The List That Saved 669 Children
In 1938, a young British stockbroker named Nicholas Winton visited Prague and saw Jewish families desperate to save their children from the Nazi threat closing in around them. He didn't look away. Instead, he sat down at a small desk and began writing names.
Over the next several months, Winton organized eight trains to carry 669 children out of Czechoslovakia to foster families in Britain. He photographed each child, matched them with homes, forged documents when bureaucracy stalled, and kept meticulous records. Every name on his list mattered. Every child entrusted to his care was accounted for. He was determined not to lose a single one.
For fifty years, no one knew. Then in 1988, his wife found a scrapbook in their attic — the original lists, the photographs, the children's names. When the BBC reunited him with some of those now-grown children, the audience wept as one after another stood to thank the man who had received them and refused to let them be lost.
Jesus makes a promise far greater than any human rescuer could keep. "All those the Father gives me will come to me," He declares, "and whoever comes to me I will never drive away." The Father has entrusted His children to the Son, and the Son keeps perfect records — not in a scrapbook hidden in an attic, but written on His heart. Not one will be forgotten. Not one will be lost. Every last one will be raised up at the last day.
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