Secret Christian Worshippers in Saudi Arabia Face ...

Secret Christian Worshippers in Saudi Arabia Face Jihadists – Then a Miracle Happens

My name doesn’t matter anymore. The man who carried that name is dead. He died the night I knelt alone in my room and whispered a prayer to Jesus Christ.

But I’m getting ahead of myself. Let me go back. Let me tell you about the life I lived before that night.

Let me tell you about growing up in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, where Islam isn’t just a religion.

It’s the air you breathe. I am speaking to you now from a place of safety.

I can’t tell you exactly where I am. There are people who still want to find me.

People who believe I deserve to die for what I’ve done. But I need to tell you my story.

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I need you to understand what it cost to follow Jesus in a place where his name is forbidden.

I need you to know about the night the police came for me and how God made them blind.

But first, you need to understand where I came from. Hello viewers from around the world.

Before our brother from Saudi Arabia continues his story, we’d love to know where you are watching from and we would love to pray for you and your city.

Thank you and may God bless you as you listen to this powerful testimony. I was born in Riyad in 1981.

My father worked for the government. My mother raised six children. I was the oldest son.

In Saudi culture, this means something. The oldest son carries the family honor. The oldest son sets the example.

The oldest son is supposed to be the most devout, the most obedient, the most perfect reflection of what a Muslim man should be.

I tried to be that man. God knows I tried. My earliest memories are of my father’s voice waking me before dawn.

Fajger prayer. The first of five daily prayers. I was four years old when I started praying with him.

I remember the cold tiles of the bathroom floor where we performed woo, the ritual washing.

I remember watching him wash his hands three times, his mouth three times, his face three times.

I copied every movement. Even at that age, I knew this was important. This was what good boys did.

By the time I was seven, I was attending Quran classes every day after school.

The shake who taught us had a long beard and eyes that seemed to see every sin you might commit before you even thought of it.

He carried a thin wooden stick. When we made mistakes in our recitation, that stick would crack against our palms.

I learned to recite perfectly. The sting of that stick taught me well. I memorized surah al fat first, then surah alas, then more and more verses.

Arabic flowing from my mouth in rhythms I didn’t always understand. We weren’t encouraged to ask what the words meant.

We were encouraged to memorize, to recite, to obey. Understanding would come later. They told us obedience came first.

My father was proud of me. I can still see the way his eyes would light up when I recited Quran perfectly in front of his friends.

He would put his hand on my head and a smile. That smile was everything to me.

I lived for that smile. I lived for the moment when he would introduce me to other men and say I was memorizing the Quran, that I prayed all five prayers, that I was a good Muslim boy.

In Saudi Arabia, being a good Muslim boy wasn’t just about pleasing your father. It was about survival.

It was about belonging. It was about being Saudi at all. You have to understand something.

In my country, there is no separation between Islam and national identity. To be Saudi is to be Muslim.

This isn’t a choice. This isn’t a preference. This is the law. This is written into the very foundation of the kingdom.

The country was built on Islam. The flag itself carries the shahada, the declaration of faith.

There is no god but Allah. And Muhammad is his messenger. Those words are on our flag, on our schools, on our government buildings.

Everywhere you look, you are reminded of what you must believe. When I was 12, I started attending Friday prayers at the mosque with my father.

This was when I began to really understand the power of Islam in Saudi society.

The mosques would fill with thousands of men. We would line up in perfect rows, shoulder tosh shoulder, foot to foot.

The Imam would lead us in prayer and then he would give the hutba, the sermon.

I remember those sermons. They were about obedience to Allah, about the dangers of western influence, about the wickedness of Jews and Christians, about how we Muslims were the chosen people, the best nation raised up for mankind, about how our way was the only true way.

About how everyone else was destined for hellfire. I believed every word. Why wouldn’t I?

This was all I knew. This was all I had ever been taught. This was what everyone around me believed.

My father, my teachers, my friends, the television, the radio, the newspapers, everything in my world confirmed the same message.

Islam is truth. Everything else is falsehood. Islam is light. Everything else is darkness. But there were things I saw that confused me.

Small things at first, things I didn’t have words for. I remember walking through the souk, the market with my mother when I was maybe 13 years old.

We saw the mutawin, the religious police, stopping a woman. Her abaya had slipped back slightly, showing a few strands of her hair.

They were shouting at her, humiliating her in public, threatening to arrest her. My mother pulled me away quickly, but I could hear the woman crying.

I could hear her begging them to have mercy. She was trying to fix her covering, apologizing over and over.

I remember asking my mother why they were so angry with her. She told me that women had been immodest, that she had tempted men to sin, that the mutawin were protecting society from evil.

But all I could think was that the woman had been crying, that she had been scared, that it seemed like a small mistake for such big anger.

I pushed the thought away. I told myself my mother was right. The Mutawin were doing Allah’s work.

They were keeping society pure. That woman should have been more careful. It was her fault.

There were other moments like this. Moments when something didn’t feel right, but I forced myself to believe it was right because everyone said it was right.

I remember being 15 and hearing about a man in our neighborhood who had been arrested for not attending Friday prayers.

The religious police had raided his house. They took him away. We heard later that he had been lashed.

40 lashes for missing prayers. I remember my father talking about it with his friends.

They all agreed the man had gotten what he deserved. How could a Muslim man miss Jumu a prayer?

What kind of faith was that? The lashing would teach him to be more devoted.

But I couldn’t stop thinking about it. 40 lashes. I imagined the pain. I imagined the humiliation.

I wondered what had been happening in that man’s life that he hadn’t gone to the mosque.

Was he sick? Was he struggling with something? Did anyone ask him? Did anyone try to help him before they hurt him?

I never spoke these thoughts out loud. I barely let myself think them because to question was to doubt and to doubt was to step onto a very dangerous path.

When I was 17, I asked my imam a question that had been bothering me.

We had been studying paradise and hellfire. The Quran talks about the hurries, the beautiful virgins that men will receive in paradise.

I asked what women receive in paradise. What is their reward? The imam looked at me strangely.

He said, “Women’s greatest reward is that they will be made more beautiful for their husbands.

That they will never age, never menstruate, never feel jealous when their husbands are with the other women of paradise.”

I asked if women get companions the way men get hies. The room went very quiet.

The other students stared at me. The Imam’s face darkened. He told me that this was a foolish question, that women are not like men, that I should focus on becoming worthy of paradise instead of asking inappropriate things.

I never asked that question again. But I never forgot the way he looked at me, like I had said something dangerous, like I had revealed something wrong inside me.

By the time I was in my 20ies, I had learned to keep my questions to myself.

I had learning to nod and agree and do what was expected. I finished university.

I got a job at a government office. I prayed five times a day. I grew my beard.

I shortened my th to above my ankle the way the prophet supposedly did. I was everything a good Saudi Muslim man should be.

But inside, quietly in a place I barely admitted existed, there were questions, small doubts, tiny cracks in the foundation of everything I believed.

I would look around at my life and feel something missing. I would pray and feel like my prayers hit the ceiling and fell back down.

I would recite Quran and feel nothing, just words, just sounds, no connection, no presence, no peace.

I told myself this was my fault, that I wasn’t devoted enough, that I needed to pray more, fast more, be more obedient.

So I did. I prayed extra prayers. I fasted extra days. I tried so hard to feel something, to feel Allah close to me, to feel the certainty that everyone around me seemed to have.

