Blog
»
Through investigations, dreams and
visions,
Jesus asked me to forsake my Muslim family
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
Jesus asked me to forsake my Muslim family
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
“I
see very clearly that God shows no favoritism.
In every nation he accepts those who fear him and do what is right.
This is the message of Good News for the people of Israel—
that there is peace with God through Jesus Christ, who is Lord of all.
Acts 10:34-36 (NLT)
In every nation he accepts those who fear him and do what is right.
This is the message of Good News for the people of Israel—
that there is peace with God through Jesus Christ, who is Lord of all.
Acts 10:34-36 (NLT)
Nabeel
Qureshi shares
the following thought provoking testimony. God
is relentless in pursuit of the those He loves, and you are on that list.
Jeff
"Allahu
Akbar. I bear witness that there is no god but Allah. I bear witness that
Muhammad is the messenger of Allah."
These
are the first words of the Muslim call to prayer. They were also the first words
ever spoken to me. Moments after I was born, I have been told, my father softly
recited them in my ear, as his father had done for him, and as all my
forefathers had done for their sons since the time of Muhammad.
We
are Qureshis, descendants of the Quresh tribe—Muhammad's tribe. Our family
stood sentinel over Islamic tradition.
The
words my ancestors passed down to me were more than ritual: they came to define
my life as a Muslim in the West. Every day I sat next to my mother as she taught
me to recite the Qur'an in Arabic. Five times a day, I stood behind my father as
he led our family in congregational prayer.
By
age 5, I had recited the entire Qur'an in Arabic and memorized the last seven
chapters. By age 15, I had committed the last 15 chapters of the Qur'an to
memory in both English and Arabic. Every day I recited countless prayers in
Arabic, thanking Allah for another day upon waking, invoking his name before
falling asleep.
But
it is one thing to be steeped in remembrance, and it is quite another to bear
witness. My grandfather and great-grandfather were Muslim missionaries, spending
their lives preaching Islam to unbelievers in Indonesia and Uganda. My genes
carried their zeal. By middle school, I had learned how to challenge Christians,
whose theology I could break down just by asking questions. Focusing on the
identity of Jesus, I would ask, "Jesus worshiped God, so why do you worship
Jesus?" or, "Jesus said, 'the Father is greater than I.' How could he
be God?" If I really wanted to throw Christians for a loop, I would ask
them to explain the Trinity. They usually responded, "It's a mystery."
In my heart I mocked their ignorance, saying, "The only mystery here is how
you could believe in something as ridiculous as Christianity."
Bolstered
by every conversation I had with Christians, I felt confident in the truth of
Islam. It gave me discipline, purpose, morals, family values, and clear
direction for worship. Islam was the lifeblood that coursed through my veins.
Islam was my identity, and I loved it. I boldly issued the call of Islam to
anyone and everyone who would listen, proclaiming that there is no God but Allah
and that Muhammad is his messenger.
And it was there, atop the minaret of Islamic life, that Jesus called to me.
And it was there, atop the minaret of Islamic life, that Jesus called to me.
Not
the Man I Thought
As
a freshman at Old Dominion University in Virginia, I was befriended by a
sophomore, David Wood. Soon after he extended a helping hand, I found him
reading a Bible. Incredulous that someone as clearly intelligent as he would
actually read Christians' sacred text, I launched a barrage of apologetic
attacks, from questioning the reliability of Scripture to denying Jesus'
crucifixion to, of course, challenging the Trinity and the deity of Christ.
David
didn't react like other Christians I had challenged. He did not waver in his
witness, nor did he waver in his friendship with me. Far from it—he became
even more engaged, answering the questions he could respond to, investigating
the questions he couldn't respond to, and spending time with me through it all.
Even
though he was a Christian, his zeal for God was something I understood and
respected. We quickly became best friends, signing up for events together, going
to classes together, and studying for exams together. All the while we argued
about the historical foundations of Christianity. Some classes we signed up for
just to argue some more.
After
three years of investigating the origins of Christianity, I concluded that the
case for Christianity was strong—that the Bible could be trusted and that
Jesus died on the cross, rose from the dead, and claimed to be God.
