Easter Behind Barbed Wire

The resilience of Easter_ Red Cross tribute

Thinking about this evening’s Good Friday service at our local parish, I found myself reflecting on how brave our POWs were during their captivity.

They had no churches. No stained glass. No choir. No bread. No wine.

Only dirt floors… whispered prayers. They built makeshift altars from scrap wood and crosses from Red Cross boxes or bamboo. In places like Changi Prison and the cells of Hỏa Lò Prison, prisoners secretly communicated by tapping codes between their cells.

Communion was improvised—sometimes using rice and water—and Scripture passages were recited from memory.

But they still proclaimed it: “He is Risen.”

  • Guards couldn’t stop it.
  • Walls couldn’t silence it.
  • Chains couldn’t hold it.

Because Easter was never about comfort—it was about victory through suffering.

One American POW recalled: “We had nothing—but that morning, we had everything. Christ had risen, and so would we.”

And in those darkest places, faith didn’t waver… These brave POWs give me a deeper understanding of the Easter message. Even in captivity, Easter served as a reminder that resurrection follows suffering—a message deeply personal to prisoners.

Even behind barbed wire, the Resurrection could not be imprisoned.

When Pope John Paul III saw the signs—hatred of Christians, targeted attacks on faith, alliances formed in the shadows—he didn’t call a council. He called warriors. Gideon’s Sword is more than a Vatican op. It’s a lifeline to the Church in America. And Micah Miller—fallen, broken, lethal—is their tip of the spear. There’s no pulpit for what’s coming. Only battlefields. THE FALLEN — Read it before your church burns.

He served God. Then he served man. Now he serves justice.
Micah Miller was a soldier.
Then a priest.
Then, a husband who buried the woman he loved.
Now?
He’s something else entirely.
-Trained by the 75th Ranger Regiment.
-Forged in the crucible of loss.
-Skills perfected on the violent streets of Haiti
-Recruited by the Vatican to fight a war America won’t even admit exists.
They tried to erase the truth.
They tried to burn down the faith.
But they didn’t count on Micah.
Now he leads a covert team into the heart of American darkness—where child mutilation is praised, churches burn in silence, and powerful men hunt the innocent.
THE FALLEN isn’t just a thriller. It’s a warning shot.

President Bearden didn’t steal the White House. He bought it—with the souls of men too weak to say no. Now the puppet masters are pulling strings from behind the curtain, and the last obstacle standing in their way? A fallen priest with a guilty conscience and a Mossad agent who doesn’t forgive. When truth becomes treason, who will you trust? THE FALLEN — Read it before they bury it.

Micah Miller never wanted redemption. Not after burying his wife. Not after walking away from the priesthood. But when the Pope himself calls, you answer.
Now he’s on a mission that will shatter everything he thought he knew—about his Church, his country, and the war being waged behind closed doors.
If you think this is just fiction, think again.
The war on faith has already begun.
Read the book, they’ll say it’s too dangerous to publish.