But the feeling of emptiness only grew. And then there was the fear, always the fear.

Fear of doing something wrong, fear of thinking something wrong, fear of becoming someone wrong.

In Saudi Arabia, we live with surveillance of the soul. The mutawin could stop you anywhere.

They could question you. They could search your phone. They could check if you had been to the mosque.

They could arrest you for the smallest things. I saw them beat a man once for playing music in his car.

Music is haram, forbidden. They pulled him out of his car in the middle of the street and hit him with their sticks while people walked by.

No one stopped them. No one questioned them. They had the authority of the kingdom and the authority of Allah behind them.

I saw them arrest a young couple who were sitting together in a coffee shop.

They weren’t touching. They weren’t doing anything improper, but they weren’t married and they were alone together.

This was kalwa, forbidden mixing. The couple was terrified. The girl was crying, begging them not to call her father.

She knew what would happen when he found out. I didn’t know what happened to them.

I never saw them again. These things were normal. This was life. You learned to watch yourself constantly.

You learned to be careful of who saw you, who heard you, who knew anything about you.

You learned that your neighbors might report you, your co-workers might report you, even your family might report you if you strayed too far from the straight path.

The straight path as al-mim. We recited it in every prayer every day. Guide us to the straight path.

The path of those upon whom you have bestowed favor, not of those who have evoked your anger or of those who are astray.

The Jews and Christians, they taught us, were those who had evoked anger and gone astray.

They had corrupted their scriptures. They worshiped false gods. They were destined for hellfire unless they accepted Islam.

We prayed every day not to be like them. I believed this. I believed Christians were mushriking polytheists because they claimed God has a son.

This was the worst sin in Islam. Shik associating partners with Allah. The Quran says Allah will forgive any sin except the shik.

Christians were going to hell. This was certain. This was clear. I never questioned it because I had never met a Christian.

Not really. There were Christians in Saudi Arabia, foreign workers mostly from the Philippines or India or Western countries, but they kept to themselves.

They had to. It was illegal for them to practice their religion openly. Illegal to own a Bible in Arabic.

Illegal to evangelize. They could be deported or arrested for any of these things. So they stayed quiet and we stayed separate and I never thought about what they actually believed.

I just knew they were wrong. Everyone told me they were wrong. My life continued like this through my 20ies.

Work, prayer, family obligations. My parents started talking about marriage. They wanted me to settle down, have children, continue the family line.

They had a few girls in mind, daughters of family, friends, good Muslim girls from good families.

I went along with it. What else would I do? This was the life I was supposed to live.

This was the path laid out for me from birth. Work, marriage, children, growing old, doing the same things my father did.

Teaching my sons to do the same things I did. Generation after a generation walking the straight path, but that feeling of emptiness never left.

That sense that something was missing, that there had to be more than this, more than just rules and fear and trying to be good enough for an Allah who seemed always angry, always watching, always waiting for you to slip so he could punish you.

I was 32 years old when everything changed. It was 2013. A normal year, a normal job, a normal life.

And then I met Ahmed. His real name is in Ahmed. I’m changing the names of people in my story to protect them.

Some of them are still in Saudi Arabia. Some of them are in hiding like me.

So, I’ll call him Ahmed. Ahmed was a foreign worker at my office. He came from another country to work in Saudi Arabia like millions of others do.

Saudi Arabia imports workers for everything. Construction, service, technology, health care. They come for the money.

They send it back to their families. They endure the heat and the restrictions and the separation from home because their children need to eat.

Ahmed worked in my department. We had been colleagues for maybe a year before we really talked.

You have to understand there is a distance between Saudis and foreign workers. It’s built into the system.

The kafala sponsorship system means foreign workers are tied to their Saudi employers. They can’t leave the country without permission.

They have few rights. They are in many ways trapped. Most Saudis treat foreign workers as less than servants, tools, not quite human.

I’m ashamed to say I didn’t think much about it. This was just how things were.

But Ahmed was kind. He was always kind. Even when other Saudis spoke to him rudely, he would respond with gentleness.

Even when people made demands, he stayed patient. There was something different about him, something I couldn’t name.

We started talking during lunch breaks, small talk at first, weather, work, nothing important. But slowly, carefully, we began to talk about deeper things.

He would ask me questions about my life. Really asked like he cared about the answer, like I was a person worth knowing.

No one had asked me questions like that before. In Saudi culture, you don’t really ask people about their inner lives.

You don’t ask if they are happy. You don’t ask if they are struggling. You ask about their family’s honor, their religious devotion, their outward success, but never the inside things, never the real things.

Ahmed asked the real things. I didn’t remember exactly how it happened. But I found myself telling him things I had never told anyone.

About the emptiness I felt. About the questions I was afraid to ask. About how I prayed and prayed but felt nothing.

About how I was scared I was doing it all wrong but didn’t know how to do it right.

He listened. He didn’t judge. He didn’t try to fix me. He just listened like my words mattered.

And then one day after I had poured out my heart about feeling distant from Allah about feeling like all my prayers were just noise.

He said something I will never forget. He said there was someone who wanted to be close to me.

Someone who had been waiting for me. Someone who loved me more than I could understand.

I thought he meant I needed to try harder at Islam. I started to explain that I was trying, that I prayed, that I fasted.

He stopped me gently. And then he said a name I had heard all my life but never really thought about.

He said, “Jesus.” Everything stopped. My heart started pounding. I looked around to make sure no one had heard.

What was he doing? Was he trying to get himself arrested? Get us both arrested.

He saw my fear. He apologized quickly. He said he shouldn’t have spoken. He asked me to forget he said anything.

But I couldn’t forget that name, Jesus. Isa al-Masi. We learned about him in Islam.

He was a prophet, a good man, a miracle worker, but not the son of God.

Never the son of God. That was the Christian lie. That was the great sin.

But something about the way Ahmed said his name. There was love in it. There was certainty.

There was peace. I went home that night and couldn’t stop thinking about it. Jesus.

Why would Ahmed risk everything to tell me about Jesus? Why would he bring up something so dangerous unless he really believed it?

Unless it was true. No, it couldn’t be true. I pushed the thought away. Ahmed was just a Christian.

He was one of those people we prayed against every day. He was misguided. He was going to hell unless he accepted Islam.

But he didn’t seem misguided. He didn’t seem like someone bound for hell. He seemed like someone who had something I didn’t have, something I wanted, that peace, that certainty, that joy underneath everything.

Several weeks passed. Ahmed and I still talked, but we avoided that subject. We both knew how dangerous it was, but I couldn’t stop thinking about it.

I would lie awake at night thinking about Jesus, wondering, questioning. Finally, I asked Ahmed about him.

We were alone in an empty office. I asked what Christians actually believe about Jesus.

Not what Islam taught me they believe, but what they actually believe. Ahmed’s eyes filled with tears.

He asked if I really wanted to know. He told me that if I really wanted to know, he could help me, but it would be dangerous for both of us.

Did I understand that? I understood and I said yes. The next week, Ahmed gave me a book.

It was small, wrapped in plain brown paper hidden inside a folder of work documents.

He handed it to me like it was nothing, just some papers, just some work to review.

But his hand was shaking. I took it home. I locked my bedroom door. I unwrapped the brown paper with trembling hands.

And there it was, a Bible in Arabic, the book we were forbidden to read, the book that could get both of us arrested.

