What does it mean to follow Jesus when governments demand your allegiance, your silence, or your fear?
That question is not abstract in this episode. It has a name, a face, a church family, and tears on a Los Angeles sidewalk and Iranian streets. Craig sits down with Ara Torosian, an Iranian-born Armenian pastor now living in Los Angeles, to talk about Iranian Christians, war, asylum, ICE arrests, and what it means to follow Jesus when governments on every side demand our fear.
Ara’s story does not fit into our neat American boxes. He loves Iran. He loves America. He has suffered under the Iranian regime. He has been and watched Christians be persecuted in Iran. He has seen fellow asylum seekers be detained here in the United States government. That kind of story makes slogans fall apart fast.
And maybe that is the point.
Because if Jesus is Lord, then no flag gets to blind us. No empire gets a blank check. No ruler gets to replace mercy. No King but Christ.
When the government Becomes a Teacher of Fear
Ara was born in Iran in 1979, the year of the Iranian Revolution. He grew up as part of an Armenian Christian minority in a country shaped by pressure, control, and fear. As a child, he remembers being pushed to step on painted U.S. flags and Israeli flags at school while chants were taught like lessons.
That is what governments do. They train children to hate the “enemy” before the children even know what the word means.
But here is the catch: the U.S. does this too. Maybe the songs are different. Maybe the flags are treated with more reverence. Maybe the slogans sound more polished. But when any government teaches us who to fear, who to bomb, who to cage, and who to ignore, Christians should pause.
Jesus never said, “Blessed are the well-propagandized.” He said, “Blessed are the peacemakers.”
The Underground Church and the Cost of Saying Yes
Ara came to faith as a teenager after reading the Bible in Farsi. He knew from the start that following Jesus could cost him. This was not church as a hobby. This was not Sunday morning culture. This was a dangerous yes.
“When I say, ‘Yes, Lord, I wanna follow you,’ I knew this is going to be dangerous. This might cost my life.” — Ara, around 10:17
That kind of faith exposes how soft our U.S. church games can be. We argue about music styles, coffee brands, and which politician God supposedly likes this year. Meanwhile, brothers and sisters in Iran have been arrested, beaten, imprisoned, and killed for gathering around Scripture.
Ara says the church in Iran went underground after pressure increased. And yet, the gospel kept moving. Not through government power. Not through a Christian nation. Not through forced religion.
Through witness. Through courage. Through people hungry for truth.
War, Peace, and the Sermon on the Mount
One of the hardest parts of this conversation is the tension around war. Ara has seen evil up close. He has watched people suffer under the Iranian regime. He understands why many Iranians are desperate for outside pressure and even military help.
Craig does not brush that pain aside. But he also asks the question Bad Romans have to ask:
“As I read the Sermon on the Mount, where am I gonna see this in the words of Jesus?” — Craig, 33:25
That question should haunt us in the best way.
Because the government always has a reason to bomb. Always. It is always freedom, safety, justice, defense, liberation, or national interest. But Jesus calls us to enemy-love, mercy, prayer, and cross-shaped faithfulness.
Ara says plainly, “As a Christian, I want peace. I want peace for all world.” He also admits the world is broken and the answers are not simple.
That honesty matters. We do not need cheap answers. We need Jesus-shaped ones.
The Church Is Not a Political Platform
Ara shares something every U.S. church should hear. In his own church, people have wanted to bring political loyalty into the pulpit. Some support Iranian opposition leaders. Some want the church to bless a movement or party.
Ara refuses.
“In my church, my platform is for Bible and preaching the gospel.” — Ara, around 37:34–38:23
Amen and amen.
The church is not a campaign office. It is not a nationalist clubhouse. It is not a place to crown Caesar, Trump, Biden, Pahlavi, or anyone else. The church belongs to Christ.
That does not mean Christians stop caring about real suffering. It means we care without handing our worship to rulers.
When ICE Looks Like the Regime You Fled
Then the episode turns from Iran to Los Angeles.
Ara describes Iranian Christian asylum seekers from his congregation being detained by ICE, including people with pending asylum cases and legal paperwork. He says one couple had lawyers, documents, and a live asylum case when they were arrested.
Ara watched masked agents detain people from his church. It brought him back to Iran.
“Seven minutes I was crying… Because that triggered me back in Iran.” — Ara, 52:49–53:00
That sentence should stop us cold.
What does it say when a pastor who fled persecution sees masked agents in U.S. uniforms and feels like he is back under the terror he escaped?
This is where “law and order” talk gets tested by Jesus. These are not talking points. These are image-bearers. These are families. These are people seeking refuge. Ara says it clearly: “They are just people. They are just Christians, persecuted Christian. They want freedom.”
Acting Christian, Not Using Christianity
Ara does not ask U.S. Christians to pick a party. He asks them to act like Christians.
“The Christian show the act, mercy, and also compassion for human life.” — Ara, 58:00–58:09
That is the line.
Not “Who did you vote for?”
Not “Which side owns the news cycle?”
Not “Can we make this fit our immigration policy?”
Mercy. Compassion. Human life.
Craig adds that silence in the face of oppression makes us complicit. That is not a call to worship politics. It is a call to stop hiding behind politics when our neighbors are suffering.
