June 24, 2026

Why We Continue to Tell Victoria Cameron’s Story

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Why do pastors, worship leaders, journalists, and ministries continue to share Victoria Cameron’s story? This article explains why her testimony is about far more than survival. It is a testimony of prayer, worship, purity, the refusal to compromise with evil, and what she believes is God’s extraordinary faithfulness through decades of persecution.

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A testimony of faith, purity, and the refusal to compromise with evil.

Every generation has testimonies that remind the Church that God still intervenes.

Some accounts are stories of healing. Others are stories of provision. Others are stories of forgiveness.

Victoria Cameron’s testimony is different.

It is the story of a woman who, over the course of decades, repeatedly refused to surrender her faith while facing circumstances she believed were designed to destroy both her life and her relationship with God.

Throughout her memoir Scotland’s Les Misérables, one theme appears again and again.

She did not overcome evil through violence.

She did not overcome it through wealth or influence.

She overcame it by refusing to agree with it.

When resources disappeared, she prayed.

When escape seemed impossible, she worshiped.

When fear overwhelmed her, she fasted.

When every visible circumstance suggested there was no way forward, she continued believing that God would make one.

Again and again, she describes unexpected rescues, providential encounters, warnings, and interventions that she believes were acts of God.

Whether through people arriving at precisely the right moment, dreams that redirected events, or what she believes were angelic interventions, the consistent theme of her testimony is not human strength but divine faithfulness.

For that reason, this publication does not present her story merely as an investigation into crime.

It is presented as a testimony of the faithfulness of God under extraordinary circumstances.

The question this story asks is not simply what happened.

It is whether the Church still believes that the God who delivered Daniel from the lions’ den, preserved Sarah the wife of Abraham, and stood with Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego is still able to preserve His people today.

That is why we continue to tell Victoria Cameron’s story.

Her testimony is not rooted in a claim of personal strength or certainty.

Instead, Cameron describes a series of choices she believes shaped every rescue that followed. Throughout her memoir, she returns to the same theme again and again: when every visible circumstance suggested there was no escape, she chose to pray, to worship, to fast, and to trust God rather than surrender to the life her captors demanded.

Throughout biblical history, one theme appears again and again in the story of the Jewish people: the refusal to abandon their covenant with God by assimilating into cultures that demanded spiritual compromise. Whether in Egypt, Babylon, Persia, or under later persecution, generations were faced with the choice of preserving their identity before God or accepting the values imposed by those who held power over them. Cameron is no exception.

Rather than accepting the circumstances forced upon her, Cameron says she made a different choice.

“Instead of accepting the circumstances my enemies chose for me, I chose to pray. I chose to fast. I chose to believe and have faith. I chose to worship God in my heart, even times when I didn’t have an instrument, because I chose to believe that God would provide a way out.”

She says she never knew whether a rescue would come.

“I didn’t always know that a way out was going to come.”

Instead, she continued trusting God while believing that He could provide one.

Throughout her memoir, Scotland’s Les Misérables, Cameron describes repeated rescues that she believes came through divine intervention. She recounts dreams, providential encounters, and what she believes were angelic interventions that preserved her life during multiple trafficking attempts.

According to Cameron, one message remained consistent whenever those events were explained to her.

“Whenever I had an experience with an angel, where they appeared in a dream or came in person to rescue me, like they did in the Bible, every time, they always have said to me, the only reason we can protect you like this is because you are pure.”

She believes that this was not a statement about her own strength, but about her refusal to make what she describes as a spiritual agreement with those who sought to control her.

According to Cameron, she was repeatedly pressured—including by Jeffrey Epstein—to accept the lifestyle her traffickers promoted and to agree that it was acceptable.

“He wanted me to make an agreement with him that his lifestyle was okay and that what the girls were doing—their jobs—was okay. Then he wanted me to accept that and become that.”

She says she refused.

“When I said no and refused, he didn’t have his agreement. 

This is important especially if you know anything about spiritual warfare from a Christian or Jewish perspective, because he behaved and conducted himself like a demon, the way a demon needs a person to make an willful agreement with them in order to gain entrance into their life. 

Even though I was abducted by force, when it came down to him trying to rape me, I was supernaturally protected by a force he could not explain, and he needed me to make a willful agreement with him to break through that force, and I refused. 

It didn’t matter how he tried to sugarcoat the lifestyle he tried to sell me, no matter what I said I refused. 

He wasn’t afraid of the force, he knew what it was. He knew I had an angel protecting me. He knew that was the source of the protection, and then once he declared that, he started trying to figure out how to get rid of the angel. 

He wasn’t afraid of the angel. He saw the angel as his direct enemy, just like a demon would.”

Cameron compares her testimony to biblical accounts in which God intervened to preserve those who remained faithful, including Daniel in the lions’ den, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego in the fiery furnace, and Sarah the wife of Abraham after she was taken into another ruler’s household.

She emphasizes that she never assumed she would be rescued.

“I had no idea. It was terrifying. I would cling to God and hope that He would set me free and that He would deliver me.”

She is careful not to describe herself as invincible.

“I’m not saying that to dare God, or to dare a situation to happen, or to brag that I was invincible, because I wasn’t.”

Instead, she believes that every rescue points to God’s faithfulness.

“God treated me like I was his daughter, and he was the father who ran after me, who never gave up, who never stopped protecting me.”

For those who support her testimony, the story is ultimately not about human strength. It is about a woman who repeatedly refused to agree with evil, chose prayer over despair, worship over surrender, faith and purity over compromise, and trusted God when no escape was visible. He answered her prayers for freedom in extraordinary ways.

The greatest battle was never whether she would survive.

It was whether she would agree.

Will you agree with evil, or will you refuse?

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