Viral Claim: “Iranian Scholar Linked to Khamenei Abandons Islam for Jesus” — What We Actually Know
I never knew a day would come when I would declare Jesus not as a prophet but as the son of God, as God and the Messiah. That was me some time ago publicly declaring Jesus not just as a prophet but as the son of God, as God and the Messiah. My name is not important. What matters is what I found or rather who found me. Today I am a follower of Jesus Christ. But for 43 years of my life, I was a devoted Muslim scholar in Iran. I taught Islamic juristprudence. I wrote commentaries on the Quran. I led Friday prayers. I was certain, absolutely certain that I possessed the truth. This is my testimony. It is not easy to share because it cost me everything I knew. But I share it because truth matters more than comfort and eternity matters more than this brief life.
I need to take you back to the beginning to help you understand who I was so you can grasp the magnitude of what happened to me.

I was born in K, one of the holiest cities in Iran, uh a city of seminaries and shrines. My father was a religious man, a merchant who closed his shop five times daily for prayer without fail. My mother covered herself completely as was proper and she taught me to recite Quranic verses before I could fully read. In our home, everything centered around Islam. Everything.
My earliest memory is sitting on my father’s lap while he recited surah al fatiha. I must have been three or four years old. The rhythmic Arabic words sounded like music to me though I did not yet understand their meaning. My father’s voice was gentle when he recited the Quran. Different from his usual stern tone. I wanted to make him proud. I wanted to recite like him.
By the age of seven, I had memorized significant portions of the Quran. My teachers praised me. My relatives spoke of me with pride at family gatherings. I was the bright one, the devout one, the one who would bring honor to our family name. I loved the attention, yes, but more than that, I genuinely loved the Quran itself. The Arabic was beautiful. The verses seemed to contain all the wisdom of the universe. I felt special to be among those who could recite them.
When I was 12 years old, my father took me to the shrine of Fatima Masume. We walked through the golden doors and I felt overwhelmed by the grandeur, the devotion of the pilgrims, the sense that God was present in that place. I made a vow that day, a vow that would shape the next three decades of my life. I promised Allah that I would dedicate myself to understanding and defending Islam. I would become a scholar. I would serve him with my whole mind and heart.
My father wept when I told him. He kissed my forehead and called me his blessed son.
At 15, I entered the Hza, the traditional Islamic seminary in Kam. While other boys my age were thinking about sports and girls. I spent my days studying Arabic grammar, logic, Islamic juristprudence, and the sciences of hadith. The curriculum was rigorous. We studied the works of great scholars who had lived centuries ago. We memorized legal rulings. We learned how to engage in religious debates.
I was good at it. Very good. My teachers noticed my aptitude for argument, my memory, my passion. I advanced quickly through the levels of study. By my early 20s, I was teaching younger students. By my 30s, I was giving lectures in the seminary and writing articles for Islamic journals when my life revolved around Allah in a way that most Muslims could not match.
I prayed far beyond the required five daily prayers. I fasted not just during Ramadan but often throughout the year. I studied late into the night reading commentaries by lamplight until my eyes burned. I was known for my devotion. People came to me with questions about Islamic law. I answered them with confidence, citing verses and hadiths from memory.
I married a good woman, the daughter of another scholar. She was pious and modest. We had three children together, two boys and a girl. I taught my sons to pray as my father had taught me. I ensured my daughter understood the importance of hijab and modesty. I wanted them to love Allah as I did.
But I must be honest with you about something. Even in those years of devotion, even when I was most confident in my faith, there were moments, small moments, when questions whispered in the back of my mind. These questions were like tiny cracks in a wall. Uh you could hardly see them, you could ignore them, but they were there.
The first crack appeared when I was studying the Quranic account of Jesus as a young scholar. The Quran speaks of Jesus or Issa as we call him in remarkable ways. It says he was born of a virgin. It says he performed miracles, healing the blind, raising the dead. It says he is the word of God and a spirit from God. It even says he will return at the end of times.
I remember thinking, why is Isaiah described with such honor? And why is he called the word of God when Muhammad is not? Why does the Quran say that Issa created a living bird from clay, a miracle that suggests creative power that belongs only to Allah?
But I pushed these thoughts away. I had been taught the explanations. Issa was a great prophet, yes, but Muhammad was the final and greatest prophet. That was the answer. I accepted it and moved on.
Another crack appeared during my study of Islamic history. Yai was reading authenticated hadiths about the life of Muhammad. Not anti-Islamic sources but our own most respected collections. I read about the battles, about the captives, about the treatment of those who opposed him. I read about Aisha who was only 9 years old when the marriage was consummated. I read about the Jewish tribes of Medina. Something troubled me.
I tried to compare Muhammad’s life to the life of Issa as described in our own Quran. Issa healed people. Muhammad fought battles. Mi Issa spoke of loving enemies. Muhammad ordered the execution of poets who mocked him. Issa had no wives. Muhammad had many.
I told myself these thoughts were from Satan trying to lead me astray. Islam teaches that questioning the prophet is a dangerous sin. So I pushed harder in my devotion, hoping to drown out the doubts with more prayer, more study, more service.
Years passed. I became more respected. My reputation grew. I was invited to speak at conferences. My articles were read by students across Iran. People called me teacher, scholar, someone who understood the faith deeply.
But the questions kept coming more frequently now, especially when I was alone at night. I would read verses about jihad, about fighting non-believers, and I would wonder, is this truly from a God of mercy? I would read about the treatment of women in Islamic law, how a woman’s testimony is worth half of a man’s, how a husband may strike his wife, be how a woman inherits half of what her brother inherits. And I would wonder, is this truly justice?
I would read about the punishment for apostasy, death for anyone who leaves Islam, and I would wonder if Islam is truth, why must it be enforced with the threat of execution? Does truth need the sword?
These questions terrified me. In Islam, doubt itself is sinful. To question Muhammad is to risk your soul. To question the Quran is to invite Allah’s wrath. I I felt guilty for even having these thoughts. I would perform extra prayers seeking forgiveness for my weak faith.
I never spoke these doubts to anyone, not to my wife, not to my fellow scholars, not to my students. I wore the mask of certainty while inside something was breaking.
Then came the event that made everything impossible to ignore. It was a warm afternoon. I had just finished teaching a class on Quranic interpretation. A young student, brighteyed and sincere, and approached me after the other students had left. He was perhaps 19 years old, serious about his studies, the kind of student I had once been.
He asked me a simple question, the kind of question I had answered a hundred times before. He asked about surah 457, the verse that says Jesus was not crucified that it was made to appear so, but that Allah raised him up.
The student asked, “If Allah saved Issa from crucifixion by making someone else appear to be him, and does that not mean Allah deceived people? Does that not make Allah a deceiver?”

I opened my mouth to give the standard answer. I had given it many times. We do not fully understand Allah’s wisdom. We accept what the Quran says by faith. But as I looked at this young man’s face full of trust and sincerity, the words caught in my throat because I realized something in that moment.
I realized that I had never truly wrestled with this question myself. I had simply repeated what I was taught and and suddenly all the small questions I had suppressed for years came flooding back with force.
I gave the students some answer. I do not remember what I said. He seemed satisfied and left. But I sat alone in that classroom for a long time after he had gone.
That night I could not sleep. I kept thinking about that verse. If Allah made it appear that Jesus was crucified when he was not, then billions of Christians have been deceived into believing a lie for 2,000 years. They believe Jesus died for their sins, rose from the dead, and offers salvation through his sacrifice. If the Quran is true, they are all deceived. But would a merciful God allow such massive deception? Would he allow billions to be misled about something so important?
And then another thought came, one that shook me to my core. What if it is the Quran that is wrong about this? What if Jesus truly was crucified and rose again?
I immediately recoiled from this thought. It was blasphemy. It was apostasy. I prayed for forgiveness. But the question would not leave me.
Over the following weeks, I began to study differently. I began to actually examine the things I had always taken for granted.
I looked at the historical evidence for the crucifixion of Jesus. Even non-Christian Roman historians confirmed it happened. The historical evidence was overwhelming. Every early source agreed that Jesus was crucified under Pontius Pilate. If the crucifixion was a historical fact on then the Quran written 600 years after Jesus contradicted established history. And if the Quran was wrong about this, what else might it be wrong about?
I felt like I was standing at the edge of a cliff looking down into darkness. Every instinct told me to step back, to stop this line of thinking, to return to the comfortable certainty I had known. But I could not stop. It was as if something inside me had awakened and refused to go back to sleep.
