Corrie ten Boom and the Hidden Place
In February 1944, the Gestapo raided the ten Boom home in Haarlem, Holland. Corrie ten Boom and her family had been sheltering Jewish refugees for months, knowing the dragon of Nazi hatred was circling closer every day. When the soldiers finally burst through the door, six people were already hidden behind a false wall in Corrie's bedroom — a space barely thirty inches deep, built months earlier by a Dutch architect who understood what was coming.
The Gestapo tore the house apart for hours. They ripped up floorboards, hammered walls, and interrogated the family with brutal efficiency. But they never found the hiding place. Forty-seven hours later, the Dutch underground extracted all six refugees alive.
Corrie and her sister Betsie were not so fortunate. They were dragged to Ravensbruck concentration camp, where Betsie eventually died. Yet even there, Corrie would later testify, the Almighty had prepared a place — not from suffering, but through it.
In Revelation 12, a woman clothed with the sun faces a great red dragon bent on destroying her child. The threat is real, the danger immense. But God has prepared a place for her in the wilderness — not a place of comfort, but of preservation. The Most High does not always spare His people from the dragon's fury, but He always prepares a place where the enemy's final victory is made impossible. The child is caught up to God's throne. Salvation belongs to the Lord.
Scripture References
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