I held it in my hands and felt like I was holding fire. This was it.

This was the line. If I opened this book, I was crossing into territory I couldn’t come back from.

I was questioning everything. I was risking everything. But I had to know. I had to know if there was something more than the emptiness I felt.

I had to know if Ahmed’s peace could be my peace. I had to know who Jesus really was.

So I opened it and I started to read and my life would never be the same.

I didn’t sleep that first night. I couldn’t. I sat on my bed with that Bible in my hands and read until my eyes burned.

And the first light of dawn crept through my window. I read through the night like a starving man, finally finding food.

I started with the Gospel of Matthew. This was Jesus’s story. The story Christians believed.

The story we were told was corrupted and false. I needed to see for myself what it actually said.

The words were in Arabic, my own language, but they felt foreign, strange, like I was reading something from another world.

And maybe I was, maybe I was reading truth for the first time in my life.

I read about Jesus being born. Not just born, but born of a virgin named Mariam.

Mary, we knew this story in Islam. The Quran talks about Issa being born of a virgin.

But in the Bible, the story was richer, fuller. The angel coming to Mary and telling her she would carry God’s son.

Her fear, her faith, her submission, let it be to me according to your word.

I kept reading Jesus growing up. Jesus starting his ministry and then the teachings, the sermon on the mount.

Blessed are the poor in the spirit. Blessed are those who mourn. Blessed are the meek.

Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness. This was different from anything I had learned.

In Islam, blessing comes from obedience, from following the rules, from being strong in faith.

But Jesus was saying, blessing comes to the broken, to the mourning, to the meek, to those who know they’re not good enough.

I read about Jesus touching lepers. We would never touch a leper. They are unclean.

But Jesus touched them. He healed them. He ate with tax collectors and sinners. The religious leaders hated him for it.

They said he was making himself unclean. But he said he came for the sick, not the healthy, for sinners, not the righteous.

Something in my chest started to crack open. Because I was sick. I was a sinner.

I had spent my whole life trying to be righteous enough, clean enough, good enough, and I was exhausted.

I was failing. I was drowning in rules I couldn’t keep, and prayers that felt empty and fear that never left.

But Jesus was saying he came for people like me. I read about him healing the blind, making the paralyzed walk, casting out demons, raising the dead.

We knew Jesus performed miracles. Islam teaches this. But reading the stories, seeing the details, feeling the power in them.

It was different than just knowing about them. And then there were his words, the things he said about himself.

This was where Islam and Christianity split. This was the great divide. I am the way, the truth, and the life.

No one comes to the father except through me. I am the bread of life.

Whoever comes to me will never go hungry. And whoever believes in me will never be thirsty.

I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will never walk in darkness.

Before Abraham was, I am. That last one made me stop. I am. This was the name God gave Moses at the burning bush.

Yahweh, I am who I am. And Jesus was using this name for himself. He was claiming to be God.

In Islam, this was the unforgivable sin. Shik, claiming partnership with Allah, claiming to be divine.

The Quran says Allah does not begget nor is he begotten. God has no son.

To say otherwise is blasphemy. But here was Jesus clearly repeatedly claiming to be God’s son.

Claiming to be one with the father, claiming to be the only way to God.

Either he was who he said he was or he was a liar and a blasphemer.

There was no middle ground. He couldn’t just be a good prophet. Good prophets don’t claim to be God.

I felt like I was standing at the edge of a cliff. Jump or turn back.

Believe or deny. Choose. I wasn’t ready to choose yet. I kept reading. Desperate for answers.

Desperate for clarity. I read about Jesus’s betrayal, his arrest, his trial. The religious leaders wanting him dead because he claimed to be the son of God.

This was the charge. This was his crime. He claimed equality with God. And then the crucifixion.

In Islam, we’re told that Jesus wasn’t actually crucified. That Allah made someone else look like Jesus and that person was killed instead.

That Allah took Jesus up to heaven without him suffering. That God wouldn’t let his prophet be humiliated like that.

But the Bible said he was crucified, that he suffered, that he died, that he took the punishment for sin, that he became sin for us so we could become righteous through him.

This made no sense to me. Why would God die? Why would God let himself be killed?

This was weakness. This was defeat. But as I read more, I began to see it differently.

This wasn’t weakness. This was love. God didn’t stay distant and safe. He came down.

He became human. He felt what we feel. He suffered what we suffer. And he died the death we deserved so we wouldn’t have to.

Islam teaches that each person carries their own sin. That on judgment day your good deeds and bad deeds will be weighed on a scale.

If your good outweighs your bad, you might enter paradise. Might, inshallah, God willing. There is no certainty.

Even Muhammad was unsure of his own salvation. But Christianity was saying something different. That Jesus already paid for sin.

That the debt is canceled. That salvation is a gift, not something you earn. You just receive it.

You just believe. Could it be that simple? Could I stop trying to earn something I could never earn?

Could I stop being afraid of a God who was always angry and start trusting a God who loved me enough to die for me?

I read about the resurrection. 3 days after Jesus died, he rose from the dead.

The tomb was empty. He appeared to his disciples. He ate with them. He let Thomas touch his wounds.

He was alive. If this was true, everything changed. If Jesus rose from the dead, then he really was who he claimed to be.

He really was the son of God. He really did defeat death. And that meant everything Islam taught me was wrong.

The thought was terrifying. My whole life, my whole identity, my whole understanding of reality, it all rested on Islam being true.

If Islam was false, then who was I? What was my life built on? What about my family, my friends, my whole community?

Were they all wrong? Was I about to betray everyone I loved? I closed the Bible and hid it under my mattress.

As dawn broke, I had to get ready for fajer prayer. My father would be knocking on my door soon.

I had to pretend everything was normal. I had to pretend I hadn’t just spend the night reading the forbidden book.

I had to pretend my world was in falling apart. The next few months were the hardest of my life.

I continued reading the Bible in secret late at night, door locked, lights low, always alert for any sound that might mean someone was coming.

I read the other gospels, Mark, Luke, John, each one showing Jesus from a different angle.

Each one confirming the same message. Jesus is God. Jesus died for sins. Jesus rose from the dead.

Believe in him and you will have eternal life. I read Paul’s letters. Romans, Ephesians, Galatians, the theology behind the gospel.

All have a sinned and fall short of the glory of God. The wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.

For it is by grace you have been saved through faith, not by works, so that no one can boast.

This was the opposite of everything I knew. Islam is a religion of works. Prayer five times a day.

Fasting during Ramadan, giving arms, making pilgrimage to Mecca if you can afford it, following Sharia law, doing good deeds, avoiding bad deeds, always striving, always working, always trying to tip the scales in your favor.

But Christianity was saying the scales don’t matter. That I could never be good enough, that I needed a savior, that Jesus was that savior, that all I had to do was trust him.

It sounded too good to be true, too easy. There had to be a catch.

But the more I read, the more I saw there was no catch. The cost had already been paid.

Jesus paid it on the cross. Finished, done, complete. I just had to accept the gift.

I met with Ahmed whenever we could find privacy. He would answer my questions. He would explain things I didn’t understand.

He was patient with me. He never pushed. He never forced. He just walked with me as I struggled toward truth.

I asked him about the Trinity. How could God be one and three at the same time?

This made no sense to me. Muslims always said Christians worship three gods, not one.