I began to notice other problems. I studied the different Quranic manuscripts and learned that there were variations, that verses had been lost, that some companions of Muhammad had questioned the compilation. This contradicted what I had always taught, that the Quran was perfectly preserved.
I studied the scientific claims in the Quran that we scholars often cited as proof of its divine origin. When I looked honestly, many of them were not as clear as I had claimed. Some reflected the scientific understanding of 7th century Arabia, not timeless divine knowledge.
I studied the prophecies of Muhammad. When I examined them critically, they were vague or written after the events they supposedly predicted.
Everything I had built my life upon was shaking. I felt sick. I felt terrified. I felt guilty for even doing this research. But I also felt something else. A desperate need for truth, whatever the cost.
One evening, I was sitting in my study and surrounded by Islamic texts I had spent my life mastering. My wife had gone to bed. The house was quiet. I had just finished reading a troubling hadith about violence against apostates and I felt a weight on my chest so heavy I could barely breathe.
I put my head in my hands and for the first time in my life I prayed a prayer that would have shocked anyone who knew me. I prayed, “God, if you are real, show me the truth. Even if it destroys me, even if it costs me everything, I want truth and not comfort.
I did not know it then. But that prayer changed everything.” Because when you genuinely ask God for truth, he answers. Not always in the way you expect, not always quickly, but he answers.
In the weeks after that prayer, my internal crisis deepened. I continued teaching, continued leading prayers, continued writing, but I felt like a fraud. How could I teach others with authority when I was drowning in doubt?
I began to have dreams, strange and vivid dreams. In one dream, I I was walking in darkness, stumbling, unable to find my way. Then a light appeared in the distance. I walked toward it, and as I got closer, I saw it was a person clothed in brilliant light. I could not see his face clearly, but I felt overwhelming love radiating from him. He reached out his hand to me.

I woke up before I could take it, my heart pounding. I tried to dismiss the dream, just my stressed mind playing tricks. But the dream came again and again, always the same figure of light, always the same feeling of love and invitation.
I did not yet understand what these dreams meant. Or perhaps I was too afraid to admit what I suspected.
My scholarly work suffered. I could not write with conviction anymore. How could I write defending Islam when I no longer knew if I believed it myself? I started avoiding my colleagues, afraid they would sense my doubt.
My wife noticed something was wrong. She asked me if I was ill, if something had happened. I told her I was tired, just tired. She accepted this. But I could see worry in her eyes.
I felt utterly alone. In Islam, there is no room for doubt. You believe or you do not. There is no space for wrestling, for questioning, for seeking. Doubt is weakness, perhaps even apostasy. So I kept my questions locked inside where they grew and multiplied like shadows in a dark room.
I had been taught that Islam meant submission and I had submitted fully for my entire life. I had submitted my mind, my will, my heart. And but now something in me was rebelling against that submission. Something in me was crying out, “What if submission to Muhammad is not the same as submission to God?”
That question terrified me more than any other because if I followed that question to its conclusion, I did not know where I would end up. I did not know what I would become. I did not know if I would lose everything, my family, my community, my identity, even my life.
But I also knew I could not continue living a lie. And I could not keep teaching something I no longer believed. I could not keep pretending everything was fine when inside I was falling apart.
I was standing at a crossroads, though I did not fully realize it yet. Behind me was everything I had known and loved. Islam, my family, my reputation, my sense of self. Ahead of me was darkness and uncertainty, but also a distant light I could not explain.
I had spent 43 years walking one path with absolute confidence. And at now I was beginning to suspect that path led nowhere good. But leaving it meant entering a wilderness with no map, no guide, no guarantee of safety.
All I had was that desperate prayer. God, show me the truth. I did not know it yet, but he was already answering. The light I had seen in my dreams was not just a symbol. It was a person. And that person was about to shatter and rebuild everything I thought I knew about God, about truth, about life itself.
But I am getting ahead of myself. And I was not ready for that revelation yet. First, I had to go deeper into my questions. I had to let everything fall apart. I had to reach the end of myself because only when you are broken can you be remade. Only when you admit you are lost can you be found.
The months that followed my prayer for truth were the darkest of my life. I felt like a man trapped between two worlds, belonging fully to neither. During the day, I performed my duties as a scholar and teacher. At night, I wrestled with questions that had no easy answers.
I need you to understand something about leaving Islam, especially for someone like me. It is not like changing your opinion about politics or deciding you prefer one philosophy over another. Islam was not just my religion. It was my identity, my culture, my community, my livelihood, my family structure, my entire understanding of reality.
Questioning Islam meant questioning everything about who I was. And in Iran, questioning Islam meant risking death. The penalty for apostasy in Islamic law is clear. death. This is not extremism or misinterpretation. This is mainstream Islamic juristprudence across all major schools of thought. I had taught this myself. I had explained to students why this law was just and necessary. A person who leaves Islam is seen as a traitor worse than someone who was never Muslim because they have known truth and rejected it.
So my questions were not academic exercises. They were dangerous.
I began my investigation in secret late at night when everyone slept. I would lock my study door and pull out books I had never examined critically before. I started with Islamic sources only because I did not trust outside sources. If Islam was going to fall apart, it would have to fall apart from within by its own contradictions.
I studied the different Quranic manuscripts and the history of how the Quran was compiled. How I had always taught that the Quran was perfectly preserved, that not a single letter had changed since it was revealed to Muhammad. But when I actually researched the historical evidence, I found a more complex and troubling picture.
I learned about the different readings of the Quran, the variant manuscripts, the verses that early Muslims reported but that are not in our Quran today. I learned that the Quran was compiled after Muhammad’s death uh and that there were disagreements about what should be included. I learned that Khalif Uman had burned other versions of the Quran to enforce standardization. Why burn other versions if they all said the same thing? The question haunted me.
I studied the hadith collections, particularly those about Muhammad’s life. I had read these hadiths many times before, but I had always read them through the lens of faith, finding explanations for anything troubling. Now I read them honestly and I was disturbed by what I saw.
I read about the massacre of the Banu Kurisa, a Jewish tribe in Medina. After they surrendered, Muhammad ordered that all the men and boys who had reached puberty be executed and the women and children be taken as slaves. The men were beheaded, between 600 and 900 of them, their bodies thrown into trenches. This was in sahi hadiths, authentic according to Islamic standards.
I sat with that story for a long time. Like I tried to find ways to justify it, to explain it, to make it fit with the image of Muhammad as the perfect example for all humanity. But I could not. This was not self-defense. This was mass execution after surrender. How was this the example I was supposed to follow?
I read about the night raids Muhammad ordered where Muslim fighters would attack enemies at night. When companions asked whether it was permissible to kill women and children in these night raids, you know, Muhammad said it was acceptable because they were from the polytheists. The casualness of that statement shook me.
I read about Safia, a Jewish woman whose husband was tortured and killed by Muslims who was then taken as a war captive and became Muhammad’s wife that same night. How was that not trauma and coercion? How was she supposed to genuinely love the man who had destroyed her life?
I read about Aisha who was 6 years old when Muhammad married her nine when the marriage was consummated. I had always defended this by appealing to cultural norms of the time. But Muhammad was supposed to be the eternal example for all times and places. If his example cannot be followed today without being considered abuse, what does that say about his claim to be the perfect model?
These were not attacks from enemies of Islam. These were our own most authentic sources. I could not dismiss them.
When I began comparing the life of Muhammad with the life of Jesus as described in the Quran and in history, the contrast was stark and troubling.
Jesus performed miracles of compassion, healing the sick, feeding the hungry, raising the dead. Muhammad’s miracles were mostly claimed visions, and splitting the moon, which no other civilization recorded.
Jesus spoke of loving enemies and praying for those who persecute you. Muhammad led armies against enemies and ordered their execution.
Jesus had no political power and did not seek it. Muhammad became a political and military leader.
Jesus taught forgiveness. Muhammad taught retaliation.
Even according to the Quran, Jesus was sinless. The Quran never claims Muhammad was sinless. In fact, the Quran tells Muhammad to ask forgiveness for his sins multiple times.

I kept asking myself, if I did not know either of these men and just looked at their lives and teachings objectively, which one seemed more like the character of God? The answer troubled me deeply.
I studied the nature of Allah as described in the Quran. Allah is described as the best of deceivers. He is merciful but also the one who leads astray whomever he wills. He loves believers but not unbelievers. His mercy is conditional.
