I saw the Roman soldiers at the foot of the cross, casting lots for his clothing, laughing and gambling while a man died above them.

I saw his mother Mary weeping at the foot of the cross, supported by a younger man, John the disciple.

I saw the other women who had followed him, their faces contorted with grief.

I saw the sky darkening at noon, an unnatural darkness that frightened even the hardened soldiers.

I saw the earth shaking.

I saw him crying out, “Elo, Eli, Lama Sabakani, my God, my God, why have you forsaken me in Aramaic, his native language”?

I saw him cry out, “It is finished,” and bow his head and die.

I saw a soldier pierce his side with a spear, making sure he was dead, and blood and water flowing out, proof that he had died of cardiac rupture, his heart literally broken.

I saw him taken down from the cross by Joseph of Arythea and Nicodemus, their faces grim with sorrow.

I saw him wrapped in linen, wrapped with spices, according to Jewish burial custom.

I saw him laid in a new tomb cut from rock.

I saw the stone rolled in front of the entrance, a massive stone that would take several men to move.

I saw the Roman guards posted.

Pilate’s seal placed on the stone because the religious leaders feared his disciples would steal the body and claim he had risen.

And then I saw the tomb empty.

Three days later, the stone rolled away, not to let him out, but to let others in to see that he was gone.

I saw the grave clothes lying there, still in the shape of a body, but collapsed, empty, no body inside them.

I saw the facecloth folded separately.

I saw the guards running away in terror, having seen an angel, having felt an earthquake, having watched the impossible happen.

I saw him walking in a garden, speaking to Mary Magdalene, who had come to the tomb to anoint his body with more spices.

I saw her think he was the gardener until he said her name, Mary.

And she recognized him and fell at his feet crying, “Raboni, my teacher”.

I saw him appearing to his disciples in a locked room, showing them his wounds, letting them see that he was not a ghost, but flesh and blood, eating food to prove he was real.

I saw Thomas, the doubter, the one who said he would not believe unless he could put his finger in the nail holes and his hand in the spear wound.

I saw Jesus invite him to do exactly that, to touch and see and believe.

I saw Thomas fall to his knees and cry out, “My Lord and my God”.

I saw Jesus appearing to over 500 people over 40 days, teaching them, proving beyond any doubt that he had conquered death.

I saw him ascending into the clouds from the Mount of Olives as his disciples watched.

Two angels appearing to tell them he would return the same way he had left.

I saw all of it, not as a vision, not as a dream, but as if I had been there, as if I had witnessed it with my own eyes.

The memories were as clear and detailed as my own memories of yesterday, of this morning, of my breakfast with my wife.

I pulled my hand back, gasping, tears streaming down my face.

How?

I whispered, “How is this possible?

The Quran says you were not crucified.

How can the Quran be wrong”?

The Quran was written 600 years after these events, he said gently.

His hands still extended toward me.

600 years of stories passed down, changed, adapted, influenced by various groups who had their own beliefs about me.

The man who compiled what became your scripture, Muhammad, peace be upon his memory, heard many stories about me from various sources.

Some of them were Christians who denied my divinity, groups that the mainstream church had declared heretical.

Some of them were Jewish groups who denied my messiahship altogether.

Some of them were agnostics who taught that I was a pure spirit who only appeared to have a body and therefore only appeared to die.

They taught that it would be beneath God to actually become incarnate to actually suffer.

Muhammad heard these competing stories and the account that made it into the Quran was influenced by these heterodox views.

He did not have access to the eyewitness accounts.

He did not have the testimonies of those who saw me die and saw me rise again.

He was doing his best with the information available to him 600 years after the fact.

But the information was incomplete and in some cases inaccurate.

But Muhammad was a prophet.

I protested weakly though I could already feel my certainty crumbling.

He received revelation from Allah through the angel Gabriel.

The Quran is the word of God revealed word for word, letter for letter.

Are you saying that revelation was false?

I am saying that Muhammad was a sincere man who sought God.

