
F-15 Eagle
An Extraordinary Easter Rescue That Had The Hand Of God In Every Detail
April 7, 2026
By Greg Laurie
Reprinted from Harbinger’s Daily
This Easter weekend, the world witnessed something that can only be described as extraordinary. A story so remarkable — so perfectly timed — that it’s hard not to see the hand of God in every detail.
On Good Friday, an American F-15E Strike Eagle was shot down over the mountains of southwestern Iran. Both crew members ejected. One landed close enough to be rescued within hours in a daring daylight operation. The other — a highly respected Colonel — landed miles away, badly wounded, in an area President Trump later described as “teaming with terrorists.”
Iran immediately launched a massive manhunt. Thousands of people were searching for him. The regime offered a $60,000 bounty for his capture. And the clock was ticking.
But this Colonel — this man of deep faith — did not panic. He did what he was trained to do.
“When a plane crashes in hostile territory, they all head right to that site — you want to be as far away as you can,” President Trump explained at today’s White House press conference. The Colonel moved fast. He put distance between himself and the wreckage. Then he began to climb.
Wounded. Bleeding — Trump said he was “bleeding rather profusely.” Hunted. Alone. And yet he scaled the rugged ridges of the Iranian mountains. He treated his own wounds. He found a crevice in the rock — a cave — and he hid himself from the enemy. Secretary Pete Hegseth described it this way: “One downed airman evaded capture for more than a day, scaling rugged ridges while hunted by the enemy.”
All of Good Friday. All of Saturday. Hidden in a cave.
Back in Washington, America’s finest were working without pause. CIA Director John Ratcliffe said the challenge of finding this man was “comparable to hunting for a single grain of sand in the middle of a desert.” And yet they never stopped. Hegseth said it powerfully: “From the moment our pilots went down, our mission was unblinking. The call never dropped. The meeting never stopped. The planning never ceased.”
And here’s where the story gets even more remarkable. The CIA launched what Ratcliffe called a “deception campaign to confuse the Iranians who were desperately hunting for our airman.” Trump confirmed it: “We were bringing them all over — and a lot of it was subterfuge. We wanted to have them think he was in a different location, because they had a vast military force out there.”
This kind of battlefield deception has ancient roots. In 2 Kings 7, God caused the entire Syrian army to hear the sound of a great army — chariots, horses, a massive force — and they fled in blind panic and confusion, abandoning everything, without a single shot fired. God has always been in the business of confounding the enemy and protecting His own.
On Saturday morning, the CIA confirmed what they had been praying for — the Colonel was alive. “On Saturday morning, we achieved our primary objective by finding and providing confirmation that one of America’s best and bravest was alive and concealed in a mountain crevice — still invisible to the enemy, but not to the CIA,” Ratcliffe said.
Then came Easter Sunday morning. As the sun rose over Iran.
President Trump authorized a massive rescue operation — 155 aircraft in total: four bombers, 64 fighter jets, 48 refueling tankers, and 13 rescue aircraft. HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopters flew seven hours through the night deep into hostile territory. Special operators descended on the area. They engaged the enemy. They were lethal.
And then — the Colonel activated his emergency transponder.
His first message was not coordinates. It was not a distress call.
His first words were: “GOD IS GOOD.”
At first, U.S. officials weren’t certain it was him. Trump later said they feared it could be an Iranian trap. But those who knew this Colonel weren’t surprised at all. He is a man of deep faith. Those three words were his signature. His testimony. His declaration from a mountain cave in the heart of enemy territory on Easter Sunday morning.
Secretary of War Pete Hegseth delivered the moment perfectly at today’s White House press conference. I want you to read every word of this: “He sent a message: ‘God is good.’ In that moment of isolation and danger, his faith and fighting spirit shone through. You see — shot down on a Friday. Good Friday. Hidden in a cave, a crevice, all of Saturday. And rescued on Sunday. Flown out of Iran as the sun was rising on Easter Sunday. A pilot reborn. At home and accounted for. A nation rejoicing. God is good.”
President Trump added: “In a breathtaking show of skill and precision, lethality and force, America’s military descended on the area… engaged the enemy, rescued the stranded officer, destroyed all threats and exited Iranian territory while taking no casualties of any kind.”
“The heroic F-15 weapons system officer had evaded capture on the ground in Iran for almost 48 hours,” Trump said. “That’s a long time when you’re in tough shape and when you’re bleeding.”
The rescue — from the moment the F-15 went down to the moment both crew members were safe — lasted 45 hours and 56 minutes.
Trump announced it to the nation on Truth Social with these words: “WE GOT HIM! My fellow Americans, over the past several hours, the United States Military pulled off one of the most daring Search and Rescue Operations in U.S. History… GOD BLESS AMERICA, GOD BLESS OUR TROOPS, AND HAPPY EASTER TO ALL!”
Friends, I don’t think this timing is an accident. Shot down on Good Friday. Hidden in a cave on Saturday. Rescued at sunrise on Easter Sunday. Flown out of Iran — alive — as a new day was dawning.
The parallels are unmistakable. And I believe God wanted us to see them.
Jesus was crucified on a Friday. He lay in a tomb on Saturday. And on Sunday morning, as the sun rose — everything changed. Death could not hold Him. The grave could not keep Him. And on that first Easter morning, the message that rang out was essentially the same one this Colonel sent from his mountain cave in Iran: “GOD IS GOOD.”
Easter is not just history. It’s a living reality. God is still in the business of rescue. He still goes after the one. He still makes a way where there is no way. He still confounds the enemy. He still brings His people out of the cave, off the mountain, and home.
This airman’s story is YOUR story, if you’ll receive it. Maybe you’ve been shot down. Maybe you’ve been wounded. Maybe you’re hiding in a cave right now — beaten up by life, hunted by your past, afraid the enemy is closing in.
God sees you. He knows exactly where you are. And He has never stopped planning your rescue.
As Secretary Hegseth said: “Despite incoming fire and unforgiving conditions, our troops brought every American home. No American lives were lost. We leave no man behind.”
That’s the Easter message. That’s the Gospel. God left no one behind. He sent His Son into enemy territory — this broken, fallen world — to bring us home. And He did it at the cost of His own life.
On Easter Sunday, an American airman was flown out of Iran as the sun rose. And his first words said everything: “GOD IS GOOD.” All the time.
Leave A Comment
You must be logged in to post a comment.