I tried to pray to this Allah as I always had but I felt nothing. The prayers felt hollow like speaking into an empty room. I would prostrate on my prayer mat and feel only the floor beneath my forehead cold and indifferent.
I began to realize something that frightened me. I had never known Allah personally. I had known about Allah. I had memorized his 99 names. I had followed the rules. But I had never had a relationship with him.
How could you have a relationship with someone who was utterly transcendent, completely other, unknowable? Islam taught that Allah was not like us in any way. That anthropomorphizing him was sherk, the unforgivable sin. But this meant that Allah was fundamentally unknowable, distant, separate. You could submit to him, obey him, fear him, but you could not know him.
The Christian claim that God became man, that you could actually know God personally, had always seemed like blasphemy to me. But now I began to wonder, what if that is exactly what humans need? What if we need a God who comes close, who enters our suffering, who makes himself knowable?
I tried to push these thoughts away, but they persisted.
Then I started having more dreams. Not every night, but several times each week. Always the same figure in light. Always extending his hand toward me. In one dream he spoke. I heard him say two words clearly. “Follow me.”
I woke up trembling. I knew who this was supposed to be. My mind knew. But my heart was resisting with everything it had. I tried to convince myself these dreams meant nothing, just my subconscious processing my doubts, but they felt different from normal dreams. They felt real, more real than waking life sometimes, like I became withdrawn.
My wife knew something was seriously wrong now. She kept asking, kept pressing. One evening she confronted me directly, asking if I had done something shameful if I was involved in sin. The irony struck me. She was worried I might be committing moral sins when the reality was far worse in her eyes. I was doubting the faith entirely.
I told her I was going through a spiritual trial, that I was struggling with some difficult theological questions. Uh she seemed relieved it was nothing worse and encouraged me to speak with the senior Ayatollah to seek guidance. But I knew I could not speak to anyone in the religious community. If I expressed even a fraction of my doubts, I would be marked as deviant, possibly dangerous.
I felt utterly isolated. I could not speak to my wife, my colleagues, my friends. They all assumed I was a devoted believer. They all saw me as a pillar of the community. If they knew what was happening inside my mind, they would reject me immediately.
In my desperation, I did something I had never done before. I decided to read the Bible. This was a major step. In Islam, we are taught that the Bible has been corrupted, that it is unreliable, that it has been changed by Jews and Christians to hide prophecies about Muhammad. I had taught this myself without ever actually reading the Bible to verify it.
But now I wanted to know for myself. I wanted to read the actual words attributed to Jesus.
In getting a Bible in Iran was not easy, especially for someone in my position. I could not simply walk into a bookstore and buy one. That would raise questions. Finally, I found a way to obtain a Persian translation through a contact who asked no questions.
When the Bible arrived, I hid it in my study, buried under other books. I felt like I was hiding something evil, even though part of me knew that was absurd. If Islam was truth, it should not be threatened by me reading another religious text. Odd.
The first time I opened the Bible, my hands were shaking. I had no idea where to start. I decided to read the Gospel of Matthew first to read about Jesus directly.
What I read astonished me. This was not what I had expected at all.
The Jesus I encountered in the Gospels was nothing like the distant prophet figure described briefly in the Quran. This Jesus spoke with authority. He healed the sick not with Allah’s permission as the Quran claimed, but with his own power. He forgave sins and something only God could do. He claimed to be one with the father. He said he was the way, the truth, and the life and that no one could come to the father except through him.
These were not the words of a mere prophet. These were the claims of someone who believed he was God himself.
I read the sermon on the mount and I wept. I do not know why exactly. Something about the words pierced through all my defenses. “Blessed are the poor in spirit. Blessed are those who mourn. Blessed are the meek. Love your enemies. Do good to those who hate you. Pray for those who persecute you.”
This was a completely different ethic from what I knew. Islam taught to fight those who fight you. To not take Jews and Christians as close friends, to be harsh against disbelievers. But Jesus taught something entirely different. He taught radical love even for enemies.
I read about the crucifixion. The account was detailed, brutal, and heartbreaking. Jesus knew it was coming. He prayed in agony in the garden. Yet he was betrayed, arrested, mocked, beaten, crucified. And on the cross, he prayed for those killing him. “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”
I had never encountered anything like this. What kind of person prays for his executioners while dying?
The resurrection accounts followed the empty tomb, the appearances to disciples, their transformation from terrified, scattered followers into bold proclaimers willing to die for their testimony.
I spent weeks reading and rereading the gospels. Each time I was struck by the same things, the character of Jesus, his compassion, his authority, his claims, his sacrifice.
I began to compare the Quranic Jesus with the gospel Jesus. The Quran gave a few brief stories, but no extended teachings from Jesus. It denied the crucifixion outright. It denied Jesus was the son of God. It reduced him to a prophet who announced the coming of Muhammad. But the Gospels presented Jesus as the centerpiece of all history, the fulfillment of prophecy, God’s ultimate revelation of himself.
The Gospels were written by people who claimed to be eyewitnesses or who had interviewed eyewitnesses. They were written within decades of Jesus’s life, not six centuries later, like the Quran. From a historical standpoint, which source about Jesus was more reliable? The answer seemed obvious.
I studied the crucifixion from historical sources outside the Bible. In Roman historians like Tacitus confirmed it, Jewish historians like Josephus mentioned it. There was no credible historical doubt that Jesus was crucified under Ponteus Pilate. So the Quran was simply wrong about this historical fact. And if it was wrong about something so central to Christianity, how could it be divine revelation?
I studied the resurrection. I looked at the evidence, the empty tomb, the transformation of the disciples, the early Christian testimony in the fact that Christianity spread despite intense persecution. Could this all be explained away as legend or hallucination? The more I studied, the more compelling the resurrection evidence became. People do not die for what they know is a lie. The disciples were willing to be tortured and killed rather than deny they had seen the risen Jesus. Would they do this for something they made up?
I wrestled with the concept of the Trinity, and this had always been my main objection to Christianity. How can God be one and three? It seemed like obvious mathematical impossibility, a corruption of pure monotheism. But as I studied, I realized I’d been attacking a straw man. Christians do not believe in three gods. They believe in one God who exists eternally in three persons. It is mysterious, yes, but not illogical. And it actually makes sense of many things. How God can be love eternally without needing to create beings to love. Now, how God can be relational within himself.
I studied the claim that the Bible was corrupted. I looked at the manuscript evidence. The New Testament has thousands of early manuscripts, far more than any other ancient text. The varants are minor, mostly spelling differences. The core message is intact across all manuscripts. There was no evidence of the kind of wholesale corruption Islam claimed.
If Christians had corrupted the Bible to hide prophecies about Muhammad, and why did they keep all the passages that make them look bad? Why keep the stories of the disciples failures, the account of Peter denying Jesus? Why keep teachings that are difficult? The corruption claim fell apart under examination.
I began to see that many Islamic objections to Christianity were based on misunderstandings or assumptions, not evidence.
But I was still resisting. Accepting Christianity meant accepting that everything I had built my life on was false. It meant my father was wrong. My teachers were wrong. All the scholars I respected were wrong. 1400 years of Islamic civilization was based on a fundamental error. It meant I was wrong. Everything I had taught, everything I had written, everything I had believed with absolute confidence was wrong.
The humiliation of that realization was crushing. How could I have been so certain about something that was false? Now, how could I have led others into darkness while thinking I was guiding them to light? I felt waves of shame, grief, and anger. Anger at myself for being deceived. Anger at those who taught me. anger at Muhammad for making claims he could not substantiate.
But underneath all this turmoil, something else was happening. A small seed of hope was growing. Because if Christianity was true, it meant something wonderful.
God was not distant and unknowable. God had come near. A God loved humanity enough to become human, to suffer, to die, to conquer death. It meant salvation was not about my performance, my perfect obedience, my endless striving to please an impossible to please deity. It meant salvation was a gift offered freely based on what Christ had done, not what I could do.
It meant I could actually know God, could call him father, could have assurance of eternal life rather than uncertainty and fear.
This was good news. And this was truly good news in a way Islam had never been.
But accepting it still terrified me because I knew what it would cost.
I kept reading, kept studying, kept praying in the only way I knew how, asking for truth. The dreams continued, “Always the figure in light, always the invitation.”
One night after reading the Gospel of John late into the night, I had the most vivid dream yet. I was standing in complete darkness. I could see nothing, feel nothing but fear. Then a voice spoke, clear and strong. “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life.”