He replied carefully.

I am saying that he brought many people from polytheism to monotheism and there is value in that.

I am saying that much of what he taught about righteousness and justice and mercy and charity is true and good.

I am saying that he was right to call people to prayer, to fasting, to caring for the poor and the widow and the orphan.

But I am also saying that what he taught about me specifically about my death and resurrection was wrong.

Not intentionally wrong, not maliciously wrong, but wrong nonetheless.

And soon the whole world will know it.

What do you mean?

I asked, fear gripping my heart.

What’s coming?

He stood up, and his expression became grave.

the expression of someone delivering news that will change everything.

3 months from now, an archaeological discovery will be announced.

Archaeologists working at a site near Jerusalem in a cave system that was sealed by an earthquake in the late 1st century have found documents, first century documents written in Aramaic and Greek, the languages of Palestine in my time, letters from people who witnessed my crucifixion and resurrection.

Testimonies from people whose names appear in the Gospels, people who knew me personally, who saw me die, who saw me alive again.

physical evidence that will be carbonated by dozens of independent laboratories around the world.

Documents that will be verified by the most rigorous scientific methods available.

Evidence that will be impossible to deny or dismiss as forgery.

I felt my stomach drop.

Felt a wave of nausea wash over me.

What kind of documents?

A letter from Nicodemus, the Pharisee who came to me by night, who saw in me something different from the other teachers, describing in detail what he saw when he helped Joseph of Arythea take my body down from the cross.

He describes the wounds, the blood that had dried, the water that had seeped from the spear wound, medical details that prove I was dead.

A letter from Joseph of Arythea himself describing how he provided his own new tomb for my burial, how he wrapped my body in clean linen, how he mourned for the prophet he had followed in secret.

A letter from Mary Magdalene recounting her encounter with me in the garden on the morning of my resurrection describing my appearance, my words, the moment she recognized me.

A letter from Peter describing how he and John ran to the tomb, how they found it empty, how they saw me later that day.

Multiple accounts from different witnesses written independently, all corroborating the same facts.

I was crucified under Pontius Pilate.

I died.

I was buried.

I rose again on the third day.

I appeared to many witnesses.

I ascended to heaven.

But how do you know this?

I asked desperately.

If it hasn’t been announced yet, if it hasn’t been made public, how do you know what they found?

Because I am God, he said simply without arrogance, simply stating a fact.

I know all things past, present, and future.

I know what has been hidden is about to be revealed.

I know that these documents have already been found, that they are currently being studied and authenticated, that the announcement will be made at an international archaeological conference in Jerusalem on June 3rd.

And I know what this will do to Islam.

I know the crisis it will cause.

I know that 1.

8 billion Muslims will be confronted with evidence that a fundamental belief of their faith is demonstrably false.

I put my head in my hands, my mind reeling.

I could see it.

I could see the chaos, the confusion, the crisis of faith.

1.

8 billion Muslims told that a core belief of their religion is wrong.

The Quran, which we believe is the perfect, unchanged, errorless word of God, proven to contain a historical error about one of the most important prophets.

What would that do to people’s faith?

How many would abandon Islam entirely?

How many would become atheists, deciding that if Islam is false, then there must be no God at all?

How many would turn to violence in their confusion and anger, lashing out at the archaeologists, at the universities, at Western civilization, at Christians, at anyone they could blame for destroying their faith?

How many would go into denial, insisting it was all a conspiracy, refusing to look at the evidence, no matter how strong?

How many Muslim scholars would issue fatwas declaring the documents to be forgeries without even examining them prioritizing the protection of Islam over the pursuit of truth?

Why are you telling me this?

I asked looking up at him through my tears.

Why come to me?

Why not appear to the leaders, to the Grand Mufties, to the heads of Alazar and the Islamic universities?

Why a nobody like me?

You are not a nobody, he said firmly.

You have influence.

You have a reputation for integrity.

People listen to you not just in your own country but across the Muslim world.

Your books are read by scholars and students.