May we be people who speak for the voiceless, refuse the worship of empire, and follow the crucified King.
Jesus over empire. Neighbor-love over coercion. No King but Christ.
🤝Connect with Ara Torosian🤝
Instagram: Ara Torosian, @aratorosian (Instagram)
Facebook: Ara Torosian (Facebook)
Church connection: Cornerstone West Los Angeles / Farsi-speaking community; Ara has written publicly for the church about war, immigration struggle, and his congregation’s pain. (cornerstonewla.org)
Related reporting: Christianity Today covered one Iranian Christian connected to Ara’s church being freed after nine months in immigration detention. (Christianity Today)
Related reporting: Religion News Service covered Ara’s hunger strike and advocacy for detained Iranian Christians. (RNS)
Related reporting: Reuters covered immigration arrests of Iranian asylum seekers in Los Angeles and Ara’s response as pastor. (Reuters)
Highlights & Takeaways
Governments train fear. Jesus trains enemy-love.
Iranian people are not the Iranian regime. We must stop confusing rulers with the people under them.
War always promises freedom, but often multiplies death. Christians must test every claim by the words of Jesus.
The church pulpit belongs to Christ. It should not become a stage for parties, rulers, or national movements.
Persecuted Christians need protection, not political theater. Asylum seekers are neighbors, not props.
Mercy is not weakness. It is what faithfulness looks like when the government gets cruel.
Speaking up matters. Silence can become cooperation with oppression.
No King but Christ means no empire or government gets our full trust. Not Iran. Not America. Not any government.
Listen
Listen for the tension in Ara’s story. He loves America, grieves Iran, opposes oppression, and still wrestles with what peace looks like in a broken world.
Reflect
Where have you let a government tell you who your enemy is? What would change if you looked at that person first through the eyes of Jesus?
Read
Read Matthew 5–7 slowly this week. Pay special attention to enemy-love, mercy, prayer, and the way Jesus rejects revenge.
Practice
Find one immigrant, refugee, prisoner, or detained family story in your own community. Do not turn it into a debate. Pray, listen, and look for one concrete act of mercy.
Episode Timestamps:
(00:00) government oppression and Iranian Christians
Standing by or speaking up
Iranian Christians in Iran and United States
Ara Torosian introduced
(00:37) Meeting Ara
Western blind spots about Iran
Hidden Christian communities
(02:01) Ara’s background
Armenian Christian roots
Born during the Iranian Revolution
Minority life under pressure
(03:32) Discovering the Bible in Farsi
First encounter with the gospel
Six months of searching
A dangerous yes to Jesus
(04:06) Childhood under government propaganda
Forced slogans and flags
Fear taught young
(07:00) Pressure on Christians in Iran
Closed churches
Pastors killed or imprisoned
(10:17) Following Jesus when it costs
Faith with real danger
Prison and persecution
American comfort challenged
(11:28) Smuggling Bibles into Iran and house arrest
Arrest at the airport
Two years under pressure
Intelligence office interrogations
(12:43) The underground church grows
House churches after closures
Hunger for truth
Iran as mission field
(15:03) People versus regimes
Iranian people not the regime
American government comparison
government power and coercion
(17:10) War, freedom, and mixed Iranian views
Some wanting intervention
Some fearing bombs
Media narratives questioned
(30:57) Craig presses the Jesus question
War on terror comparison
More war making more death
Sermon on the Mount tension
(33:32) Ara’s struggle with war and peace
Wanting peace as a Christian
Broken world realities
Rights versus righteousness
(34:46) Presenting, not protesting
White House fasting
Voice for the voiceless
Persecuted Christians detained
(35:37) Government worship in churches
Leaders lifted over Scripture
Jesus as Savior, not rulers
Peace prayed for daily
(37:03) Politics inside the church
Iranian opposition movements
Pulpit not for parties
Church as gospel space
(48:01) Bad Roman donation break
Spotfund support
No King But Christ message
Donations beyond costs to Memphis charities
(48:38) ICE arrests and asylum seekers
Church members detained
Pending asylum cases
Legal path concerns
(52:03) Masked agents and trauma
Couples detained
Panic attack and emergency room
Iran memories triggered
(54:00) Broken immigration system
Asylum eventually granted
Months in detention
Families harmed
(55:44) Children praying for their dad
Nine- and seven-year-old kids
Detained father
Sunday prayers
(56:08) Speaking because he can
Freedom to criticize government in U.S. vs. Iran
White House advocacy
Church silence challenged
(58:00) What Christians should show
Mercy and compassion
Human dignity
Persecuted Christians seeking freedom
(59:36) Silence and complicity
Speaking out against oppression
Possible costs
Refusal to stay quiet
(01:01:03) Life belongs to Jesus
Threats from Christians
Fear admitted
Kingdom purpose
(01:03:11) Bad Roman Salsa break
Salsa support
Homemade freedom joke
No King but Christ jingle
(01:03:54) How many Christians in Iran?
Numbers hard to know
Underground church reality
Fundraising claims questioned
(01:05:30) Where to find Ara
Instagram and Facebook
Open to honest questions
Avoiding hateful arguments
(01:07:14) Lakers, Luka, and closing
Basketball side quest
Keeping in touch
Final thanks