I knew these were Jesus’s words from John’s gospel. But hearing them spoken in the dream, they were not just words. They were a lifeline thrown to a drowning man.
The figure appeared again, brighter than ever before. This time I could see his face or thought I could. It was filled with such love, such compassion, such knowing. He looked at me as if he saw everything I had ever done, every sin, every failure, every doubt. And yet he was not disgusted. He was not angry. He was looking at me with pure love.
He spoke again. “Come to me all who are weary and burdened and I will give you rest.”
I woke up with tears streaming down my face. I was weeping uncontrollably. Deep sobs that I tried to muffle so I would not wake my wife. Something inside me was breaking. My resistance was crumbling. I was exhausted from carrying the burden of doubt, from maintaining the facade, from trying to earn salvation through my own efforts.
I realized in that moment that I could not save myself. I had spent my entire life trying to be righteous enough, obedient enough, devout enough to earn Allah’s favor. But I was still empty. I still had no assurance. I still lived in fear.
But Jesus offered rest. Jesus offered to carry my burden. Jesus offered salvation not as wages earned, but as a gift given.
And I was close to breaking, close to surrender. But it was not quite there yet. Fear still held me. Fear of losing everything. Fear of being wrong again. Fear of the consequences.
But I was standing at the edge now and I knew somehow I knew that I could not stay balanced on this edge forever. Soon I would have to fall one way or the other into the darkness I had always known or into the light that was calling my name.
The weeks after that dream became a blur of internal struggle. Yo, I moved through my daily responsibilities like a ghost, physically present, but mentally elsewhere. I taught classes on Islamic juristprudence while internally questioning every word that came from my mouth. I led prayers while wondering if anyone heard them. I counseledled students on matters of faith while my own faith was in ruins.
I was living a double life and the strain was destroying me. I lost weight. I could not sleep properly. My wife grew increasingly worried, suggesting I see a doctor, and I assured her I was fine, knowing I was anything but fine.
I kept reading the Bible in secret. After finishing the Gospels, I moved to Paul’s letters. What I found there shook me even further.
Paul wrote about justification by faith, not by works of the law. He wrote that no one could be saved by their own righteousness, that all had sinned and fallen short of God’s glory. He wrote that salvation was a free gift of grace received through faith in Christ’s finished work on the cross.
And this was revolutionary to me. My entire life had been about works. Perform the rituals correctly. Follow the rules precisely. Earn your place in paradise through obedience. Islam offered no assurance of salvation. Even Muhammad himself was not certain of his fate. The Quran says Allah forgives whom he wills and punishes whom he wills. You could do everything right and still end up in hell if Allah decided so. The anxiety this created was immense. You never knew if you had done enough. You lived in perpetual fear of divine displeasure.
But Paul was saying something completely different. He was saying that Christ had done everything necessary. His sacrifice was sufficient, complete, final. Those who trusted in him were declared righteous, not because they earned it, but because Christ’s righteousness was credited to them.
It seemed too good to be true. But the more I read, the more I saw this message throughout the New Testament. Jesus himself said it was finished on the cross. Be ga. Not I have started something you must complete but it is finished done accomplished.
I began to understand what grace meant. Not just mercy, not just forgiveness but unmmerited favor. God giving what we do not deserve and cannot earn.
Islam has no real concept of grace. Everything is transactional. You obey, Allah rewards. You disobey, Allah punishes. It is a legal system, a contract, a set of scales weighing good deeds against bad deeds. Uh you never know which side is heavier until judgment day.
But Christianity proclaimed something entirely different. The scales had already been balanced. Christ had paid the debt. Grace meant that God did for us what we could never do for ourselves.
Tears came to my eyes as I read these passages. Part of me desperately wanted this to be true. Part of me still resisted, still feared being deceived.
I studied the prophecies about Jesus in the Old Testament, and I had been taught that the Bible’s prophecies about Muhammad had been removed by Jews and Christians. But when I actually read the Old Testament, I found it full of prophecies about a coming Messiah who would suffer and die for the sins of his people.
Isaiah 53 stunned me. written 700 years before Christ. It described in detail someone who would be despised and rejected, wounded for our transgressions, crushed for our iniquities, whose punishment would bring us peace. See, it said this person would be like a lamb led to slaughter, that he would die with the wicked but be buried with the rich. It said through his suffering, many would be justified.
This was Jesus’s crucifixion described centuries before it happened. How could this be coincidence?
I found prophecies about the Messiah being born in Bethlehem, about him being betrayed for 30 pieces of silver, about his hands and feet being pierced, about people gambling for his garments. All these prophecies were fulfilled in Jesus’s life with precise detail.
Where were the prophecies about Muhammad? I searched the Old Testament honestly, trying to find any clear prediction of an Arabian prophet who would come six centuries after Christ. There were none. The passages Muslims claimed referred to Muhammad were vague and required mental gymnastics to make fit. But the prophecies about Jesus were specific and numerous.
The evidence was mounting beyond what I could ignore.
Then something happened that forced everything to a crisis point. I became severely ill. It started as what seemed like a bad flu, but rapidly became worse. High fever, difficulty breathing, intense pain. My wife insisted I go to the hospital.
The doctors ran tests and found that I had developed pneumonia that had progressed dangerously. They admitted me immediately. For several days, my condition worsened. The fever would not break despite medication. My breathing became increasingly labored. And at one point, the doctors spoke quietly with my wife outside my room, and I knew from their expressions it was serious.
I drifted in and out of consciousness, in and out of fevered dreams. In my lucid moments, I thought about death. I thought about what came after.
I realized with stark clarity that if I died right now, I did not know where I would go. According to Islam, my fate would depend on whether my good deeds outweighed my bad deeds. But I would not know until judgment. And even if they did outweigh, paradise in Islam was not guaranteed. It was subject to Allah’s arbitrary will.
But I also realized something else. I did not really believe in the Islamic version of paradise anymore. I did not believe in the rivers of wine and the hurries and the material pleasures promised in the Quran. It seemed like a projection of 7th century Arabian male fantasies, not the eternal purpose of the universe.
I was facing death without a solid hope or the religion I had devoted my life to offered no assurance, no peace, no confidence, just scales and judgment and uncertainty.
In my fever, I had more dreams. In one, I was drowning, sinking into dark water, unable to breathe. I was dying. Then someone grabbed my hand and pulled me up out of the water. And I gasped for air. I looked up to see who had saved me, and it was the figure of light, the one who had appeared in my dreams before. He said, “I have come that they may have life and have it abundantly.”
Another night I dreamed I was in a courtroom standing accused. The evidence against me was overwhelming. Every sin, every failure, every moment of selfishness and pride. I knew I was guilty. The verdict was certain. Then someone stepped forward and said he would take my punishment. He would die in my place. I looked and saw it was Jesus and he was already bleeding, already wounded.
I woke from that dream weeping. Even in my weakened state, the symbolism was unmistakable. This was substitutionary atonement, the heart of the Christian gospel. Christ taking the punishment we deserve so we could receive the mercy we do not deserve.
One night when my fever was at its worst and I genuinely thought I might die, I did something I never thought I would do. I prayed to Jesus. It was not eloquent. I was too weak, too confused, too desperate for eloquent prayers. In my mind, perhaps partly delirious, I simply cried out, “Jesus, and if you are real, if you truly are the son of God, save me. I do not want to die without knowing you. I do not want to face eternity without truth. Please, if you are there, help me.”
I felt nothing dramatic in that moment. No lightning bolt, no angelic choir, no sudden healing. I was still sick, still weak, still uncertain. But I felt something subtle, something deep, a sense of not being alone. A whisper of peace in the midst of chaos.
I fell asleep after that prayer. And for the first time in days, I slept deeply without nightmares.
When I woke the next morning, my fever had broken. The doctors were surprised by the sudden improvement. Within a few more days, I was well enough to go home. My wife was overjoyed, thanking Allah for my recovery. My sons visited and expressed relief. My colleagues came by to wish me well. Everyone assumed my healing was Allah’s mercy.
But I knew something had shifted. That desperate prayer to Jesus had been a turning point. But I had reached out in my extremity, and somehow in some way I could not fully explain. I believed he had heard me.
Back home, recovered in body, but more conflicted than ever in soul. I returned to the Bible. This time I read it differently. Not as a scholar examining a text, but as a seeker desperately looking for truth.
I read the Gospel of John slowly, carefully. The opening verses arrested me. “In the beginning was the word, and the word was with God, and the word was God. He was in the beginning with God. All things were made through him, and without him was not anything made that was made.”