Then
David challenged me to study Islam as critically as I had studied Christianity.
I had learned about Muhammad from imams and my parents, not from the historical
sources themselves. When I finally read the sources, I found that Muhammad was
not the man I had thought. Violence and sensuality dripped from the pages of his
earliest biographies, the life stories of the man I revered as the holiest in
history.
Shocked
by what I learned, I began to lean on the Qur'an as my defense. But when I
turned an eye there, that foundation crumbled just as quickly. I relied on its
miraculous knowledge and perfect preservation as a sign that it was inspired by
God, but both beliefs faltered.
Overwhelmed
and confused by the evidence for Christianity and the weakness of the Islamic
case, I began seeking Allah for help. Or was he Jesus? I didn't know any longer.
I needed to hear from God himself who he was. Thankfully, growing up in a Muslim
community, I had seen others implore Allah for guidance. The way that Muslims
expect to hear from God is through dreams and visions.
1 Vision, 3 Dreams
1 Vision, 3 Dreams
In
the summer after graduating from Old Dominion, I began imploring God daily.
"Tell me who you are! If you are Allah, show me how to believe in you. If
you are Jesus, tell me! Whoever you are, I will follow you, no matter the
cost."
By
the end of my first year in medical school, God had given me a vision and three
dreams, the second of which was the most powerful. In it I was standing at the
threshold of a strikingly narrow door, watching people take their seats at a
wedding feast. I desperately wanted to get in, but I was not able to enter,
because I had yet to accept my friend David's invitation to the wedding. When I
awoke, I knew what God was telling me, but I sought further verification. It was
then that I found the parable of the narrow door, in Luke 13:22–30. God was
showing me where I stood.
But
I still couldn't walk through the door. How could I betray my family after all
they had done for me? By becoming a Christian, not only would I lose all
connection with the Muslim community around me, my family would lose their honor
as well. My decision would not only destroy me, it would also destroy my family,
the ones who loved me most and sacrificed so much for me.
For
Muslims, following the gospel is more than a call to prayer. It is a call to
die.
I
began mourning the impact of the decision I knew I had to make. On the first day
of my second year of medical school, it became too much to bear. Yearning for
comfort, I decided to skip school. Returning to my apartment, I placed the
Qur'an and the Bible in front of me. I turned to the Qur'an, but there was no
comfort there. For the first time, the book seemed utterly irrelevant to my
suffering. Irrelevant to my life. It felt like a dead book.
With
nowhere left to go, I opened up the New Testament and started reading. Very
quickly, I came to the passage that said, "Blessed are those who mourn, for
they will be comforted."
Electric,
the words leapt off the page and jump-started my heart. I could not put the
Bible down. I began reading fervently, reaching Matthew 10:37, which taught me
that I must love God more than my mother and father.
"But
Jesus," I said, "accepting you would be like dying. I will have to
give up everything."
The
next verses spoke to me, saying, "He who does not take his cross and follow
after me is not worthy of me. He who has found his life will lose it, and he who
has lost his life for my sake will find it" (NASB). Jesus was being very
blunt: For Muslims, following the gospel is more than a call to prayer. It is a
call to die.
Betrayal
I
knelt at the foot of my bed and gave up my life. A few days later, the two
people I loved most in this world were shattered by my betrayal. To this day my
family is broken by the decision I made, and it is excruciating every time I see
the cost I had to pay.
But
Jesus is the God of reversal and redemption. He redeemed sinners to life by his
death, and he redeemed a symbol of execution by repurposing it for salvation. He
redeemed my suffering by making me rely upon him for my every moment, bending my
heart toward him. It was there in my pain that I knew him intimately. He reached
me through investigations, dreams, and visions, and called me to prayer in my
suffering. It was there that I found Jesus. To follow him is worth giving up
everything.
For more:
follow on Twitter @jefflampl
I wonder what kind of story a Christian who converted to Islam might tell. This story appeals to a tribal view of Christianity, i. e. we are good/right THEY are not. I don't think that's what Jesus or God his Father had in mind.
ReplyDelete