No one asked my name, no one asked my background or what I did for a living.

They simply welcomed me with smiles and nods, making space in the circle for me to sit.

Someone brought me tea.

A woman smiled at me with kind eyes and told me she was glad I had come.

What happened that night changed my life forever.

They began by singing songs of worship to Jesus.

quiet songs, beautiful songs in Arabic, songs about his love and sacrifice and resurrection.

I had never heard anything like it.

There was joy in their voices despite their circumstances, despite living in constant danger as Christians in an Islamic country, despite the persecution and loss many of them had experienced.

They sang about Jesus as if he was their dearest friend, their beloved savior, the reason for living.

Then they prayed.

Not ritual prayers repeated from memory with prescribed words and movements, but personal prayers spoken from the heart.

People talking to Jesus like he was right there in the room with them.

They thanked him for his blessings, for protection, for strength.

They asked him for courage and wisdom.

They prayed for family members who did not yet know him.

They prayed for Muslims to find the truth.

They prayed for me by name.

Though they did not know my name, they simply called me our new brother and asked Jesus to guide me and protect me and reveal himself to me fully.

I sat there with tears running down my face, overwhelmed by the intimacy and authenticity of their prayers.

This was nothing like the formal distant prayers of Islam.

This was relationship.

This was family.

This was real.

After prayer, they opened Bibles.

Most of them had small worn Bibles that looked well read.

And began discussing a passage from the book of Romans.

They read about how all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God and how we are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by Jesus Christ.

They talked about what this meant, how it applied to their lives, how it was different from earning righteousness through works and deeds.

I sat there silent, listening, absorbing, feeling like I was hearing the truth explained with clarity for the first time in my life.

Everything in Islam had been about doing enough good deeds to hopefully outweigh your bad deeds, about following enough rules to hopefully please Allah, about living in constant uncertainty about whether you would be accepted or rejected on judgment day.

But these people were talking about assurance, about knowing they were saved, about being confident in God’s love, not because of what they had done, but because of what Jesus had done for them.

The discussion went on for perhaps an hour.

Different people shared insights, asked questions, encouraged one another.

There was no hierarchy, no one person dominating the conversation.

It was a fellowship of equals, brothers and sisters in Christ, learning together.

When the discussion ended, Dwood asked if I had any questions.

I had a thousand questions, but I started with the one that troubled me most.

The biggest obstacle between Islam and Christianity in my mind, the Trinity.

How could Christians claim to worship one God while saying God is father, son, and holy spirit?

This seemed like clear polytheism.

Sherk, the worst sin in Islam, the one unforgivable sin.

An older man in the group whose face bore scars from some past violence, burn marks on one side of his neck and jaw, answered me.

He did not give me complicated theology or philosophical arguments.

Instead, he asked me to think about water.

Water can be liquid, ice or steam.

Three different forms, three different states, but all H2O, all the same substance, one essence, three expressions.

God, he said, is one being who exists in three persons beyond our full understanding.

Yes, but not illogical or contradictory.

The Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit are all fully God, distinct in person, but unified in essence, unified in will, unified in purpose.

He said to think of it like the sun, the sun itself, the light it gives, and the heat it produces.

Three distinct things, but all one sun.

You cannot have the sun without its light and heat.

You cannot separate them.

It was not a complete answer to all my questions.

But it was enough to show me that what I had been taught about Christian belief was a caricature, not the reality.

Christians were not worshiping three gods.

They were worshiping one God who had revealed himself in three persons.

I asked about the crucifixion.

Islam taught that Jesus was not really crucified.

that God would not allow his prophet to be killed in such a humiliating way that someone else was made to look like him and crucified in his place.

How could Christians believe God would let his son die like that?

A young woman spoke up.

She could not have been more than 25, but she spoke with wisdom beyond her years.

She said that was exactly the point.

God did not send Jesus to be a political leader or military conqueror or protected prophet.

