Laurence Brown, Medical Doctor, USA (part 1 and 2): Conversion Stories, Being True to a Promise
EsinIslam
Heralding New Muslims:
A Personal Account
Of Revert Muslim:
The nature of
conversion stories and the common ground between them,
no matter what religion.
By Laurence
B. Brown, MD
Laurence
Brown, Medical Doctor, USA (part 1 of 2): Conversion
Stories
Having repeated
been asked about how I became Muslim, and why, I have
decided to tell the story one last time, but this time
on paper. However, I feel conversion stories are
worthless unless related with the lessons learned, and
it is with those lessons that I intend to begin.
No doubt, there
is a certain fascination with conversion stories, and
for good reason. Frequently they involve dramatic
life-altering events, sufficient to shock the convert
out of the materialistic world and into the
spiritual. Those who experience such life dramas are
brought face to face with the bigger issues of life
for the first time, forcing them to ask the ‘Purpose
of Life' questions, such as ‘Who made us?' and ‘Why
are we here?' But there are other common elements to
‘conversion' stories, and one of them is that the
convert is humbled to his or her knees at such
moments, and looking back, most relate having prayed
with sincerity for the first time in their lives. I
have been intrigued by these commonalties, and have
noted some significant lessons. The first, I would
say, is that most converts who passed through these
moments of trial and panic prayed directly to God,
without intermediary, and without distraction. For
example, even those who spent their lives believing in
the Trinity, when faced with catastrophe,
instinctively and reflexively prayed directly to God,
and never to the other proposed elements of the
Trinity.
Let me relate a
story as example. A popular television evangelist
once had a lady relate her ‘Born Again' Christian
conversion story, which revolved around a terrible
boat-wreck, from which she was the sole survivor.
This lady related how during her days and nights of
survival against the harsh elements of the open ocean
God spoke to her, God guided her, God protected her,
etc. You get the idea. For maybe five to ten minutes
she told her tale, which was indeed dramatic and
captivating, but throughout the story she related how
God did this, God did that, and seeking His favor, she
prayed to God and to God Alone. However, when she was
saved by a passing ship, she described how the minute
she landed on the ship's deck she threw her arms open
to the heavens and yelled, "Thank you, Jesus."
Well, there is a
lesson there, and it relates to sincerity. When in
the panic and stress of circumstance, people
instinctively pray to God directly, but when
conceiving themselves safe and secure they frequently
fall back into previously held beliefs, many (if not
most) of which are misdirected. Now, we all know that
many Christians equate Jesus with God, and for those
who would like to argue the point, I just suggest they
read my book on the subject, entitled The First and
Final Commandment (Amana Publications). For all
others, I would just continue by saying that the real
question is ‘Who truly is saved?' There are countless
convert stories, all telling how the God of this or
that religion saved the person in question, and all of
these converts conceive themselves to be upon the
truth by nature of the miracle of their salvation.
But as there is only One God, and therefore only one
religion of absolute truth, the fact of the matter is
that only one group can be right and all others are
living in delusion, with their personal miracles
having confirmed them upon disbelief rather than upon
truth. As God teaches in the Holy Quran:
"…God leaves
astray whom He wills and guides to Himself whoever
turns back [to Him]" (Quran 13:27)
…and:
"So those who
believe in God and hold fast to Him – He will admit
them to mercy from Himself and bounty and guide them
to Himself on a straight path." (Quran 4:175)
As for those
astray in disbelief, they will be left to stray, as
they themselves chose.
But the strength
of belief, even when misdirected, is not to be
underestimated. So who is going to become Muslim
based upon my conversion story? Only one person --
me. Muslims may find some encouragement in my story
but others may be left empty, just as Muslims sigh and
shake their heads in despair when hearing others
relate the ‘miracles' which followed prayers to patron
saints, partners in the Trinity, or other distractions
from the One True God. For if a person prays to
something or someone other than our Creator, who, if
not God, might be the one answering those prayers?
Could it just possibly be a certain one who has a
vested interest in confirming those who are astray
upon their particular flavor of disbelief? One whose
dedicated purpose is to lead mankind astray?
However a person
chooses to answer those questions, these are issues
addressed at length in The First and Final
Commandment , and those interested can
investigate. But for now, I will tell my story.
Laurence
Brown, Medical Doctor, USA (part 2 of 2): Conversion
Stories
In the winter of
1990, when my second daughter was born, she was
whisked from the birthing room to the neonatal
intensive care unit, where she was diagnosed with a
coarctation of the aorta. This meaning a critical
narrowing in the major vessel from the heart, she was
a dusky gunmetal blue from the chest to the toes, for
her body simply was not getting enough blood and her
tissues were suffocating. When I learned of the
diagnosis, I was shattered. Being a doctor, I
understood this meant emergency thoracic surgery with
a poor chance of long-term survival. A consultant
cardio-thoracic surgeon was called from across town at
the pediatric hospital in Washington, D.C., and upon
his arrival I was asked to leave the intensive care
unit, for I had become overly emotional. With no
companion but my fears, and no other place of comfort
to which to go while awaiting the result of the
consultant's examination, I went to the prayer room in
the hospital and fell to my knees. For the first time
in my life I prayed with sincerity and commitment.