Then verse 14, “and the word became flesh and dwelt among us, and we have seen his glory, glory as of the only son from the father, full of grace and truth.”
This was claiming that the eternal word of God through whom everything was created became human, became flesh, entered creation. This was the incarnation, you know, the central claim of Christianity that Islam adamantly rejected.
But as I thought about it deeply, it made profound sense. If God wanted to truly reveal himself to humanity, the most effective way would not be through a book or a prophet who claimed to hear voices. It would be to come himself, to speak directly, to demonstrate his character through his own actions.
I read Jesus’s words. “I am the way, the truth, and the life. And no one comes to the father except through me.”
This was either the statement of a lunatic, a liar, or God himself. There was no middle ground where Jesus could be just a good prophet. A good prophet does not claim to be the exclusive way to God.
I read “before Abraham was, I am.” Jesus deliberately used the divine name, the name God revealed to Moses at the burning bush. The Jewish leaders understood exactly what he was claiming and tried to stone him for blasphemy.
And I read, “I and the Father are one.” Again, the Jewish leaders picked up stones saying Jesus was making himself equal with God.
Either Jesus was who he claimed to be or he was a blasphemer and false prophet. Islam tried to have it both ways, honoring Jesus as a great prophet while denying his central claims. But that was logically impossible. If Jesus’s claims about himself were false, he was not a great prophet. He was a deceiver. But if his claims were true, then everything changed.
And I read Jesus’s invitation. “Come to me all who labor and are heavy laden and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me for I am gentle and lowly in heart and you will find rest for your souls.”
Rest. My soul had never known rest. Islam was a heavy burden of endless rules and rituals. Perpetual anxiety about whether I was doing enough. constant fear of Allah’s displeasure. But Jesus offered rest, a gentle and lowly heart, not a demanding and capricious will.
And I read about the cross again. But this time I tried to understand its theological meaning, not just the historical event. I read that Christ became sin for us so that we might become the righteousness of God. I read that he is our substitute that God’s wrath against sin was poured out on Jesus so it would not have to be poured out on us.
This was the logic of sacrifice. An innocent taking the place of the guilty it offended my sense of justice in one way. How is it fair for an innocent person to be punished? But in another way, it was the ultimate expression of love. Someone willingly taking our place, paying our debt, and it satisfied justice while extending mercy.
Sin had to be punished. God’s holiness demanded it. But mercy could be shown because the punishment was borne by Christ. Justice and mercy met at the cross.
Islam had no atonement. Sins could be forgiven arbitrarily if Allah chose. Uh but there was no mechanism for how a holy God could forgive sin while maintaining justice. It was just divine decree. Allah says your sins are gone. So they are gone. But why? On what basis?
Christianity provided an answer. Sins were forgiven because they had been paid for. Justice was satisfied. Mercy was possible because justice was served.
I sat with these truths for weeks. I read and reread. I prayed though I was no longer sure to whom I was praying. I wrestled with God like Jacob wrestled with the angel.
One evening I was alone in my study. My family was visiting relatives. I had the house to myself. I was reading Romans 5. “Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. Through him, we have also obtained access by faith into this grace in which we stand. And we rejoice in hope of the glory of God, peace with God, access to God, hope, grace, and everything Islam had never given me.”
I kept reading. “God shows his love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”
While we were still sinners, not after we cleaned ourselves up, not after we proved ourselves worthy. While we were still sinners, Christ died for us. This was love beyond anything I had ever encountered.
Something broke inside me in that moment. All my resistance, all my intellectual objections, all my fear, it all crumbled. I fell to my knees beside my desk and I wept. Deep, painful sobs from a place I did not know existed inside me.
I wept for all the years I had been deceived. I wept for all the people I had led astray with my teaching. I wept for the burden I had carried trying to earn salvation. I wept for the distance I had felt from God all my life.
And then I prayed, not a formal prayer, not in Arabic, just honest words from a broken heart.
I said, “Jesus, I believe you are who you said you are. I believe you are the son of God. That you died for my sins. that you rose from the dead. I have nothing to offer you. I have wasted my life serving a false image of God. I have been a teacher of lies. I am a sinner who deserves judgment. But you said you came to save sinners. You said you came to give rest to the weary. I am weary. I am so tired of carrying this burden. Please save me. I surrender. I give up trying to save myself. I trust in what you did on the cross. Forgive me. Make me yours.
The words were simple. Nay, almost childlike. But they came from the deepest part of my being. And something happened. I cannot fully describe it. It was not dramatic in an external sense. There were no voices, no visions, no physical manifestations. But internally everything changed.
It was like a weight I had carried my entire life was suddenly lifted. Like stepping out of a dark room into sunlight. Like taking a breath after being underwater too long.
I felt peace. Not the absence of problems, but a deep settled peace that did not depend on circumstances. I felt clean as if I had been washed. I felt loved in a way I had never felt before. Unconditionally, completely, eternally.
I remained on my knees, tears streaming down my face, overwhelmed by the presence of God. Not a distant, unknowable force, but a person, a father who loved me, a savior who died for me, a spirit who was with me.
I do not know how long I stayed there. Time seemed irrelevant. All I knew was that I had encountered the living God, and nothing would ever be the same.
When I finally stood up, my legs were shaky. I looked around my study, at all my Islamic books, at my certificates and awards, at the evidence of my former life. It all seemed hollow now, empty husks of dead religion.
I had been born again, though I did not yet know that was the term Christians used. I had passed from death to life. I had been found.
But even in that moment of joy and peace, I knew what lay ahead. I knew the price I would have to pay. I knew I could not hide this forever. I knew that choosing Christ meant losing everything else.
And I knew it was worth it. Because I had found treasure hidden in a field, and to possess it, I would gladly sell everything I had.
I had met Jesus. And once you truly meet him, you can never go back to the shadows. The light was too bright, too true, too beautiful. I was home. Finally truly home.
The days immediately following my conversion were strange. I felt like I was living in two realities simultaneously. Externally, nothing had changed. I still looked like the same person, lived in the same house, had the same family and responsibilities. But internally, everything was different. I was different.
I had a secret that changed everything and I could tell no one.
I continued my daily routine but it felt surreal like being an actor in a play. I led prayers at the mosque but in my heart I was praying to Jesus. I taught Islamic juristprudence to my students but I no longer believed what I was teaching. The words felt like ash in my mouth.
I knew this could not continue forever. The duplicity was eating at me. I had found truth. And then truth demands to be lived openly, not hidden in darkness. But I was terrified of what would happen when I revealed what had happened to me.
I started reading the Bible more openly, though still carefully. When my wife asked what I was reading, I told her I was studying Christian theology to better refute it. This was not entirely a lie. I had been doing that before my conversion, but now my motivation was completely different.
I began to pray as Christians pray in calling God Father, praying in Jesus’s name, speaking conversationally rather than in formal Arabic phrases. This was revolutionary for me. I could talk to God like talking to a person who cared about me. I did not have to perform ablutions first. I did not have to face a particular direction. I could pray in my own language, in my own words, anytime, anywhere.
And I sensed God’s presence when I prayed. Not always dramatically, but consistently. A sense of being heard, being loved, and not being alone.
I felt joy, genuine joy for the first time in my life. Not happiness dependent on circumstances, but deep joy rooted in knowing I was saved. I was forgiven. I was a child of God.
But this joy existed alongside growing fear about the future.
I knew I needed to connect with other Christians. But this was dangerous in Iran. The Christian community was small, heavily monitored by authorities and mostly ethnic Armenians who kept to themselves or converts from Islam were the most vulnerable, subject to arrest, imprisonment or worse.
Through very careful and discreet inquiries, I eventually made contact with the small house church, a secret gathering of believers, most of them converts from Islam like me.
The first time I attended one of their meetings, I was scared beyond words. I had to be sure I was not being followed. I had to enter the building carefully, making sure no one saw me. Ah, but when I entered that room and saw other believers, some of them former Muslims, some of them risking everything to follow Jesus, I was overcome with emotion.
I was not alone. There were others who had found the truth and counted the cost. We sang worship songs in Farsy quietly so neighbors would not hear. We prayed together. We studied the Bible together. We shared communion remembering Christ’s sacrifice.
I wept through most of that first meeting. These people became my true family. Are my brothers and sisters in Christ. We shared a bond deeper than blood, a bond forged in the risk we were all taking for our faith.
They told me their stories. One man had been beaten by his own father when he converted. A woman had been disowned by her entire extended family. Another man had lost his job and lived in poverty rather than deny Christ.