He sent him to be a sacrifice to pay the price for humanity’s sin to die the death we deserved so we could have life.

The cross, she said, was not a defeat.

It was the victory.

It was the moment when Jesus conquered sin and death and Satan.

It looked like weakness, but it was the greatest demonstration of power in history.

It looked like the end, but it was the beginning of our salvation.

And the resurrection 3 days later proved it.

Jesus rose from the dead, appeared to hundreds of witnesses, and ascended to heaven.

Death could not hold him because he was God.

We talked for hours that night.

The candles burned low and were replaced.

More tea was brought.

They answered my questions with patience and clarity, never making me feel foolish for asking, never treating me with anything but respect and love.

Several of them shared their own stories of coming to faith, of leaving Islam, of the cost they had paid.

The old man with the scarred face told how he had been a imam, how he had converted after studying the Bible to refute it, how his own mosque congregation had beaten him and set him on fire.

His wife had stayed Muslim and divorced him.

His children refused to speak to him, but he said with tears of joy in his eyes that knowing Jesus was worth all of it.

A young man in his early 20s told how he had been engaged to be married when he converted.

His fiance’s family called off the wedding.

His own father ordered him to leave the house and never return.

He lived on the streets for months before finding this church family.

One woman had been divorced by her husband the day he found out she was a Christian.

She lost custody of her children.

She had not seen them in 3 years.

But she said Jesus had given her a peace that surpassed understanding, that he was enough even when everything else was taken away.

Yet they all spoke of Jesus with such love, such devotion, such joy that it was clear they considered the cost worth paying.

They had found something more valuable than family, than reputation, than physical safety, than life itself.

They had found Jesus, and he was enough.

As the night grew late, and the gathering came to an end, Daud pulled me aside.

He said they met every Thursday night in different locations for safety, rotating between several homes.

He said, “If I wanted to continue learning, continue seeking.

I would be welcome to join them.

He also said they would understand if I never came back.

If the risk was too great, if I decided to walk away from this path, there would be no judgment, no condemnation, no pressure.

But he also said something else, something I have never forgotten.

He put his hand on my shoulder, looked me in the eyes, and said that Jesus was knocking on the door of my heart, and only I could choose whether to open it.

He said Jesus would never force himself on anyone, never coersse or manipulate, but he would continue pursuing me with love until I either surrendered to him or finally hardened my heart completely against him.

He said the choice was mine, but he prayed I would choose life.

I walked home through the dark street of Baghdad that night, feeling like I was floating.

Everything looked different.

The stars seemed brighter.

The night air seemed sweeter.

Despite all my fear and confusion, despite all the questions still unanswered, I felt something I hadn’t felt in years, maybe ever, I felt hope.

real hope.

Not the uncertain hope of Islam that was always tinged with fear, but a hope anchored in something solid, someone reliable.

When I got home, my family was asleep.

I sat in our small courtyard under the stars and looked up at the sky.

And for the first time in my life, I prayed to Jesus, not with fear or doubt, but with gratitude.

I thanked him for sending Dwood to find me in that market.

I thanked him for the believers who had welcomed me and taught me with such love.

I thanked him for being patient with my questions and fears, for pursuing me even when I was running away.

I still hadn’t fully surrendered.

I still had not made the final commitment.

But I was closer than I had ever been.

The walls around my heart were crumbling.

The resistance was weakening.

Jesus was winning.

And part of me was glad.

I went back the next Thursday and the Thursday after that and the one after that.

Each time I learned more.

Each time my certainty grew.

Each time the contrast between the fear-based submission of Islam and the lovebased relationship of Christianity became clearer and more undeniable.

The group began to teach me more systematically.

They explained the entire story of the Bible.

creation, humanity made in God’s image, the fall into sin, God’s covenant with Abraham and Moses, the prophecies about a coming Messiah who would save humanity, Jesus fulfilling those prophecies in precise detail, his death and resurrection, the church spreading the gospel despite persecution, and the promise of his return to make all things new.

