Between two Irans
4/25/202631 min
He fled the Islamic Revolution as a child and built a life in America. Now David Nasser reflects on war, regime change, and the hope he still sees for Iran’s people. WORLD Radio’s Myrna Brown talks with him in this extended weekend interview.
Clips
Showing 10 of 11Transcript preview
First 90 secondsSpeaker 00:00
Additional support comes from Water's Edge. For seventy-five years, Water's Edge has existed to financially empower donors and ministries to transform lives with the gospel of Jesus Christ. Water's Edge Kingdom Investments offers investors four point five five percent APY on thirteen-month term investments. These investments provide the funds needed to make church building loans to growing churches across the country. Details at watersedge.com/invest.
Myrna Brown· Host0:29
[gentle music] Hello, and thank you for joining us for a special edition of The World and Everything in It. I'm Myrna Brown. When David Nasser was just a child, he found himself squarely in the middle of the Iranian revolution of 1979. The events of those years would change the trajectory of Iran, but also of Nasser's life and his faith as well. His family fled the country as the monarchy gave way to becoming the Islamic Republic. They ended up in America, where he became a Christian, then a pastor and author. Now, thirty-seven years later, he's watching closely as his new country fights to bring about change in the country of his birth, one he still thinks of