Having spent my life as an atheist, this was the first
time that I even partially recognized God. I say
partially, for even in this time of panic I was not
fully believing, and so prayed a rather skeptical
prayer in which I promised God, if, that is, there was
a God, that if He would save my daughter then I would
seek and follow the religion most pleasing to Him.
Ten to fifteen minutes later, when I returned to the
Neonatal ICU, I was shocked when the consultant told
me that my daughter would be fine. And, true to his
assessment, within the next two days her condition
resolved without medicine or surgery, and she
subsequently grew up a completely normal child.
Now, I know that
there is a medical explanation for this. As I said, I
am a doctor. So when the consultant explained about a
patent ductus arteriosis, low oxygenation and eventual
spontaneous resolution, I understood. I just didn't
buy it. More significantly, neither did the
Intensivist – the Neonatal ICU specialist who made the
diagnosis. To this day I remember seeing him
standing, blank-faced and speechless. But in the end,
the consultant was right and the condition
spontaneously reversed and my daughter, Hannah, left
the hospital a normal baby in every respect. And
here's the rub -- many who make promises to God in
moments of panic find or invent excuses to escape
their part of the bargain once the danger is past. As
an atheist, it would have been easy to maintain my
disbelief in God, assigning my daughter's recovery to
the doctor's explanation rather than to God. But I
couldn't. We had cardiac ultrasound taken before and
after, showing the stricture one day, gone the next,
and all I could think of was that God had made good on
His part of the deal, and I had to make good on mine.
And even if there were an adequate medical
explanation, that too was under the control of
Almighty God, so by whatever means God chose to effect
His decree, He had answered my prayer. Period. I did
not then, and I do not now, accept any other
explanation.
The next few
years I tried to fulfill my side of the bargain, but
failed. I studied Judaism and a number of sects of
Christianity, but never felt that I had found the
truth. Over time I attended a wide variety of
Christian churches, spending the longest period of
time in Roman Catholic congregation. However, I never
embraced Christian faith. I never could, for the
simple reason that I could not reconcile the biblical
teachings of Jesus with the teachings of the various
sects of Christianity. Eventually I just stayed home
and read, and during this time I was introduced to the
Holy Quran and Martin Lings' biography of the prophet,
Muhammad, entitled, Muhammad, His Life Based on the
Earliest Sources.
During my years
of study, I had encountered the Jewish scriptures
referencing three prophets to follow Moses. With John
the Baptist and Jesus Christ being two, that left one
according to the Old Testament, and in the New
Testament Jesus Christ himself spoke of a final
prophet to follow. Not until I found the Holy Quran
teaching the oneness of God, as both Moses and Jesus
Christ had taught, did I begin to consider Muhammad as
the predicted final prophet, and not until I read the
biography of Muhammad did I become convinced. And
when I did become convinced, suddenly everything made
sense. The continuity in the chain of prophethood and
revelation, the One-ness of Almighty God, and the
completion of revelation in the Holy Quran suddenly
made perfect sense, and it was then that I became
Muslim.
Pretty smart,
hunh? No, not at all. For I would err greatly if I
believed that I figured it out for myself. One lesson
I have learned over the past ten years as a Muslim is
that there are a lot of people much more intelligent
than I am, but who have not been able to figure out
the truth of Islam. It is not a matter of
intelligence but of enlightenment, for Allah has
revealed that those who disbelieve will remain upon
disbelief, even if warned, for in punishment for
having denied Allah, Allah in turn has denied them the
treasure of His truth. As Allah teaches in the Holy
Quran:
"Indeed, those
who disbelieve – it is all the same for them whether
you warn them or do not warn them – they will not
believe. God has set a seal upon their hearts and
upon their hearing, and over their vision is a veil."
(Quran 2:6-7)
But, on the
other hand, the good news is that…
"…whoever
believes in God – He will guide his heart" (Quran
64:11)
"…God chooses
for Himself whom He wills and guides to Himself
whoever turns back [to Him]." (Quran 42:13)
…and:
"…And God guides
whom He wills to a straight path." (Quran 24:46)
So I thank God
that He chose to guide me, and I attribute that
guidance to one simple formula: recognizing God,
praying to God Alone, sincerely promising to seek and
follow His religion of truth, and then, once receiving
His mercy of guidance, DOING IT .
About the author:
Laurence B. Brown, MD, can be contacted at
BrownL38@yahoo.com.
He is the author of The First and Final
Commandment (Amana Publications) and Bearing
True Witness (Dar-us-Salam). Forthcoming books
are a historical thriller, The Eighth Scroll,
and a second edition of The First and Final
Commandment, rewritten and divided into
MisGod'ed and its sequel, God'ed.