Living in Union With Christ in Dangerous Times 2 of 3

Josef Tson
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Josef Tson

Josef Tson (1934–present). Born in 1934 in Romania, Josef Tson emerged as a prominent Baptist pastor, evangelist, and author during the oppressive Communist regime of Nicolae Ceaușescu. Raised in a Christian family, he drifted from faith at 14 but was baptized in 1951 after engaging with Christian intellectuals at Cluj University, where he studied for four years. At the Baptist Seminary in Bucharest, liberal theology shook his beliefs, leading him to teach for a decade before leaving Romania. He studied at Oxford University, earning an M.A. in 1972, and returned to Romania, pastoring churches in Ploiești and Second Baptist Oradea, Europe’s largest Baptist church with 1,400 members, from 1974 to 1981. Arrested multiple times in the 1970s, Tson faced brutal interrogations and death threats for preaching, famously telling a secret police officer in 1977, “Your supreme weapon is killing; my supreme weapon is dying,” believing his martyrdom would amplify his sermons. Exiled in 1981, he settled in the U.S., becoming president of the Romanian Missionary Society and founding Emmanuel Bible Institute in Oradea, translating Christian literature and training ministers. Tson authored Suffering, Martyrdom, and Rewards in Heaven, exploring persecution’s role in faith, and was a radio voice on Radio Free Europe. In 2010, the Romanian Baptist Union revoked his ordination for aligning with a charismatic group, a move that stirred debate. Married to Elizabeth, he continued preaching into his 80s, saying, “When you kill me, you send me to glory—you cannot threaten me with glory.”