That they are polytheists. Ahmed explained it wasn’t three gods, but one god in three persons, father, son, and holy spirit.

He used analogies. Water is one substance but three forms. Ice, liquid, steam. The sun is one thing but has three aspects.

The sun itself, the light from it, the heat from it. These analogies weren’t perfect, but they helped me start to understand.

I asked him about why God would need to have a son. Why couldn’t God just forgive sins without all this?

Ahmed told me that God is not only loving but also just. Sin requires payment.

Justice demands it. In Islam, Allah can just forgive sins if he wants to. He’s not bound by justice.

He can be arbitrary. One person he forgives, another he doesn’t. You never know. But the God of the Bible is bound by his own nature.

He cannot be unjust. Sin must be punished. So God himself became the punishment. He took it on himself.

Love and justice meeting at the cross. This made sense to me in a way nothing in Islam ever had.

This was a God I could trust. A God who didn’t play favorites. A God whose love was certain, not arbitrary.

I asked Ahmed, “What happened if I believed? What would change?” He said, “Everything would change.

That I would be born again. That the Holy Spirit would come to live in me.

That I would become a new creation. That all things would pass away and all things would become new.”

But he also warned me. He said, “Believing in Jesus in Saudi Arabia comes with a cost.

That I would have to keep it secret. That if my family found out, they might disown me.

That if the government found out, I could be arrested. That the penalty for apostasy was death even if they rarely enforced it.

That my life would be in danger.” He asked me to think carefully, to count the cost, to not decide quickly.

This wasn’t something to take lightly. So I thought I prayed, not to Allah anymore.

I didn’t know how to pray to him after everything I’d learned. But I prayed to whoever was really there, to whoever was really listening.

I prayed for truth. I prayed for courage. I prayed for certainty and I had dreams.

Strange vivid dreams that felt more real than waking life. In one dream I was in a dark place, lost, afraid, wondering.

And then I saw light in the distance, a figure in the light. I walked toward it.

As I got closer, I saw it was a man. He was glowing. His face was kind.

He reached out his hand to me. I knew without being told that this was Jesus.

I fell to my knees. I was terrified. I was unworthy. I was unclean. But he lifted me up.

He touched my face and he said one word, “Come.” I woke up with tears streaming down my face.

My heart was pounding. That dream felt more real than any waking moment I’d ever experienced.

That presence, that love, that certainty. I had another dream where I was drowning. I was in deep water going under, gasping for air.

I was dying. And then someone grabbed my hand, pulled me up, pulled me to safety, held me while I coughed and gasped and cried.

I looked up and it was the same man, Jesus. He was smiling at me.

You’re safe now. These dreams shook me. I’m not someone who usually remembers dreams, but these I remembered in perfect detail, every image, every feeling, every word.

Were they really from God? Or was my mind playing trick on me because I wanted so badly to believe?

I didn’t know. But I knew I couldn’t keep living in this in between place.

I couldn’t keep pretending to be a Muslim while my heart was pulling toward Jesus.

I couldn’t keep going to the mosque and reciting prayers I no longer believed. I couldn’t keep lying to everyone around me and to myself.

I had to choose Jesus or Islam, truth or comfort, freedom or safety. It was late at night sometime in October 2013.

I was alone in my room. I had been reading the Gospel of John. I got to chapter 3.

Jesus talking to Nicodemus telling him he must be born again. That God so loved the world that he gave his only son.

That whoever believes in him should not perish but have eternal life. Whoever believes. That was it.

That was all. Just believe. I closed the Bible. I got off my bed. I knelt on the floor.

My whole body was shaking. My heart felt like it would burst out of my chest.

I was terrified. I was desperate. I was at the end of myself. And I prayed out loud to Jesus.

I don’t remember the exact words. I was ineloquent. I wasn’t poetic. I just told him I believed.

That I knew he was real. That I knew he died for me. That I knew he rose again, that I was sorry for my sins, that I needed him, that I wanted him to save me, that I wanted to follow him no matter what it cost.

And then I waited. I don’t know what I expected. Lightning, a voice, something dramatic.

But what happened was quieter than that and more powerful. It was like something broke open inside my chest.

Like chains I didn’t know I was wearing suddenly fell off. Like I could breathe fully for the first time in my life.

And there was peace. Deep overwhelming peace. Not the absence of problems. Not the end of danger, but the presence of someone.

Someone with me. Someone in me. Someone who loved me. Someone who would never leave me.

I stayed on my knees and cried. I cried like a child. I cried for all the years of emptiness.

I cried for all the fear. I cried for all the striving. I cried for the relief of finally finding what I had been searching for my whole life.

Jesus. His name was Jesus. And he was real. And he was mine. And I was his.

I was born again that night in October 2013 in my bedroom in Riyad. The old man died.

The new man came to life. I was still in the same room in the same city in the same country.

But everything was different. I was a Christian now. I was a follower of Jesus Christ.

I was a son of God. And I was in the most dangerous position of my life.

The morning after my conversion, I woke up terrified. Not of what I had done, but of what it meant.

I had crossed a line I could never uncross. I had made a choice that would change everything and no one could know.

My father knocked on my door for fajger prayer like he did every morning. I got up.

I went to the bathroom. I performed wudoo, the ritual washing, like I had done thousands of times before, but this time it felt like a lie.

Every motion was a lie. I was washing my hands to pray to Allah. But my heart belonged to Jesus.

Now I went to pray. I stood next to my father. I bowed. I prostrated.

I recited the words I had memorized as a child. But inside I was praying different prayers.

Inside I was talking to Jesus, thanking him, asking him to help me, asking him to give me strength to survive this double life.

This became my reality. Outwardly Muslim, inwardly Christian, living in two worlds at once, split down the middle of my soul.

I went to work. I did my job. I made small talk with colleagues. I went to Friday prayers at the mosque.

I fasted during Ramadan. I celebrated aid with my family. I did everything a good Muslim man should do.

And I hated every moment of it. It felt like suffocating, like wearing a mask that was slowly crushing my face.

Every day, every hour, pretending to be someone I wasn’t anymore. Pretending to believe something I knew was false.

Pretending to worship someone I had turned away from. But I had no choice. In Saudi Arabia, there is no such thing as religious freedom.

Islam is the only religion allowed for citizens. Converting to another religion is apostasy. Apostasy is technically punishable by death, though the government rarely enforces this officially anymore.

What they do instead is worse in some ways. If a Saudi is discovered to be an ex-Muslim, the consequences are severe.

They lose their job. They lose custody of their children. Their marriage is automatically analled.

They are disowned by their family. They become nonpersons, ghosts walking through society with no protection, no rights, no identity.

And if the government wants to make an example of someone, they can. They can arrest you for blasphemy, for insulting Islam, for corrupting others.

They can imprison you, torture you, force you to recant, make you confess on television, that you were misguided, that Islam is true, that you repent.

I knew all of this. I had seen what happened to people who strayed from Islam.

There was a man in Jedha who was accused of apostasy a few years before my conversion.

The religious police arrested him. He disappeared for months. When he reappeared, he looked like a different person, broken, empty.

He recounted everything. He said he had been temporarily insane. He begged him forgiveness. No one believed him.

Everyone knew he had been coerced. But it didn’t matter. The message was sent. This is what happens when you leave Islam.

This is what happens when you betray your country, your culture, your family, your God.

So I hid, I lied, I pretended because the alternative was losing everything. But Ahmed knew.

