstoppable and eternal. And the light that shone in that prison cell on the night Jesus appeared to me is still shining today.
And it will keep shining until every knee bows and every tongue confesses that Jesus Christ is Lord.
To God alone be all the glory forever and ever. Amen.