Their testimonies strengthened me and sobered me. They warned me about what was coming. They told me to prepare myself for loss.
I tried to prepare. And but how do you prepare to lose everything?
For several months, I lived this double life. Islamic scholar by day, Christian in secret. The strain was immense. I felt like I was betraying everyone. My family by hiding the truth. My new faith by not confessing it openly. My students by teaching them things I no longer believed.
The Bible I read said that if you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved. It said not to be ashamed of the gospel. It said that whoever denies Jesus before men, Jesus will deny before his father in heaven.
I knew I had to come clean. I knew I could not keep living this lie. But I kept delaying, telling myself I needed to find the right time, the right way.
The decision was made for me.
One afternoon, I was in my study at home. I thought I was alone, but my teenage son had come home early from school. I did not hear him enter the house, and I was reading the Gospel of John, and I had become less careful about hiding the Bible, assuming I would hear anyone approaching.
My son opened the study door without knocking, and he saw the Bible open on my desk.
He stared at it, then he stared at me. His face registered confusion. then shock, then something like horror. He asked me why I had a Bible. I could see in his eyes that he already suspected the answer, but was hoping for some innocent explanation.
I could have lied. I could have given the excuse about studying to refute Christianity. Part of me wanted to, but looking at my son’s face, I knew I could not lie to him. Whatever happened next, I had to tell him the truth.
I said, “I am reading it because I have come to believe it is true.”
The color drained from his face. He took a step back as if I had struck him. He asked me what I meant.
I told him as simply and calmly as I could that I had studied deeply and come to believe that Jesus is the son of God and that he died for our sins and rose again and that I had given my life to him.
My son’s reaction was immediate and visceral. He began shouting, asking how I could betray our family, betray Allah, betray everything I had taught him. His shouts brought my wife and younger son running.
They found us in my study, the Bible open on the desk, my older son crying and yelling, and me sitting quietly knowing my life had just irrevocably changed.
My wife demanded to know what was happening. I, my son, told her. He said I had become an apostate, that I’d left Islam for Christianity. I’ve never seen such a look on my wife’s face. It was betrayal, disgust, fear, and grief all at once. She stared at me as if I had become a stranger, a monster.
She asked me if it was true. I told her it was.
What followed was chaos. She screamed at me, asking how I could do this to her, to our children, to our family. She said I had shamed them all. She said I had destroyed everything. pop. My younger son was crying, confused. My older son was still shouting, saying things I will not repeat.
I tried to remain calm. I tried to explain that I had not taken this decision lightly, that I had studied deeply, that I had found truth and could not deny it. But they did not want to hear explanations. To them, this was pure betrayal. Apostasy from Islam is seen as the ultimate treachery, worse than murder, worse than anything.
My wife demanded I recant immediately. I do that I renounce this insanity and return to Islam. She said if I did not, she would tell her family, tell the authorities, tell everyone.
I told her I could not deny what I knew to be true. I told her I loved her and our children, but I could not go back.
She spat at me. My own wife spat in my face. Then she told me to leave the house. She said I was no longer her husband, that she wanted nothing to do with an apostate.
I tried to reason with her, but she would not listen. She was hysterical. Uh, and I understood why. In her worldview, I had just damned myself to hell and brought shame on our family.
I packed a small bag with a few clothes and essential items. My hands were shaking. My younger son begged me not to go, crying and clinging to me. It broke my heart to leave him, but I had no choice. My older son would not look at me. My wife stood with her arms crossed, her face hard as stone.
I walked out of my home, the home where I had lived for over 20 years, and where my children had been born, where I had thought I would grow old. I walked out with nothing but a small bag and the knowledge that I had just lost my family.
I went to stay with a Christian brother from the house church who had offered shelter to believers in trouble. His apartment was small, but he welcomed me with open arms.
That night, lying on a thin mattress on his floor, I wept harder than I had ever wept in my life. The reality of what I had lost crashed over me in waves. my wife who had been my partner for decades, my children whom I loved more than my own life, my home, my comfort, my security.
I questioned God in my grief. I asked why this had to be so hard. I asked if there had been any other way. But even in my grief, I knew the answer. There was no other way. Truth is costly. Following Jesus meant taking up a cross. He had warned that he came not to bring peace but a sword that he would set family members against each other that we must love him more than father, mother, son or daughter.
I had read those words. Now I was living them.
The next few days were a nightmare. Word spread quickly. My colleagues at the seminary heard. My students heard. My extended family heard. My phone rang constantly with calls from people shocked, angry, trying to convince me to recant. Some were genuinely concerned for my soul. Others were concerned for the family’s reputation. Some made threats.
I I received messages telling me I would be killed for apostasy. I received messages saying I had brought dishonor on everyone who knew me. I received messages from former friends saying they never wanted to see me again.
My position at the seminary was immediately terminated. My writings were pulled from publication. My name was removed from everything. It was as if I had never existed.
I was now unemployed, separated from my family with a target on my back. Though the authorities came looking for me at my old house, my Christian brother told me I needed to move, that it was not safe to stay in one place.
For the next several weeks, I moved from safe house to safe house, never staying more than a few days anywhere. I was now a fugitive essentially though I had committed no crime other than changing my beliefs.
I tried to contact my wife to explain to ask about my children. She refused to speak to me through a mutual acquaintance. I learned that she had filed for divorce on grounds of apostasy which was legally valid. She was telling people I had died that she was a widow. To her, I was dead.
I wondered if I would ever see my children again. The thought was unbearable.
In those dark days, I clung to Jesus like a drowning man clings to a life preserver. I prayed constantly. I read the Bible constantly. I attended house church meetings whenever possible, drawing strength from other believers.
They were remarkable people. pal. These secret Christians in Iran, they had all suffered. They all had stories of loss and persecution. But they had a joy and peace that transcended their circumstances. They truly lived as if Jesus was more valuable than everything else.
One evening at a house church meeting, an older brother who had been a Christian for many years shared from the Gospel of Matthew. The he read Jesus’s words. “Blessed are you when others revile you and persecute you and utter all kinds of evil against you falsely on my account. Rejoice and be glad, for your reward is great in heaven. For so they persecuted the prophets who were before you.”
He looked at me and said, “Brother, you are blessed. You are suffering for Jesus’s name. This is a privilege.”
At first, his words seemed insane. How could suffering be a blessing? How could loss be a privilege? But as I reflected on it, by began to understand, the prophets were persecuted, the apostles were persecuted, Jesus himself was persecuted and killed. Suffering for righteousness was a sign that I was on the right path, that I had joined the company of the faithful throughout history.
And I was learning something I could have never learned in comfort. Jesus was enough. When everything else was stripped away, he was sufficient. His presence, his promises, his love, they sustained me in a way nothing else ever had.
And I learned to pray differently in those days. Not prayers asking God to remove my suffering, but prayers for strength to endure it faithfully. Not prayers asking God to restore what I had lost, but prayers thanking him for what I had gained.
Because I had gained everything that truly mattered. I had gained eternal life. I had gained a relationship with the living God. I had gained forgiveness and peace and hope.
Yes, I had lost my family, my career, my reputation, my security, and but I had found my soul. And Jesus said, “What does it profit a man to gain the whole world and lose his soul?”
Months passed. I survived by doing odd jobs, paid in cash, working for people in the Christian underground network who were willing to help. It was humble work far below my former status as a scholar. But I did not mind. I was learning humility. I was learning dependence on God.
I continued to study the Bible now with a hunger I had never had for the Quran. Every page seemed to speak to my situation. The Psalms became especially precious to me as David wrote so often about being persecuted, about crying out to God, about trusting despite circumstances.
I studied the book of Acts and read about the persecution the early church faced. Steven was stoned to death for his faith. James was killed with the sword. Peter and John were imprisoned and beaten. Paul was constantly hunted, beaten, shipwrecked, imprisoned. Uh yet they rejoiced to suffer for the name of Jesus.
I was in good company.
One night I had another dream. I was walking through a dark valley, stumbling over rocks, exhausted and afraid. Then Jesus appeared beside me. He did not remove the darkness. He did not make the path easy, but he walked with me. And his presence made all the difference.
When I woke from that dream, I understood something profound. Jesus never promised to remove our suffering. He promised to walk through it with us. While he promised that he would never leave us or forsake us. He promised that nothing could separate us from his love.
