The dictator Nicolae Ceausescu of...
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The dictator Nicolae Ceausescu of Romania oppressed his people and told them that nothing could threaten his Communist reign: But in the back country a revolution was brewing. Led by Lazlo Tokes, a minister of the Hungarian Reformed Church, who served among the Hungarians who lived in Romania, the truth began to emerge. Because Tokes earlier had spoken out against the dictator he had been assigned a parish in Timisoara, a remote city with a small population. Tokes was only an assistant pastor at the time, but his strong biblical preaching soon attracted throngs to his church, even as many as 2,000 people attending the services. The dictator ordered the secret police to attack Tokes and his family. The faithful pastor was imprisoned.
The people rallied on Tokes' behalf with such intensity that their cry was heard in the capital city of Bucharest. When Ceausescu stepped out on the balcony on December 21, 1989, the people did not cheer him but rather derided him for his treatment of Tokes. The tide had turned. Within four days the dictator was tried by a tribunal and shot to death.
Hananiah, the false prophet, in his own day, fooled the people of Judah for a while, convincing them with his soft words about peace that they had nothing to fear, but eventually Jeremiah's hard sayings were found to be the true Word of God.
- Hasler
The people rallied on Tokes' behalf with such intensity that their cry was heard in the capital city of Bucharest. When Ceausescu stepped out on the balcony on December 21, 1989, the people did not cheer him but rather derided him for his treatment of Tokes. The tide had turned. Within four days the dictator was tried by a tribunal and shot to death.
Hananiah, the false prophet, in his own day, fooled the people of Judah for a while, convincing them with his soft words about peace that they had nothing to fear, but eventually Jeremiah's hard sayings were found to be the true Word of God.
- Hasler