And through Ahmed, I found others who knew, others who were living the same double life, other Saudi ex-Muslims who had come to faith in Jesus Christ.

Ahmed told me carefully one day that there were others like me, that there was a small community of believers, that we met in secret, that I could meet them if I wanted, if I was ready.

I was desperate to meet them. I had never felt so alone in my life.

I needed to know I wasn’t the only one. I needed to worship Jesus out loud, not just in my head.

I needed to pray with people who understood. So Ahmed arranged it. He gave me an address and a time.

He told me to be careful, to watch for anyone following me, to not tell anyone where I was going, to keep my phone off, to take a taxi, not my own car, to act like I was just visiting a friend.

I followed his instructions. My hands were sweating as the taxi drove through Riyad. My heart was pounding.

What if this was a trap? What if the religious police knew about this group?

What if I was being led into an arrest? But I trusted Ahmed and I needed this too badly to turn back.

The address was for a small house on the outskirts of the city. Nothing special, nothing that would draw attention, just another house in a quiet neighborhood.

I knocked on the door. A man opened it. He looked at me carefully. Ahmed must have described me.

He nodded and let me in quickly, closing the door behind me. Inside were maybe eight people, some Saudis, some foreign workers, men and women, young and old.

They looked at me with understanding in their eyes. They knew what I was feeling.

They had all felt it too. One of the Saudi men came up to me.

He embraced me. He whispered in my ear, “Welcome, brother. You are not alone anymore.”

I started crying right there in front of all these strangers. I couldn’t help it.

The relief of not being alone was too much. I had been carrying this secret for weeks.

The weight of it had been crushing me. And now here were people who knew, who understood, who had made the same choice.

We sat together, we talked. Everyone shared a little of their story, how they came to faith, what it cost them, how they survived.

One woman had been a Christian for 5 years. Her own family didn’t know. She lived with them, ate with them, pretended to fast during Ramadan while secretly eating when no one was watching.

She said the loneliness was the hardest part, that she couldn’t be real with anyone except this group.

One of the men had lost his wife. She discovered he had converted. She divorced him and took their children.

He hadn’t seen his kids in 2 years. He said he wouldn’t change his decision, but the pain was almost unbearable.

Another man had been arrested once. The religious police found a Bible in his car.

They interrogated him for hours. They beat him. They threatened him. He denied being a Christian.

He said the Bible was for study to understand the enemy. They eventually let him go with a warning, but he still had scars from what they did to him.

These stories terrified me. This was my future. This was what I had signed up for.

Loss, pain, fear, constant danger. But these people had something I had never seen in any Muslim.

They had joy. Real joy. Not the forced happiness of people pretending everything is fine, but deep genuine joy, peace, hope, love for each other, love for Jesus.

One of the foreign workers there was from the Philippines. His name was Michael. He wasn’t ex-Muslim.

He had grown up Christian, but he had been meeting with this group for years, risking deportation to serve them.

He was the one who brought Bibles, who taught them Christian theology, who led them in worship.

That first night, Michael asked if we could worship together. Everyone agreed eagerly. This was why we came to worship Jesus freely, to sing his name out loud, to pray without fear.

Michael started singing quietly a worship song in English. Others joined in. Some sang in Arabic.

Some just hummed. We didn’t have instruments. We didn’t have a sound system. Just our voices.

Quiet, careful, but full of love. I didn’t know the songs. I didn’t know how to worship like a Christian.

But I sang anyway. I lifted my hands like I saw others doing. And I felt the presence of God in that room.

The Holy Spirit real close moving among us. We prayed together. People prayed out loud, thanking Jesus, praising him, asking for strength, asking for protection, praying for family members who didn’t know, praying for Saudi Arabia, praying for the day when we could worship freely.

I prayed too. My voice shook. I didn’t know what to say, but I thanked Jesus for bringing me to this family.

I asked him to help me stay faithful. I told him I was scared, but I trusted him.

When we finished, Michael opened the Bible. He taught us. He explained passages. He answered questions.

He showed us how to read scripture for ourselves, how to pray, how to grow in faith.

These meetings became my lifeline. We met every few weeks. Never in the same place twice.

Never with the same people every time. Small groups, scattered, careful, always watching, always ready to run.

This was the underground church of Saudi Arabia. Hidden, hunted, illegal, but alive, growing. The kingdom of God advancing in the darkness.

Between meetings, I was alone again. Back to the double life. Back to pretending. It got harder, not easier.

Because now I knew what I was missing. Now I had tasted fellowship. Now I had worshiped freely.

Going back to the mask was even more painful. My family started to notice I was different.

My father asked why I seemed distant, why I didn’t seem as enthusiastic about religious discussions anymore, why I was quiet at the mosque.

I told him I was tired. Work was stressful. I was fine, just needed rest.

My mother worried I was sick. She made special foods for me. She asked if I needed to see a doctor.

She said I seemed sad. I wanted to tell her I wasn’t sad, that I had found something that made me happier than I’d ever been.

But I couldn’t because if I told her, I would lose her. She would see it as her duty to report me, to save me from hellfire by forcing me back to Islam.

Even if it meant my arrest, even if it meant my death, she would think she was doing it out of love.

So I smiled. I ate her food. I told her I was fine. And I died a little inside every time I lied to her.

The pressure was building. I could feel it. The secret was too big. The life was too small.

Something was going to break. I started having nightmares. Dreams of being discovered. Dreams of the religious police breaking into my room and finding my Bible.

Dreams of my father’s face when he learned the truth. The disappointment, the rage, the grief.

I would wake up sweating, heart raising, sure that today was the day everything fell apart.

But I kept going. I kept pretending. I kept meeting with the believers. I kept reading my Bible in secret.

I kept praying to Jesus in my heart while my mouth said Muslim prayers. I learned from the others how to survive, how to hide, how to be careful.

Don’t save anything Christian on your phone. Don’t search for Christian content online where it can be tracked.

Don’t tell anyone about your faith, not even other Christians you are not sure about.

Assume you’re always being watched. Trust no one except the few who have proven themselves.

We communicated through coded messages. If someone texted me asking to meet for coffee, that meant there was a gathering.

The time mentioned was 2 hours earlier than the actual meeting. The location was never stated but given through separate contact.

We were like spies, like resistance fighters. Like the early church in Rome when Christianity was illegal and believers met in catacombs and homes, always ready to flee, always ready to be arrested.

I heard the stories of other groups that had been discovered, houses raided, people arrested, foreign workers deported, Saudis interrogated.

Some of them broke under pressure and gave names. Some of them disappeared into the system.

We prayed for them. We mourned for them. We knew any one of us could be next.

And we kept going because what else could we do? We couldn’t unknow what we knew.

We couldn’t unbelieve what we believed. Jesus was real. He had saved us. He had given us new life.

We couldn’t go back to the old death. Better to die as Christians than live as pretend Muslims.

This was what we all knew, even if we didn’t say it out loud. The month has passed.

2013 turned toward its end. My faith grew stronger. My love for Jesus deepened. My knowledge of the Bible increased, but my situation grew more dangerous.

I started noticing things. A car that seemed to follow me. Colleagues asking questions about my whereabouts.

My father mentioning that a neighbor had asked it why I was going out late at night.

Was I paranoid or was I really being watched? I didn’t know. But I couldn’t shake the feeling that time was running out.