They showed me how the Old Testament pointed to Jesus on every page.

The Passover lamb whose blood protected from death Jesus, the lamb of God.

The bronze serpent Moses lifted up in the wilderness to heal those who looked at it.

Jesus lifted up on the cross to save those who believe.

The suffering servant in Isaiah 53 who bore our sins and was wounded for our transgressions.

Jesus on the cross.

They taught me about grace, the unmmerited favor of God given freely to all who believe, not earned by works or deeds.

This concept was revolutionary to me.

In Islam, everything was about scales, about weighing good deeds against bad, about hoping you had done enough.

But in Christianity, it was about accepting the gift that Jesus had already purchased with his blood.

Salvation was not about my effort but about his finished work.

When Jesus died on the cross, his last words were, “It is finished”.

The price was paid in full.

They taught me about the Holy Spirit, the presence of God living inside believers, guiding them, empowering them, transforming them from the inside out.

This explained the peace I had seen in Christians like Yousef.

This explained the joy in this persecuted house church.

They had God himself dwelling in them, closer than their own breath.

After about 2 months of meeting with the group, Dwood sat with me privately one Thursday evening before the others arrived.

We sat in the courtyard of the house where we were meeting under a fig tree, drinking tea.

He asked me where I stood in my journey.

Was I still seeking, still questioning?

Or had I reached a point of belief?

I told him honestly that I believed Jesus was the son of God, that he had died for my sins and risen from the dead, that he was the only way to the father.

I believed it all.

The evidence was overwhelming.

the testimony of scripture, the witness of the Holy Spirit in my heart, the supernatural dreams, the changed lives I saw in the believers around me.

Everything pointed to the truth of Christianity.

But I also told him I was terrified of what confession would mean.

I had a wife and three children who knew nothing of what I was doing.

I had a position as a cleric that I would lose instantly.

I had a community that would view me as an apostate, a traitor worthy of death.

I believed, but I did not know if I had the courage to openly follow Jesus, to take up my cross as he commanded.

Dood listened with understanding in his eyes.

He did not pressure me or judge me.

He did not quote scripture at me or make me feel guilty.

He simply asked if he could pray for me.

He put his hand on my shoulder, bowed his head, and prayed that Jesus would give me the courage and strength for whatever lay ahead that the Holy Spirit would guide me in timing and wisdom.

That I would know with certainty when the time came to fully commit.

That I would trust Jesus to carry me through whatever suffering might come.

That night alone in my bathroom with my hidden Bible, I made my decision.

I had been reading through the Gospel of John again and I came to chapter 10 where Jesus said, “He was the good shepherd who lays down his life for the sheep”.

He said, “His sheep hear his voice and follow him and he gives them eternal life”.

He said, “No one can snatch them out of his hand”.

I realized I had been hearing his voice for months in dreams, in scripture, through the believers.

He had been calling me, and I had been following slowly, fearfully, but following nonetheless.

The time had come to stop hesitating and fully surrender.

I knelt on that cold tile floor and prayed the most important prayer I have ever prayed.

I told Jesus that I believed in him, that I accepted him as my Lord and Savior, that I surrendered my life to him completely and without reservation.

I confessed my sins, all of them.

every failure, every act of hypocrisy, every moment of cruelty or pride or lust or anger, I asked him to forgive me and cleanse me and make me new, to wash me in his blood and give me his righteousness.

And in that moment, in that small bathroom, in the middle of the night, I felt a presence more real than anything physical.

I felt love wash over me like a wave, like I was being immersed in an ocean of unconditional love.

I felt peace settle into my soul like an anchor, a peace that went deeper than circumstances or feelings.

I felt joy bubble up from somewhere deep inside.

A joy that had nothing to do with my external situation and everything to do with being reconciled to God.

I felt for the first time in my life truly alive, truly free, truly home.