And I felt that love tangibly daily. In the kindness of Christian brothers and sisters who shared their meager resources with me, in the comfort of scripture, in the sense of God’s presence when I prayed, in the peace that sustained me despite circumstances that should have destroyed me.
I thought often of my children. I prayed for them constantly. I prayed that somehow someday they would come to know Jesus themselves. I prayed that they would understand why I had made the choice I made.
I thought often of my former students, of the thousands of people I had taught Islamic theology to over the years. I grieved that I’d led them away from truth. I prayed for their salvation and I began to feel a burden, a calling. If I had been deceived and found the truth, I needed to help others find it, too. I needed to reach Muslims with the gospel, and I needed to warn them about the deception I had lived under for so long.
This calling grew stronger over time. Eventually, I began writing about my journey secretly at first, sharing my testimony online under a pseudonym. I explained why I left Islam and came to Christ. I addressed the theological issues. I shared the gospel.
The response was overwhelming. Some Muslims cursed me and sent death threats, but others wrote to say they had similar doubts, that my story resonated with them, and that they wanted to know more about Jesus.
I began connecting with other ex-Muslim Christians, other scholars who had converted. We formed a network supporting each other, sharing resources, developing materials to help Muslims understand the truth about Jesus.
This work became my new calling. I could no longer teach in a seminary, but I could teach online. I could no longer write for Islamic publications, but I could write articles and books explaining Christianity to Muslims.
My life had been destroyed. But from the ruins, God was building something new, something more important than my former career or reputation. He was using my experience, my knowledge of Islam, my understanding of how Muslims think to reach people I never could have reached as an Islamic scholar.
I realize now that God was preparing me all along. Every year I spent studying Islam deeply was preparation for understanding where Muslims struggle and how to address their questions. Every verse of the Quran I memorized was preparation for comparing it to the Bible. Every student I taught gave me insight into how to communicate with Muslims.
God wasted nothing. He redeemed it all.
Would I choose this path again, knowing what it would cost? The question haunts me sometimes. I think of my younger son’s tears. I think of my wife’s face when I left. I think of everything I lost.
But then I remember the alternative. I remember the emptiness of Islam, the fear, the hopelessness, the distance from God. I remember the burden of trying to earn salvation through my own efforts. I remember the darkness and I know that even if following Jesus cost me everything earthly, it gave me everything eternal. And that is a trade I would make again and again because nothing in this world compares to knowing Christ Jesus my Lord.
For his sake, I have lost everything, and I count it all as rubbish in order that I may gain Christ and be found in him.”
The Apostle Paul wrote those words 2,000 years ago. Now, I understood them from experience. Jesus was worth it. He is worth it. He will always be worth it.
It has been 7 years since I left Islam and gave my life to Christ. 7 years since I walked out of my home with nothing but a small bag and a new faith. 7 years of living as an exile, a fugitive, a witness to truth.
In those seven years, I have seen God’s faithfulness in ways that still amaze me. The da I have seen him provide when I had nothing. I have seen him protect me from real threats. I have seen him use my broken story to reach people I could never have imagined reaching.
I am no longer in Iran. After 2 years of hiding and moving from place to place, I was able to leave the country with help from Christian organizations that assist persecuted believers. I now live in a country where I can practice my faith openly, where I cannot be arrested or killed for following Jesus. And the relief of this freedom is something I cannot adequately describe.
But my heart remains with the people I left behind. My heart remains with Muslims who were trapped in the same deception I lived under for 43 years.
This is why I must speak. This is why I risk even now to share my testimony publicly cuz I know what it is like to live without the truth and I cannot stay silent while others remain in darkness.
I want to speak directly to my Muslim brothers and sisters and especially those who like me have questions they are afraid to voice. I want to tell you what I have learned, what I wish someone had told me years ago.
I understand your devotion to Islam. I understand your love for Allah as you have been taught to know him. I understand your reverence for Muhammad and the Quran. I understand your fear of even questioning these things. I felt all of this deeply.
But I ask you to consider what if you have been sincerely wrong and what if devotion to Islam is not the same as devotion to the true God. The Quran itself commands you to investigate and seek truth. It says in surah 17:36 not to follow what you do not know. So I ask you to investigate even if it is frightening.
Let me share with you the key truths that changed everything for me.
First, understand who God truly is. The Quran describes Allah as utterly transcendent, completely other, unknowable in his essence. The names of Allah include the proud, the subduer, the giver of harm. Allah is described as the best of deceivers. He is arbitrary in his mercy, choosing whom to save and whom to damn according to his will alone. This creates a relationship based on fear and submission, not love and intimacy. You can never know if Allah truly loves you. You can never have assurance of salvation. You live in perpetual anxiety about your standing before him.
But the God revealed in the Bible, inculcating in Jesus Christ is radically different. Yes, he is holy and just. Yes, sin offends him and must be dealt with. But his fundamental character is love. The Bible says God is love, not just that he has love. This God does not remain distant. He comes near. He enters into his creation taking on human flesh in Jesus Christ. Why? Because he loves us and wants relationship with us. Jesus revealed that God is father, not a harsh taskmaster, not an arbitrary judge, but a loving father who cares for his children. Jesus taught us to pray our father something unthinkable in Islam.
And this makes sense of reality in a way Islam never could. Love requires relationship. If God is eternally loving, he must be eternally relational. This is why Christians believe in the trinity. One God eternally existing in three persons, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. In perfect loving relationship, Allah being absolutely one in a unitarian sense as cannot be eternally loving because there was no one to love before creation. Love requires an object.
Second, understand who Jesus truly is. The Quran honors Jesus in remarkable ways more than any prophet except Muhammad. It says Jesus was born of a virgin, performed miracles, is the word of God, a spirit from God, and will return. But then the Quran denies the most important claims about Jesus, that he is the son of God, that he died on the cross for our sins, that he rose from the dead.
You must ask yourself, why does the Quran written 600 years after Jesus contradict what all historical sources from the first century confirm? Every early source, Christian and non-Christian, agrees Jesus was crucified. Roman historians confirm it. Jewish historians confirm it. Early Christian documents from within decades of Jesus’s life confirm it. The crucifixion is one of the most historically certain events of ancient history.
And yet, the Quran denies it based on no historical evidence whatsoever. Why? Because if Jesus died on the cross and rose again, then everything he claimed about himself was validated. He claimed to be God. He claimed to be the only way to the father. He claimed his death would atone for sin. If he rose from the dead, these claims are true. And if these claims are true, Islam is false.
I studied the historical evidence for the resurrection extensively. The empty tomb, the appearances to hundreds of witnesses, the transformation of terrified, scattered disciples into bold proclaimers, the beginning of the church despite intense persecution. The fact that these witnesses were willing to die horrible deaths rather than deny what they had seen. People do not die for what they know is a lie. The disciples truly believed they had seen the risen Jesus. And the best explanation for their belief is that they actually did see him.
Third, understand how salvation truly works. Islam teaches salvation by works. Your good deeds must outweigh your bad deeds. You must perform the rituals correctly. You must obey the law. And even if you do all this, you have no assurance because Allah may still choose to send you to hell. This creates a crushing burden. You never know if you have done enough. You live in fear. Even Muhammad himself was not certain of his fate as recorded in the Quran. One, but Christianity proclaims something radically different. Salvation by grace through faith in Jesus Christ.
This means salvation is a gift, not wages earned. It is based on what Christ did, not what you do. His perfect life, his sacrificial death, his triumphant resurrection. This is what saves you. When you trust in Jesus, God credits his righteousness to you. Your sins are forgiven completely. Not because you earned it, but because Christ paid for them. You are declared righteous because Christ’s righteousness is given to you.
This is grace, unmmerited favor, God giving what we do not deserve. And this provides assurance, not arrogant presumption, but humble confidence based on God’s promise. The Bible says that those who believe in Jesus have eternal life, not might have or hope to have, but have. It is certain because it rests on Christ’s finished work, not our imperfect efforts.
When I understood this, it was like a massive weight lifting from my shoulders. I had spent my entire life trying to earn salvation, and I was exhausted and still uncertain. But Jesus offered rest, offered assurance, offered peace.
Fourth, examine Muhammad honestly. I know this is difficult. Muslims are taught that Muhammad is the perfect example, the best of creation. To criticize him is considered grave sin. But if Muhammad is truly a prophet of God, he should be able to withstand honest examination.
