BREAKING: Iranian Soldier Died at Hormuz – What He Saw Led 3000 IRGC to Leave Islam
By March 25th, just 10 days after my NDE experience, I had personally led more than 3,000 former IRGC personnel to faith in Christ.
The number was growing exponentially as each new convert returned to share the gospel with his former comrades that creating a chain reaction of spiritual transformation that was completely unprecedented in the history of Iran.
The American military command was stunned by the developments.
General Patricia Morrison, the coalition commander overseeing post-war operations, summoned me to her headquarters for an urgent briefing.
Captain Mansuri, she said, “We’re receiving surrender requests from Iranian units that specifically cite your religious testimony as their motivation.
Our intelligence services estimate that nearly 15% of Iran’s remaining military personnel have either surrendered or gone a W after claiming to have converted to Christianity.
What exactly are you telling these men?
” I explained that I wasn’t engaging in psychological warfare or propaganda operations as I was simply sharing the truth about my encounter with the living Christ and inviting my former brothers in arms to experience the same freedom, peace, and purpose that I had found.
The Holy Spirit was doing the rest, convicting hearts and drawing souls to salvation with supernatural power that no human strategy could replicate.
General, I said, “What you’re witnessing is the greatest spiritual awakening in Persian history since the Islamic conquest 1,400 years ago.
God is using the collapse of the Islamic Republic to create an unprecedented opportunity for the gospel to take root in Iranian soil.
If American policy supports this revival instead of hindering it, you could see the emergence of a genuinely democratic pro-western Iran within a generation.
” The most dramatic conversion came on March 22nd and when Admiral Hussein Salami, former commander of the entire IRGC, sent word through intermediaries that he wanted to meet with me personally.
Admiral Salami had been in hiding since the opening American strikes, leading guerilla resistance from a mobile command post somewhere in the Zagros Mountains.
The meeting took place at midnight in an abandoned warehouse outside Basra under the cover of a sandstorm that grounded American surveillance aircraft.
Admiral Salami arrived with six bodyguards, all of them armed and clearly suspicious of what they viewed as a possible trap.
The 58-year-old commander looked haggarded, and defeat weighed heavily on his shoulders, but his eyes still held the fierce intelligence that had made him one of Iran’s most effective military leaders.
“Daras,” he said, not using my first name in a way that suggested both familiarity and disappointment.
“I knew your father well.”
Raam Mansuri was a man of unshakable faith and absolute loyalty to the Islamic revolution.
How do you think he would feel about his son betraying everything he died for?
The question was like a knife to my heart because I had been wrestling with the same doubt since my conversion.
But as I prepared to answer, I felt the presence of the Holy Spirit filling me with supernatural boldness and clarity.
Admiral, I replied, “My father served the Islamic Republic because he believed it represented the will of Allah.”
But what if he was wrong?