I was born again just as Jesus had told Nicodemus, “A person must be born again to see the kingdom of God”.

The old me, the cleric who served Allah in fear and uncertainty, was gone.

The new me, a child of God, saved by grace through faith in Christ, was born in that moment.

I did not hear an audible voice.

I did not see a vision, but I knew with absolute certainty that something fundamental had changed in me.

The old was gone.

The new had come.

I was no longer just a Muslim man who was curious about Christianity.

I was a follower of Jesus Christ.

I was a Christian.

I belonged to him.

I wept there on the bathroom floor for a long time.

Overwhelmed by gratitude, overwhelmed by the weight of what had just happened.

Overwhelmed by love, overwhelmed by the journey that still lay ahead.

I knew this was just the beginning.

I knew the hard part was coming.

But I also knew I would never be alone again.

Jesus was with me.

The Holy Spirit lived in me.

I was part of God’s family now.

part of a kingdom that would never end.

The next Thursday, I asked to be baptized.

The group arranged it carefully with all the security precautions necessary.

We met at a safe location, a believer’s home that had a small courtyard with a large water tank used for storing water when the city supply was unreliable.

Late at night with lookouts posted at the gate to watch for danger.

I stood in that water with the wood.

The moon was nearly full giving enough light to see.

The small group of believers stood around the tank singing softly.

The wood asked me the questions of faith before the witnesses.

He asked if I believed Jesus Christ was the son of God.

I said yes.

He asked if I believed Jesus died for my sins and rose from the dead.

I said yes.

He asked if I was committing to follow him no matter the cost even unto death if necessary.

I said yes.

Then he lowered me into the water saying he baptized me in the name of the father, the son, and the holy spirit.

When I came up out of that water, gasping, wiping water from my eyes, the small group around me was singing quietly in celebration.

They embraced me one by one, welcoming me as their brother in Christ, rejoicing that another soul had been saved, that the kingdom of God had grown by one more person.

I had crossed the line.

There was no going back now.

I was a follower of Jesus, publicly declared before witnesses, baptized into his death and resurrection, but I was still living a double life.

I was still going to the mosque every day, still leading prayers, still teaching Islam to children and adults.

Every time I did these things now, I felt physically ill.

I was lying to everyone I knew.

I was betraying the trust of my community.

I was living in constant fear of discovery, constantly watching what I said, constantly hiding who I really was.

The house church counseledled me to be patient, to wait for the right time, to reveal my faith, to pray for wisdom about when and how to tell my family.

They said there was no shame in being cautious when your life was at stake.

that even Jesus sometimes moved quietly to avoid confrontation before the appointed time.

But they also said I could not live this way indefinitely, that eventually the truth would have to come out, that a light cannot remain hidden forever.

I knew they were right.

I knew I could not continue like this.

Eventually, a choice would have to be made.

Eventually, I would have to openly confess Christ or deny him.

And I knew which choice I would make.

I knew, even knowing the cost, even knowing what I would lose, that I could never deny Jesus.

He was too real.

His love was too overwhelming.

My faith was too certain.

That choice came sooner than I expected, and in a way I never imagined.

About 3 weeks after my baptism, I was careless.

I had been reading my Bible late at night as usual, and when I finished, I was so tired, my eyes burning with exhaustion, that I simply left it on a shelf in our small storage closet instead of hiding it back under the mattress.

I went to sleep, thinking I would move it in the morning before anyone was awake.

But the next day, while I was at the mosque leading midday prayer, my wife was cleaning the house.

She found it.

When I came home that evening, I knew immediately something was wrong.

Zara’s eyes were red from crying, swollen, her face pale.

My children were unusually quiet, sitting together in a corner, afraid.

The atmosphere in our home was thick with tension, like the air before a thunderstorm.

As I entered our home, I saw the Bible sitting on our small table, opened to the Gospel of John, where I had been reading the night before.

My heart dropped into my stomach.

Everything slowed down.

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