That the double life couldn’t last forever. That soon, very soon, I would have to choose between hiding and and unrunning, between safety and freedom.

And then came the night that changed everything. The night we gathered to pray and the police came for us.

The night I should have been arrested. The night I should have lost everything. The night God showed me a miracle I still can’t explain.

It was late November 2013. Michael, the Filipino worker who led our group, sent out a message.

There would be a gathering, a larger one than usual. Not just our small sale, but several sales coming together, maybe 20 people total.

This made me nervous. More people meant more risk, more phones that could be tracked, more chances of someone being followed, more possibilities of betrayal.

But Michael said we needed it. The believers were discouraged, scared. We needed to worship together, to encourage each other, to remember we were part of something bigger than our individual fears.

The location was a small house on the far outskirts of Riyad, empty, isolated, owned by someone sympathetic to Christians, though not a believer themselves.

They rented it to us for the night, knowing the risk, doing it anyway. I drove there carefully, watching my mirrors, taking random turns, making sure no one followed.

My hands gripped the steering wheel too tight. My jaw was clenched. Something felt wrong.

I couldn’t name it. Just a feeling in my gut. A warning. I almost turned around.

Almost went home. Almost stayed safe. But I needed this. I needed to be with my brothers and sisters.

I needed to worship. I needed to feel less alone. So I kept driving. I arrived at the house.

There were already several cars there, parked at a distance, trying not to draw attention.

I parked far away, too, and walked. It was cold. I could see my breath in the night air.

The stars were bright in the desert sky. Beautiful, peaceful, no hint of the storm coming.

I knocked on the door. Someone let me in. Inside the house was fuller than I expected.

People I knew, people I’d never met. Saudi men and women, foreign workers from the Philippines, India, Ethiopia.

All of us with the same secret. All of us risking the same thing. The atmosphere was tense.

Everyone felt it. This was dangerous. Too many people, too exposed. But we were here now.

We had come this far. We might as well make it count. Michael welcomed everyone.

He looked tired. I learned later he had barely slept in days. He felt responsible for everyone there.

He knew if something went wrong, he would blame himself. We started with prayer. People shared requests.

Someone his family member was sick. Someone had nearly been discovered at work. Someone was struggling with doubt.

Someone was desperate to leave Saudi Arabia but had no way out. We prayed for all of it.

We prayed for each other. We prayed for a strength and then we worshiped. Someone had brought a small speaker.

We played worship music quietly. Contemporary Christian songs. Old hymns translated to Arabic. We sang together.

Voices rising, hands lifting. Some people cried, some people danced. All of us poured out our hearts to Jesus.

This was what we couldn’t do anywhere else. This was freedom in this room for this moment.

We weren’t pretending. We weren’t hiding. We were ourselves. We were Christians openly, fully. I remember the song that was playing when it happened.

It was in Arabic. The lyrics said something like, “You are my hiding place. You protect me from trouble.

You surround me with songs of deliverance.” We sang those words over and over. You are my hiding place.

You protect me from trouble. Not knowing how soon we would need that protection. Not knowing we were singing a prayer that was about to be answered.

Then someone’s phone buzzed. We usually kept our phones off during gatherings, but this person had forgotten.

They looked at the message. Their face went white. They looked up at Michael with terror in their eyes.

Michael took the phone, read the message. His hands started shaking. He looked at all of us.

And he said something I will never forget. He said, “They’re coming. The police. They’re coming now.”

Someone informed. We have maybe 5 minutes. Everything stopped. The music kept playing, but no one sang.

Everyone just stared, frozen, terrified. This was the nightmare we all feared. And it was happening right now.

Some people started to panic, started looking for exits, started grabbing their things to run.

But Michael stopped them. He said, “If we ran now, we’d be seen.” The police were already on their way.

We’d be chased, caught. It would be worse. Someone asked what we should do. Michael closed his eyes.

He was thinking, praying, deciding. Finally, he said we should pray. That’s all we could do.

Pray and trust God. Some people thought he was crazy. Pray while the police were coming.

We needed to run. We needed to hide. We needed to do something. But where would we go?

We were surrounded by desert. The nearest building was kilometers away. If we ran, we’d be spotted.

If we hid, we’d be found. We were trapped. Michael got down on his knees.

He started praying out loud, asking God to protect us, to hide us, to do what only he could do, to show his power.

One by one, others joined him, getting on their knees, some lying face down, some standing with hands raised.

All of us praying, crying out to Jesus. Some praying in Arabic, some in English, some in Tagalog, some in languages I didn’t recognize.

All of us desperate, all of us terrified, all of us clinging to God like drowning people cling to anything solid.

I was on my knees, eyes closed, heart pounding so hard I thought it would break my ribs.

I prayed like I had never prayed before. I begged God to save us, to protect us, to not let us be arrested.

I promised him anything, everything. Just please, please save us. And then we heard them.

Cars pulling up outside, multiple vehicles, doors slamming, voices, official voices, police, religious police. We heard them talking, heard them organizing, heard them preparing to raid the house.

This was it. This was the end. In seconds, they would break down the door.

They would arrest all of us. The Saudis among us would face interrogation, imprisonment, maybe worse.

The foreigners would be deported, but only after being detained and questioned. Our families would find out.

Our lives would be destroyed. Someone near me was sobbing. Someone else was whispering prayer so fast I couldn’t understand the words.

I kept my eyes closed. If I was going to be arrested, I didn’t want to see it coming.

I just kept praying. Jesus, save us. Jesus, help us. Jesus, Jesus, Jesus. The footsteps got closer.

Right outside the door, we could hear them clearly. Multiple men. We heard them try the door.

It was locked. We heard them discussing whether to break it down or find the owner.

And then something happened that I still cannot explain, something impossible, something that defies logic and reason and everything I know about how the world works.

The footsteps moved away from the door. We heard the men talking, but their voices were moving away back toward their vehicles.

We heard confusion in their voices, like they weren’t sure what they were doing there, like they had forgotten why they came.

We heard the car doors open. We heard engines start and we heard them drive away.

They left. They came to arrest us. They were right outside our door. They knew we were there.

Someone had told them we were there and they left. For a long moment, no one moved.

We all just knelt there in silence, waiting for them to come back, waiting for the trick to be revealed, waiting for the door to crash open.

But nothing happened. Just silence. Just the sound of our own breathing. Just the music still playing quietly from the speaker.

You are my hiding place. Michael stood up slowly. He went to the window and looked out carefully.

He turned back to us with tears streaming down his face. They’re gone. They’re really gone.

God blinded them. He made them forget. He protected us like he protected Elicia. Like he protected Paul.

He sent confusion into their camp and they left. People started crying, started praising God, started hugging each other.

Some people fell to their knees again. This time in worship, not fear. We had just witnessed a miracle.

An actual real undeniable miracle. God had shown up. God had saved us. God had proven he was real and he was with us and he was more powerful than the police, than the government, than the religious authorities, than anything that could harm us.

I was shaking. My whole body was shaking. I couldn’t stop. Relief, gratitude, or terror, joy, everything all at once.

But Michael said we couldn’t stay. That even though they left, they might come back.

That whoever informed on us might inform again, that we needed to leave immediately. All of us, different directions, different times, spread out so we weren’t all seen leaving at once.

The foreigners left first. They were in the most immediate danger. If the police came back and found them, they’d be deported within days.

