Signs and Wonders in Europe: How God Is Moving Among Migrants

Across Europe, migrants are encountering Jesus through healings, deliverance, and the work of the Holy Spirit—revealing how God is renewing faith in a secular continent.

Public conversations about migration in Europe usually focus on politics, economics, or cultural tension. Rarely do they acknowledge the spiritual reality unfolding across the continent. Yet among migrant communities, a different story is emerging—one marked by dreams, visions, healing, and deliverance.

Leaders like Tommie and Jonas with NEO US are witnessing these moments firsthand. Among Muslim-background migrants, encounters with Jesus and the power of the Holy Spirit are not abstract ideas—they are lived experiences. These testimonies are transforming lives and reshaping Europe’s faith landscape in unexpected ways.

A Son’s Desperate Prayer

One of the most striking stories Jonas shares begins with desperation. A young migrant approached him, burdened by fear for his father back home. The family believed the father was under severe spiritual oppression. Sleepless nights and anxiety had taken over their home.

The son asked a simple question:

“Can you pray for my father?”

Jonas agreed. Together, they prayed—not with ceremony, but with confidence in the authority of Jesus’ name.

Days later, the son returned with news that changed everything. His father had slept peacefully for the first time in years. The torment had lifted. Peace had returned.

For the family, this was not a coincidence—it was proof that God was present and active.

Encounters with the Holy Spirit

In another gathering, prayer led to a powerful encounter with the Holy Spirit. As the group prayed, a man fell to the ground, overwhelmed by God’s presence.

“It reminded me of the book of Acts,” Jonas said—where encounters with God were often physical, unmistakable, and life-changing.

For the man, the experience brought lasting freedom. He later shared that fear and despair broke him in that moment, marking the beginning of a transformed life.

Healings That Open Hearts

Tommie often points to healing as a doorway to faith. In one case, a migrant suffering from chronic pain asked for prayer. After the group prayed, the pain subsided. He began moving freely.

Others took notice.

News spread quickly through the camp, drawing people who wanted to know more about Jesus. These moments consistently follow a pattern: compassion first, curiosity next, faith soon after.

Healing becomes an invitation—one that speaks louder than argument.

Deliverance in a Secular Europe

In much of Europe, the supernatural is dismissed as outdated. But many migrants come from contexts where spiritual oppression is a lived reality. When they encounter freedom in Christ, the change is undeniable.

“These are not emotional experiences,” Jonas explains.

“They are real encounters that bring lasting change.”

Those who experience deliverance often become bold in prayer, discipling others with confidence rooted in what they have personally experienced.

Echoes of the Book of Acts

Tommie and Jonas' testimonies closely mirror the New Testament. In Acts, healings, deliverance, and visions frequently led entire households toward faith.

The same pattern is unfolding today.

Migrant believers see themselves as part of that ongoing story—living out a modern expression of the early church within Europe.

Impact Beyond Migrant Communities

These encounters do not stay within migrant circles.

A German neighbor who witnessed a healing began attending Bible studies. A secular student, curious after hearing about a vision, joined a prayer gathering and later chose to follow Christ.

Migrants—often seen only through social or political lenses—are becoming spiritual catalysts.

As Tommie notes,

“Europeans may not believe in religion, but they struggle to deny what they see with their own eyes.”

Resistance and Resilience

Skepticism remains. Some dismiss these stories as exaggerated. Others question migrant conversions. Many believers face rejection from Muslim peers who see faith in Christ as betrayal.

Still, the fruit is clear: freedom from addiction, healing from illness, release from fear, and lives marked by hope.

God Still at Work

The stories emerging across Europe tell a different narrative—one not defined by decline, but by renewal. Through migrants, God is healing the sick, freeing the oppressed, and filling lives with the Holy Spirit.

As Jonas reflects,

“This is the same God we read about in Scripture—still writing His story today.”

Europe’s spiritual future may be shaped by those who arrived seeking safety but now carry testimonies of transformation, healing, and faith.

God is moving among migrants—and through them, He is inviting Europe to encounter Him again.