Your lectures are attended by thousands.

Your fatwas are respected.

And more importantly, you have spent your life seeking truth even when that truth was uncomfortable.

I have watched you argue against interpretations of Islamic law that you felt were unjust even when it made you unpopular.

I have watched you stand up for women’s rights within an Islamic framework even when other scholars criticized you for being too liberal.

I have watched you call for reform dihad for fresh thinking even when traditionalists accused you of innovation.

You have shown that you value truth more than conformity.

That is why I have come to you.

What do you want me to do?

I asked my voice barely above a whisper.

I want you to tell the truth.

he said, his eyes boring into mine.

When the discovery is announced, there will be many Muslim leaders who will immediately call it a forgery, a western conspiracy, a Zionist plot to undermine Islam.

They will tell people not to believe the evidence, no matter how strong it is.

They will tell Muslims that their faith is under attack, that they must reject this discovery without examination.

They will choose to protect the institution of Islam rather than seek the truth.

I am asking you not to do that.

I am asking you to be brave.

To look at the evidence honestly when it is presented.

To admit when something you believed was wrong.

To follow the truth wherever it leads, even if it leads away from Islam and toward me.

You’re asking me to apostatize, I said the word heavy on my tongue.

You’re asking me to leave Islam.

You’re asking me to become a Christian.

Do you know what that means in my world?

Do you know what they do to apostates?

I’m asking you to become my follower.

He corrected gently.

The labels don’t matter as much as the reality.

Christian, Muslim, these are human categories.

I’m asking you to acknowledge that I am who I said I am.

That I am the way, the truth, and the life.

That no one comes to the father except through me.

That I died for your sins and rose again to give you eternal life.

That salvation is not earned through following religious laws, through your five daily prayers or your fasting or your pilgrimage or your good deeds, but received as a gift through faith in me and in what I accomplished on the cross.

And if I do this, I said slowly, they will kill me.

Someone will issue a fatwa calling for my death.

Some young zealot will take it upon themselves to execute the apostate, to defend the honor of Islam by spilling my blood.

Perhaps, he said, and I appreciated that he did not lie to me.

Did not sugarcoat the reality.

I will not lie to you and say there is no cost to following me.

I told my first disciples that they would face persecution, that they would be hated because of me, that they would be dragged before governors and kings for my sake.

Many of them were killed for their faith.

Peter was crucified upside down.

James was beheaded.

Thomas was speared to death in India.

They faced torture and death rather than deny what they knew to be true, that I had risen from the dead.

But I also told them not to fear those who can kill the body but cannot kill the soul.

I told them that whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.

I told them that I would be with them always, even to the end of the age.

I told them that in this world they would have trouble but to take heart because I have overcome the world.

I need time, I said, my voice breaking.

I need to think, to pray, to study.

This is too much.

This is my entire life, my entire identity, my entire worldview.

You’re asking me to abandon everything.

You have three months, he said.

Use them well.

Read the Gospels, not as a Muslim reading a text you’ve been taught is corrupted, but as a genuine seeker reading eyewitness testimonies.

Read Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John.

Read them carefully, prayerfully, asking God to show you the truth.

Read the letters of Paul, who was once Saul of Tarsus, a zealous persecutor of my followers, a man who participated in the stoning of Steven, the first martyr.

Read how I appeared to him on the road to Damascus, how I called him to be my apostle to the Gentiles.

Read his testimony of my resurrection in 1 Corinthians chapter 15 where he lists the witnesses who saw me alive.

Over 500 people, most of whom were still alive when he wrote and could be questioned.

Read the history of the early church.

How my disciples went to their death, still proclaiming that they had seen me risen.

Ask yourself why men who knew the truth would die for what they knew was a lie if it were indeed a lie.

People die for lies they believe to be true all the time.

But people do not die for lies they know to be false.

My disciples knew whether they had seen me risen or not.

And they went to horrible deaths rather than recant.

Ask yourself what that means.