We helped them gather their things. We prayed over them. We sent them out into the night.

Then the Saudis started leaving, small groups, few minutes apart. Michael coordinated it all. Making sure everyone had a way home.

Making sure everyone knew to stay off their phones. Making sure everyone understood how serious this was.

I was in one of the last groups to leave. Before I left, Michael grabbed my arm.

He looked at me with an intensity I’d never seen before. He said I needed to consider leaving Saudi Arabia.

That if someone had informed on us once, they would inform again. That my face had been at this gathering.

That I might be on a list now, that it wasn’t safe anymore. I told him I had nowhere to go, no visa, no money for that kind of escape.

My whole life was here. My family was here. He said to pray about it, that God had just performed a miracle to save me.

That maybe God was preparing to do another miracle to get me out of the country, that I should be ready, that I should have a plan.

I nodded. I didn’t know what else to do. I left the house and walked to my car.

The night was still cold, still clear, still peaceful, like nothing had happened, like we hadn’t just experiences the impossible.

I drove home in a days. I kept expecting police to pull me over. Kept expecting my phone to ring with an arrest warrant.

Kept expecting the miracle to be undone, but nothing happened. I got home. I parked.

I went to my room. I locked the door and I collapsed. I didn’t sleep.

I couldn’t. I just lay on my bed and tried to process what had just happened.

The police had come for us. They were right there, right outside the door. And they left.

They left. How? Why? What did they see? What did they hear? What made them forget why they came?

The only answer was God. It had to be God. There was no natural explanation.

No coincidence could account for this. God had intervened. God had protected us. God had shown his power.

But Michael’s warning kept echoing in my mind. Someone had informed. Someone knew about us.

Someone had called the police. And whoever that person was, they might try again. They might be watching me.

They might know my name. I realized something in that moment. The miracle wasn’t just that God saved us.

The miracle was that God was preparing me for what came next because I couldn’t stay in Saudi Arabia.

Not anymore. The double life was over. The hiding was over. God had shown me his power.

Now he was calling me to trust him with my future. I needed to leave.

I needed to escape. I needed to become a refugee for Christ. And I had no idea how I was going to do it.

The days after the miracle were the strangest of my life. I went through my normal routine, work, home, family dinners, Friday prayers, but everything felt like a dream, like I was watching someone else live my life while the real me was somewhere else entirely.

I kept thinking about what Michael said, that I needed to leave, that I needed to have a plan.

But how do you plan for something like this? How do you escape from a country that controls your every movement?

How do you disappear when your family watches your every step? I started researching carefully using internet cafes, never my home computer, using VPNs, covering my tracks.

I looked into what it took for a Saudi to leave the country and not come back to seek asylum somewhere to start over.

What I found was not encouraging. Saudi men need an exit visa to leave the country.

The government controls who leaves and who stays. If they suspect you’re trying to defect, they can prevent you from boarding a plane.

They can detain you at the airport. They can make you disappear. And even if you get out, where do you go?

Most countries don’t grant asylum easily to Saudis. They have diplomatic relationships to maintain, oil deals to protect.

They don’t want to anger the Saudi government by harboring their refugees. I felt trapped.

God had saved me from arrest. But now what? Was I supposed to just wait here until the next time the police came?

Until the next informant reported us until someone finally discovered my secret? I prayed constantly every quiet moment, every night, every morning.

Jesus, show me what to do. Jesus, make a way. Jesus, I trust you. Even when I didn’t feel like I trusted him.

Even when I felt like I was drowning in impossibility, 2 weeks after the raid that never happened, I got a message from Michael.

He wanted to meet somewhere public, somewhere safe. We met at a mall, walked around like we were just shopping, talked quietly.

He told me he was leaving Saudi Arabia. His work visa was ending. He wasn’t going to renew it.

It was too dangerous now. Too many close calls. He had a wife and children back home who needed him alive, not imprisoned.

He said before he left, he wanted to help the Saudi believers. He had been working on something, a network, a way to get people out.

It wasn’t perfect. It wasn’t guaranteed, but it was a chance. He asked if I was serious about leaving.

If I was ready to give up everything, my family, my job, my nationality, my entire life as I knew it.

Because if I left, I could never come back. I would be a fugitive, a traitor, a dead man to everyone I loved.

Was I ready for that? I looked at Michael. This man who had risked so much to serve people he barely knew.

This man who had brought me the gospel. This man who had taught me to worship.

This man who had prayed over me the night we should have been arrested. I told him I was ready.

I didn’t know if it was true, but I said it anyway. Because what choice did I have?

Stay and live a lie. Stay and wait for a rest. Stay and slowly die inside.

Michael told me the plan. It was complicated. It involved contacts in other countries, sympathetic Christians, human rights organizations, people who helped religious refugees escape persecution.

He couldn’t guarantee it would work, but it was better than nothing. He said, “I needed to be patient.

It might take weeks. It might take months. But when the time came, I would need to be ready to leave immediately.

No goodbyes. No explanations. Just go. Could I do that? I thought about my mother, my father, my siblings, my cousins and aunts and uncles, everyone I loved, everyone who loved me.

Even if their love was conditional on me being Muslim, could I leave them without saying goodbye?

Could I disappear and let them wonder what happened to me? Could I break their hearts like that?

But then I thought about Jesus, about what he said in the Gospels. Anyone who loves father or mother more than me is not worthy of me.

Whoever does not take up his cross and follow me is not worthy of me.

Whoever finds his life will lose it. And whoever loses his life for my sake will find it.

I had already lost my life. The old life was gone the moment I knelt and prayed to Jesus.

This was just making it official. This was just the physical reality catching up to the spiritual reality.

So I told Michael, “Yes, I would be ready. I would wait for his signal.

I would trust God with the rest. The next month was agony. Every day I wondered if today was the day.

Every night I packed a small bag with essentials and then unpacked it in the morning so no one would see.

Every moment I was aware this might be my last moment with my family. I memorized my mother’s face.

The way she smiled when she served food. The way she worried over small things.

The way she prayed over us every morning. I tried to hold these memories like treasures, knowing I would need them in the years to come.

I watched my father, his quiet strength, his pride in his family, his devotion to Islam.

I knew my leaving would destroy something in him. His oldest son, the one he expected to carry on the family name with honor.

That son would vanish and he would never know why. I spent time with my siblings talking, laughing, being together.

They asked why I was being so sentimental. I told them I was just appreciating family.

They smiled and thought it was sweet. They didn’t know I was saying goodbye. And I couldn’t tell them.

I couldn’t give them that because if they knew I was leaving, they would try to stop me.

And if they knew why I was leaving, they would feel obligated to report me for my own good, to save my soul, to prevent me from going to hell.

So, I lied. I smiled. I pretended everything was fine, just like I had been doing for over a year now.

But this time the life felt heavier because this time I knew it was almost over.

The message came in January 2014. Late at night, a single word from Michael. Go.

My hands shook as I read it. This was it. This was real. After all the planning and waiting and praying, it was actually happening.

I was leaving Saudi Arabia tonight, right now. I had maybe an hour before my contact would arrive.

I grabbed my preacked bag, some clothes, my hidden Bible, a little money. That was all I could take, all I could risk carrying.

I looked around my room. This room where I grew up, where I memorized Quran as a child, where I had my first doubts as a teenager, where I read the gospel for the first time, where I knelt and gave my life to Jesus, where I had hidden and prayed and grown and changed.