Compare Muhammad’s life to Jesus’s life. Jesus healed the sick, raised the dead, fed the hungry, forgave his enemies, taught radical love, never married, owned nothing, died as a sacrifice for others. Muhammad led armies, ordered executions, took captives as slaves, married many women, including a child, accumulated wealth and power, and died of illness after being poisoned. Which life better reflects the character of a loving God?
Look at Muhammad’s revelations. Many of them conveniently served his personal interests. When he desired his adopted son’s wife, a revelation came allowing it. When his wives complained, revelations came rebuking them. When he wanted more than the four wife limit imposed on other men, a revelation came allowing him special privileges. Does this sound like divine revelation or human desire cloaked in religious authority?
Look at the violence Muhammad commanded and participated in. I am not talking about defensive warfare. And I am talking about offensive jihad, raids on caravans, assassinations of poets who criticized him, executions of hundreds of men who had surrendered. Compare this to Jesus who healed the ear of the man who came to arrest him, who prayed for those crucifying him, who taught his followers to love their enemies.
I know these comparisons are painful. They were painful for me. But truth matters more than comfort.
Fifth, read the Bible for yourself. Do not rely on what Muslims say about it. One, do not accept claims that it had been corrupted without examining the evidence. Read the Gospels. Read Jesus’s own words. Read about his life, his teachings, his death, his resurrection. Then ask yourself honestly, does this seem like truth or fabrication?
The Bible has been preserved with remarkable accuracy. We have thousands of early manuscripts. The variants are minor and do not affect any core teaching. No serious historian doubts that we have the Bible essentially as it was written. The the claim that Christians corrupted the Bible to hide prophecies about Muhammad makes no sense when you examine it.
If Christians were so intent on corruption, why did they keep passages that make them look bad? Why keep stories of the disciples failures of Peter denying Jesus? Why keep difficult teachings? And when exactly did this supposed corruption happen? Muslims claim it was before Muhammad’s time, but the Quran affirms the Torah and Gospel as they existed in the 7th century. Bonned calls them God’s word. So which is it?
Now let me address the common objections Muslims raise.
You say the trinity is illogical that three cannot be one. But we do not believe in three gods. We believe in one God who eternally exists in three persons. This is mysterious. Yes, but not contradictory. And it makes sense of how God can be eternally loving and relational.
You say God cannot become man, that it is beneath his dignity. But God can do anything. And if he chose to reveal himself by becoming human, who are we to say he cannot? And the incarnation makes perfect sense. If God wants to truly reveal himself to humanity, the most effective way is to come himself.
You say the Bible is corrupted, but you have no evidence for this claim. Every manuscript discovery confirms the Bible’s reliability. Meanwhile, the Quran has variance in manuscripts, lost verses, and was compiled after Muhammad’s death with disagreements about what to include. Uh, you say Jesus did not die on the cross, but you are rejecting unanimous historical testimony from eyewitnesses based on a claim made 600 years later by someone who was not there.
I say these things not to attack you, but to plead with you to examine your beliefs honestly. Your eternal destiny is at stake.
I know what you were thinking because I thought the same things. You were thinking, “This man has been deceived by Satan. He has lost his way. He has traded truth for lies.” I understand that is what I would have thought about someone like me when I was a Muslim.
But consider this possibility. What if Satan’s greatest deception is not to make people worship him openly, but to make them worship God wrongly? What if Satan’s strategy is to take people’s sincere religious devotion and direct it toward a false image of God, toward a false prophet, toward a false hope? What if Islam itself is the deception?
I know that thought is terrifying. It was terrifying for me to admit you have been wrong about something so fundamental that your parents were wrong, your teachers were wrong, your entire civilization was wrong. This is incredibly difficult. But truth is truth regardless of how many believe it or how long it has been believed. At one point almost everyone believed the earth was flat. That did not make it true.
I am not asking you to accept my word. I am asking you to investigate for yourself. Read the Bible to study the historical evidence for Jesus’s crucifixion and resurrection. Compare the character of Muhammad and Jesus honestly. Examine the logical problems in Islam and pray. Pray to the true God, whoever he is, and ask him to show you truth. Do not pray to Allah as you have been taught because you are assuming Allah is the true God. Instead, pray to the God who created you and ask him to reveal himself.
I prayed that prayer when I was in crisis, asking for truth above comfort and and God answered by leading me to Jesus. He will answer your honest prayer too.
To my Christian brothers and sisters, I also have words for you. You must understand how difficult it is for Muslims to consider the gospel. Islam is not just a religion but a total system that encompasses identity, family, culture, and law. Leaving Islam costs everything. Be patient with Muslims who are seeking. They are wrestling with questions that could destroy their entire life. They need time and space to process.
Share your own testimony. Muslims respect personal experience. Tell them what Jesus has done in your life. Tell them about the peace, the assurance, the relationship with God that Christianity offers.
Learn about Islam so you can engage meaningfully. Understand what Muslims believe and why. This shows respect and makes you more effective. Do not be afraid of the difficult questions. The gospel can withstand scrutiny and truth is not threatened by honest examination.
Above all, love Muslims genuinely. They can sense whether you truly care about them or just see them as conversion targets. Jesus loved people first before they believed anything about him. And pray. Pray for Muslims to encounter Jesus. Pray for dreams and visions. God is using these powerfully in the Muslim world today. Pray for protection for secret believers and for those who share the gospel openly at great risk.
And the harvest among Muslims is ripe. More Muslims are coming to Christ now than at any point in history. Despite persecution, despite opposition, the spirit is moving.
To those who are seekers who are reading this with curiosity or perhaps secret doubt about Islam, I want you to know Jesus is worth it. Yes, following him may cost you everything. It cost me my family, my career, my reputation, my home. I live as an exile, unable to return to my country. And I may never see my children again in this life.
But Jesus is worth it. The peace I have now, the joy, the assurance, the intimate relationship with God. I would not trade this for anything. I have eternal life, not uncertain hope, but certain promise. I know my sins are forgiven. I know I am loved unconditionally. I know I am a child of God.
Islam never gave me any of these things. It gave me rules to follow, rituals to perform, fear of judgment, and uncertainty about my fate. Jesus gave me everything Islam could not. He gave me himself and he offers himself to you.
The question is what will you do with Jesus? You cannot remain neutral. You cannot call him just a good prophet when he claimed to be God. Either he was telling the truth or he was a blasphemer and liar. There is no middle ground. CS Lewis put it well. A man who was merely a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would not be a great moral teacher and he would either be a lunatic on a level with the man who says he is a poached egg or else he would be the devil of hell. You must make your choice. Either this man was and is the son of God or else a madman or something worse.
Who is Jesus to you? The Quran calls him the word of God, born of a virgin, sinless performer of miracles, the Messiah. The Quran says he will return at the end of days. But it stops short of the full truth. Jesus is the son of God and the exact representation of the father. The one through whom all things were made. The one who took on flesh to save us. The one who died for our sins and rose again. The one who is alive today and reigning as Lord.
He is calling you right now as you read these words. He is calling you to come to him. He is calling you to lay down your burden of religious performance and receive the rest he offers. He is calling you to stop trying to save yourself and trust in what he has already done. And he is calling you to know God not as a distant judge but as a loving father.
He is calling you to life, abundant life now and eternal life forever.
What will you do with this call? I pray that you will respond as I did. I pray that you will have the courage to follow truth wherever it leads, even if it costs you everything. Because in the end, gaining Jesus and losing everything else is not loss. It is gain beyond measure. He is the treasure hidden in a field. He is the pearl of great price. He is worth selling everything to possess.
7 years ago, I was a respected Islamic scholar, comfortable, secure, certain in my beliefs. Today, I am an exile, cut off from family, living modestly, considered a traitor by those who once honored me. But I would not go back. I would not trade what I have in Christ for all the comfort and security of my former life because I have found the truth. And once you know truth, you cannot unknow it. Once you see light, you cannot pretend to be blind. And once you taste living water, you cannot be satisfied with sand.
Jesus said, “I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the father except through me.” This is either the most arrogant claim ever made by a human or it is the most important truth in the universe. I have examined the evidence. I have weighed the cost. I have experienced the reality. And I know I know that it is true.
Jesus is the way. He is the truth. He is the life. And he is offering himself to you.
Come to him. Trust him. Follow him. It will cost you everything. But you will gain what no money can buy, what no achievement can earn, what no religion can provide. You will gain God himself. And in him you will find everything your soul has been longing for.
This is my testimony. This is my plea. This is my hope for you. May the God who revealed himself in Jesus Christ open your eyes to see truth. give you courage to follow it and grant you the eternal life that only he can give.
Amen.
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