He walked toward the door of my office and I thought he was leaving.

Thought this impossible worlds shattering encounter was ending.

But he stopped and turned back to me, his hand on the doorframe.

One more thing, he said, his voice carrying a weight of eternity.

You have a choice to make, Abdul Raman.

You can make it now in private with time to prepare, with three months to study and pray and come to terms with the truth.

Or you can make it later in public under pressure with the eyes of the world watching, with your community demanding that you reject the evidence, with your family pressuring you to stay in Islam.

But you will make it.

Every person must decide what to do with me.

You can accept me or reject me, but you cannot ignore me.

Not anymore.

The evidence is coming.

The truth is coming to light.

And you will have to choose whether to follow the truth or to protect your comfortable life.

Wait, I said, standing up from my chair, my legs shaking.

If you’re really who you say you are, if you’re really God, then why?

Why did you have to die?

Why couldn’t God just forgive sins without all the blood and suffering?

That’s what we teach in Islam.

That Allah is merciful and forgiving.

That he doesn’t need a sacrifice to forgive.

Why the cross?

He turned back to face me fully.

And his expression was one of profound seriousness mixed with deep compassion.

Because justice and mercy must both be satisfied, he said.

Sin is not just a personal failing that can be overlooked.

Sin is rebellion against the holy God who created you.

It is a violation of his law, his character, his very nature.

God is not just merciful.

He is also just.

He cannot simply ignore sin any more than a good judge can ignore crime.

If a judge let every criminal go free because he felt merciful, you would not call him a good judge.

You would call him corrupt.

God’s justice demands that sin be punished.

The wages of sin is death, spiritual and physical separation from God.

But God’s love demands that sinners be saved.

These two truths, justice and love, met at the cross.

I took the punishment that you deserved.

I died in your place.

Justice was satisfied because sin was punished.

Love was satisfied because the sinner was saved.

This is why the cross was necessary.

This is why there is no other way to the father except through me.

But that seems so inefficient, I said, struggling to understand.

So complicated.

Why not just create a system where people earn their salvation through good deeds?

That’s what makes sense to us.

Do good, avoid evil, and you’ll be rewarded in the afterlife?

And how many good deeds are enough?

He asked, his eyebrows raised.

If salvation is earned, then there must be a standard.

How do you know when you’ve done enough?

How do you know if your good deeds outweigh your bad deeds?

How do you measure the weight of a thought crime versus a physical crime?

How do you account for the sins you committed but don’t remember?

How do you have any assurance of salvation at all?

You live your entire life in uncertainty, hoping that on the day of judgment, your good will outweigh your bad, but never really knowing.

Is that mercy?

Is that love?

Or is it cosmic uncertainty?

Divine capricciousness.

I opened my mouth to respond, but found I had no answer.

He was right.

This was something that had troubled me at times in my own spiritual life.

this uncertainty about whether I had done enough, whether my prayers were sincere enough, whether my fasting was accepted, whether my charity counted, if I felt pride about it afterward.

There were nights when I lay awake wondering if I would pass the test on the day of judgment, if my scale would tip in the right direction, if I had accumulated enough good deeds to outweigh my sins.

The gift of salvation through faith, he continued, is not inefficient.

It is merciful.

It gives you certainty.

It gives you peace.

When you accept what I did for you on the cross, when you trust in my sacrifice rather than your own works, you can know with certainty that you are saved.

Not because you are good enough, but because I am.

Not because you have earned it, but because I have freely given it.

This is grace.

Abdul Raman.

This is the good news, the gospel.

You cannot save yourself, but I have saved you.

He need only receive the gift.

But doesn’t that lead to lentiousness?

I asked, raising an objection I had used many times in debates with Christians.

If salvation is a free gift that cannot be earned or lost, what stops people from sinning as much as they want?

Why would anyone live righteously if their salvation doesn’t depend on it?

He smiled slightly, as if he had heard this question many times before.

Because true faith transforms the heart.

Continue reading….
« Prev Next »