I was leaving it all behind. I wrote a letter. I wasn’t supposed to. Michael said, “No traces, no evidence, but I had to leave something for my mother.

I couldn’t let her think I just disappeared without a word.” I wrote that I loved her, that I was sorry, that I had to leave, that I couldn’t explain why, but I was safe, that she shouldn’t worry, that she should forgive me, that I hoped she would remember me with love, not anger.

I didn’t mention Jesus. I didn’t mention Christianity. That would put her in danger. If the authorities knew she had a son who converted, they would interrogate her.

They would make her life hell. Better to let her think I had some other reason for leaving.

Better to let her create her own explanation. I left the letter on my desk.

I took one last look around. And then I walked out down the stairs, past my parents’ room where they slept, past my siblings rooms, through the house I had lived in my entire life.

Out the front door into the night. A car was waiting two blocks away. Like Michael said, the driver didn’t speak, just nodded when I got in.

And we drove away from my neighborhood, away from Riyad, away from everything I knew.

I don’t want to share the exact details of how I escaped. Not because I don’t trust you, but because others are still using the same roots, the same contacts, the same methods.

If I say too much, I put them at risk. I put future refugees at risk.

What I can tell you is that it took three days. Three days of traveling through places I’d never been.

Three days of staying in safe houses with people I’d never met. Three days of prayer and fear and hope all mixed together.

Three days of dying to my old life. And then I crossed a border. I won’t say which one, but I crossed from Saudi territory into another country.

And for the first time in my life, I was no longer under Islamic law.

I was no longer under the control of the Saudi government. I was no longer a prisoner.

I was free. The moment I realized it, I fell apart. I just collapsed on the ground in this foreign country and sobbed.

Everything I had been holding in for months, for years, came pouring out. The fear, the grief, the relief, the guilt, the joy, everything.

The people who helped me cross sat with me. They didn’t try to make me stop crying.

They didn’t try to comfort me with words. They just sat with me while I broke down.

And then they helped me stand up and they took me to the next safe place.

I spent weeks being processed as a refugee. Interviews, documentation, medical checks, psychological evaluations, proving my story, proving the danger I faced, proving I couldn’t go back.

It was exhausting. Reliving the trauma, explaining over and over why I left, waiting to see if they would believe me, waiting to see if they would help me or send me back to die.

But eventually, finally, I was granted asylum. I was given refugee status. I was assigned into a country that would take me in not permanently, not as a citizen, but as someone under protection, someone who had been persecuted for their faith and needed safety.

That’s where I am now. I can’t tell you exactly where. For my own security, but I’m here.

I’m alive. I’m safe. I wake up every morning and I can pray to Jesus out loud.

I can read my Bible in public. I can go to church. I can worship freely.

It still feels like a dream sometimes. Like I’ll wake up and find myself back in Riyad, back in my room, back in the double life.

But then I look around and remember this is real. This is my new life.

This is the freedom Jesus promised. But freedom came with a cost. I haven’t spoken to my family since I left.

I can’t. Any contact would put them in danger. The Saudi authorities might be monitoring them, hoping I’ll reach out.

And my family, if they knew where I was, might feel obligated to report me.

Or worse they might come looking for me to bring me back to force me to recant to kill me for the honor of the family.

So I live with silence. I live with not knowing if my mother is well, if my father is healthy, if my siblings are married or have children or are struggling or thriving.

I live with the fact that they probably think I’m dead or they think I betrayed them.

Either way, I’m lost to them. I won’t lie and say it doesn’t hurt. It does.

Every single day I dream about them sometimes. I dream I am back home and everything is fine and I can talk to them and they still love me.

And then I wake up and remember that version of reality doesn’t exist. But I have a new family now.

The church here. Other refugees, other believers, people who understand what I lost and what I gained.

People who chose Jesus despite the cost. We cry together. We worship together. We remind each other why we made this choice.

And I know I made the right choice because I have Jesus. And Jesus is worth everything.

He’s worth my country, worth my family, worth my old identity, worth everything I left behind and everything I’ll never have.

He said in the Gospels that those who leave family for his sake will receive 100 times as much.

I’m starting to understand what he meant. I have brothers and sisters now all over the world.

People I have never met who pray for me, who support me, who love me because we share the same Lord.

I also know that what happened to me that night, the night the police came and couldn’t see us, was not just for me.

It was so I could tell you about it. So I could witness to God’s power.

So I could encourage other believers who are suffering. So I could warn others about what life is like for Christians in Saudi Arabia because most people don’t know.

Most Christians in free countries have no idea what it’s like to worship in secret, to risk your life for reading a Bible, to lose everything for following Jesus.

They take their freedom for granted. They complain about small inconveniences while my brothers and sisters in Saudi Arabia are hiding and suffering and dying.

I want you to know, I want you to pray for them. I want you to support organizations that help refugees like me.

I want you to never forget that there are people right now, tonight in Saudi Arabia and other Islamic countries who are meeting in secret to worship Jesus, who are risking everything to follow him, who need your prayers and your support.

And if you’re reading this and you’re Muslim, if you’re questioning, if you’re seeking, I want you to know that Jesus is real.

He’s not who Islam says he is. He’s more. He’s God himself come to earth.

He died for your sins. He rose from the dead. He offers you forgiveness and peace and eternal life.

Not because you’re good enough, but because he is gracious enough. Following him might cost you everything.

It cost me everything, but he is worth it. He is worth more than everything.

More than family approval, more than worldly success, more than safety and comfort, more than life itself, because he is life.

Real life, eternal life, life that starts the moment you believe and never ends. I’m still that Saudi man who grew up in Riyad, who memorized Quran, who prayed five times a day, who tried so hard to be good enough.

But I’m no longer in darkness. I’m in light, the light of the world, Jesus Christ.

My old name is dead. My old identity is gone. My old life is finished.

But I’m more alive now than I ever was before because I’m alive in Christ.

And no one, no government, no law, no persecution, no suffering can take that away from me.

Jesus said, “If you lose your life for his sake, you will find it.” I lost everything.

My country, my family, my identity, my security, everything. And I found everything. I found Jesus.

I found truth. I found freedom. I found life. Real, abundant, eternal life. This is my story.

This is what Jesus did for me. This is why I follow him. This is why I’ll never go back.

This is why I’ll never stop telling people about him, no matter what it costs.

Because he’s worth it. He’s worth it all. If you’re hearing my story and you want to know more about Jesus, please don’t ignore that feeling.

Don’t push it away. Don’t let fear stop you. Seek him. Read the Bible. Pray to him.

Ask him to show you if he is real. He will answer just like he answered me.

Just like he saved me that night from the police. Just like he made a way for me to escape.

Just like he’s given me new life, he can do the same for you. Wherever you are, whatever you’ve done, whatever you believe right now, he’s calling you.

He’s reaching out to you. He’s offering you the same thing he offered me. Life, freedom, peace, love, forgiveness, hope.

All you have to do is say yes. My name doesn’t matter. I’m just a witness.

Just someone telling you what I’ve seen, what I’ve experienced, what I know to be true.

Jesus is Lord. He is the way, the truth, and the life. He is the light in the darkness.

He is the hope for the hopeless. He is the savior of the world. That’s my story.

That’s my testimony. That’s my life from darkness into light. All glory to Jesus Christ.

Amen.

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