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Seeking Allah, Finding Jesus by Nabeel Qureshi
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This is an interesting and engaging book. A little slow at the start but a page-turner before it ends. (Try to avoid spoilers, I suggest you not google Nabeel Qureshi until you have finished the book.)
By way of introduction, I am a retired veteran who paints watercolors and writes, mostly fiction. My only published work is Living in the Spirit: Paul's Timeless Message to Christians, a study of Romans.
I lived in Saudi Arabia twice in the 1980s, working close enough with several members of the Royal Saudi Air Force that we often discussed our respective beliefs. I’ve read a dozen books about Muslim beliefs and conversions as well as dozens on Christian apologetics.


Ask at your local library about their ILL procedures. If you want to, to save them time and trouble, you can tell the librarian that our three-letter OCLC WorldShare code here at the Bluefield College library is PYX (he/she will know what that means), and that we have the article and will gladly loan it.

Nabeel is a member of a close, loving family in a close, loving Ahmadiyya (moderate) Muslim Community. He knows who Jesus is and isn’t interested in letting him out of that pigeonhole.
But he becomes friends with an equally intelligent, dedicated Christian.
His story is so different from all these abused-Muslim-female-suffers stories, partly because he is an American male, but mostly because he has a Christian friend.
What other relationships contribute to Nabeel's experience?

There's something of a trap, though. There are two Audible releases with the same title. One of them is a series of lectures by Nabeel, rather than the audiobook.


“Then what hope is there for us, David?” “Only the grace of God.” “But why would He give me His grace?” “Because He loves you.” “Why would he love me, a sinner?” "Because He’s your Father.”

“Then what hope is there for us, David?” “Only the grace of God.” “But why would He give me His grace?” “Because He loves you.” “Why would he love me..."
I liked that exchange too. They had several really good ones.


I lived in Saudi Arabia long enough to confirm this. Such a different worldview is hard to understand. Changing it must be even more difficult.
Do you feel Nabeel's struggle?

I found Nabeel's descriptions of and comparisons of these two different systems fascinating. I have heard of the shame/honor idea in many eastern cultures, but I had never had it so simply and yet thoroughly explained. It really gave me some new insight.

It is fascinating that arguments about religion and science exist, but here Nabeel has seen in science an explanation for a religious belief.



This is also a more recent development. My grandparents’ generation relied a lot more on authorities than we do these days. (This was in Germany, not the US, but still a Western culture)
He’s oversimplifying a lot in these chapters.

That is most probably true, but there seems to be more skepticism as everyone seems to be an "authority" of some sort. With an educated society there is the ability to read, research, and study many different views to derive knowledge and not blindly follow what a small group is telling us.


That is most probably true, but there seems to be more skepticism as everyone seems to be an "authority" of some sort. With an educated..."
That is absolutely true. But we're lazy and rushed and emotional, so we often let someone else think for us.

There's also (as media moguls in every country understand very well!), an enormous psychological predisposition to imagine that the "news" as it's being presented to you on TV with an aura of "authority," actually represents unfiltered Reality with a capital R. In the U.S., the power to present that "Reality," when I was a child growing up in the 50s and 60s, rested with a tiny oligopoly with just three networks. Now, with the advent of cable TV, it's a slightly less tiny oligopoly; but its psychological power isn't much diminished, and it's still used as much to manipulate as to "inform."

Certainly folks like the media, advertisers, politicians, and a host of others consciously feed us a world view which fits their good, not necessarily ours.
We were warned about following the world.

Yes, and I think uprooting his parents' firm traditions and beliefs is why Nabeel's journey and decision are so difficult for him. He is aware how his decision will affect his parents who had been so diligent about teaching him his Muslim traditions and faith.

Nabeel also believes in the efficacy of dreams and visions, unlike many modern Christians. He prays for a dream or vision expecting to get one. He has a firm enough belief in God that his crisis is know who God was, not whether he is.
Many of the philosophic and religious arguments for and against religion in general and these religions in particular were insufficient to him; he knows God is.


I really liked that revelation Nabeel had. I have heard many different ways of describing how the Trinity works, but that one I had not heard before and the idea that there is something else in this world that can be three-in-one all at the same time like that is fascinating to me.

An excellent book, all the more poignant as you realise what happened at the end.

Books mentioned in this topic
Living in the Spirit: Paul's Timeless Message to Christians (other topics)The Qur'an (other topics)
A 2009 article in Christianity Today (Dec. 2009, p. 32-5), "Muslim Followers of Jesus?" by Joseph Cumming of Yale Univ., might be a useful resource for some persons in this discussion. It's also useful, in better understanding Islam, to read The Qur'an (sometimes transliterated in English as the Koran --Arabic and English letters don't have an exact one-on-one correspondence), since that book and its interpretation is so central to discussions of the religion.
Since our group's co-moderator Ron just finished reading this book (and brought to it an already broad background of reading and prior interest in the subject), and will be taking an active part in the discussion, I've decided to sit this read out myself. But I'll be following this thread with great interest!