The Communist Soviet government had taken away his job, his family, and his freedom. His crime? Faithful service to God, or, in the words of the KGB, anti-Soviet activities."He was imprisoned, interrogated, and then sentenced to five years in a corrective labor camp, where he endured bitter hardships designed to stifle the spirit and break the will.But even the prospect of eternal banishment to a remote village in western Siberia could not deter him from his steady reliance upon Gods promises . . .
The Communist Soviet government had taken away his job, his family, and his freedom. His crime? Faithful service to God, or, in the words of the KGB, anti-Soviet activities."He was imprisoned, interrogated, and then sentenced to five years in a corrective labor camp, where he endured bitter hardships designed to stifle the spirit and break the will.But even the prospect of eternal banishment to a remote village in western Siberia could not deter him from his steady reliance upon Gods promises . . .