50,000 Saudi Pilgrims Watch LIVE as Mecca Scholar Shares His Testimony: “Jesus Is the Messiah”

50,000 Saudi Pilgrims Watch LIVE as Mecca Scholar Shares His Testimony: “Jesus Is the Messiah”

I was standing in a place filled with light. Not sunlight, not lamp light, but light that seemed to have no source. It simply existed everywhere, warm and soft and comforting. In front of me stood a man. He wore a white robe, simple and clean. His face was kind, not harsh or judgmental, but gentle. His eyes were full of something I had never seen before: unconditional love. He didn’t speak in this first dream. He just looked at me. But that look went through me like water through cloth, seeing everything. Every question I’d been afraid to ask, every doubt I’d been trying to bury, every secret sin, every moment of pride and hypocrisy—he saw it all, yet he did not turn away. He did not recoil. In that gaze, there was no demand for submission, no threat of punishment, no requirement of rituals. There was only an invitation. When I woke up, my heart was hammering against my ribs, and my face was wet with tears. I had never wept like that in my life. I felt a strange, terrifying sense of exposure, as if I had been standing naked before a judge, yet the judge had offered me a cloak of comfort rather than a sentence.

I tried to dismiss it as a mere hallucination. I performed wudu with shaking hands, desperate to wash away the confusion. I told myself it was the fatigue of the Hajj season, the exhaustion of the intellect. But the feeling of that love—that raw, unfiltered, completely undeserved love—remained stuck in my soul like a splinter. Over the next three years, these dreams became a recurring, agonizingly beautiful rhythm in my life. Sometimes I was in a vast desert, and he would appear on the horizon, walking toward me. Sometimes I was in the Grand Mosque, and the crowd would simply vanish, leaving only him and me. He never looked like the figures described in our traditions. There was no fire, no lightning, no booming voice of command. There was only peace.

In one dream, he finally spoke. It was not in the Arabic of the Quran, yet I understood him perfectly. His voice wasn’t an instruction or a decree; it was a question. “Rasheed, why do you seek for life among the dead?” I woke up trembling. I spent hours in my study, pouring over the scriptures I had mastered. I looked for references to this man, this figure who felt so profoundly different from the theology I had been fed. I began, in secret and with trembling fingers, to look at the Christian texts. I knew the standard refutations—I had written them myself. I knew the arguments about how the Bible had been “corrupted,” how it had been altered by men to hide the true message. But when I read the Gospels, the words didn’t feel like the corrupted text I had been warned about. They felt like a mirror.

I read about a man who touched the leper, who spoke to the Samaritan woman, who sat with the tax collectors and the sinners. I read of a man who wept at the grave of his friend. This was not the distant, unknowable, and often angry god of my theology. This was a God who suffered. This was a God who came down to meet his creation, not to demand they climb to him through a mountain of impossible laws, but to reach into their darkness and pull them out. The conflict inside me became a civil war. I was a doctor of Islamic law. I was a lineage-holder of the Prophet’s tribe. My entire existence, my family’s honor, my marriage, my career—it was all built on the bedrock of Islam. If I turned toward this man, I was not just changing religions. I was committing social suicide. I was condemning myself to be an outcast, a traitor, a man deserving of death under the very laws I had taught others to uphold.

I remember one night, standing on my balcony overlooking the flickering lights of Mecca. The call to prayer, the Adhan, was echoing across the city from a thousand minarets. It was a beautiful, haunting sound that had been the soundtrack of my entire life. But for the first time, it didn’t sound like a call to truth. It sounded like the rhythm of a cage. I looked at the dark silhouette of the Kaaba, the center of my world, and I asked a question that would change the trajectory of my life forever. “If you are the only way, why does your voice feel like a shadow, while this man who calls me in my dreams feels like the sunrise?

The months that followed were a crucible. I began to intentionally falter in my duties. I found myself softening my tone when teaching about the “infidels.” When students asked about the necessity of violence, I would give them the orthodox answer, but my heart would scream in protest. I was living a lie so profound that it began to physically manifest. I lost weight. I couldn’t sleep. My wife, Nadia, noticed. She asked if I was ill, if I was possessed by a Jinn, or if I had been cursed. I told her I was just tired from the workload, but she knew better. She began to pray for me, her eyes filled with a terrifying, loyal fear.

The breaking point didn’t come in a flash of lightning. It came in a quiet moment in my study. I had been reading the Sermon on the Mount. “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven.” The words hit me with the force of a physical blow. I had been everything the world considered “rich in spirit”—I was educated, I was pious, I was elite, I was powerful. And yet, I had never felt so utterly bankrupt. I realized that my entire life had been an attempt to prove my worthiness to a God who remained silent, while this Jesus, this figure of love, was offering me everything I had failed to earn—for free.

I fell to my knees on the prayer rug I had used for thousands of prayers. I didn’t face the Kaaba. I didn’t chant the Shahada. I simply whispered into the silence of my room, “I don’t know who you are, but if you are the truth, then take my life. Because I cannot live this lie anymore.

In that moment, the room didn’t change, the walls didn’t shift, but the weight that had been crushing my chest for years simply evaporated. It was as if I had been holding my breath for thirty years and finally, finally, allowed myself to exhale. I knew then that there was no turning back. I knew that the path ahead would be paved with loss, betrayal, and likely blood. But I also knew, with an iron-clad certainty that no scholar or king could shake, that I had found the Truth.

I began to plan. I knew I couldn’t just leave. I had been a teacher for thousands, a public figure of the faith. My departure had to be a testimony. I wanted them to know that I wasn’t leaving because I was misled, or because I had been tricked by Western influence, or because of a moral failure. I was leaving because I had found the Person behind the veil of the universe.

When the invitation came to speak at the Grand Mosque during the height of the Hajj, I knew it was the moment. I was terrified. Not of the death that would surely follow, but of the possibility that I might lose my nerve at the last second. I spent the days leading up to it in a state of suspended animation. I hugged my children, holding onto the scent of them, knowing this would be the last time. I looked at Nadia, wanting to tell her, wanting to beg her to come with me, but knowing that the risk was too great.

When I finally stepped onto that platform, the sea of fifty thousand faces stretched out before me like a desert of white linen. The atmosphere was electric with devotion. They were there to hear a scholar, a man of their own blood, a man of their own faith. They were looking for confirmation of their devotion. And I was there to deliver the news that would shatter their world.

As I felt the microphone in my hand, I didn’t see the religious police standing in the shadows. I didn’t see the cameras recording me for the world. I saw the face from my dreams. And he was smiling.

I stood there, a man who had memorized the Quran at twelve, a man who had written volumes on the law, a man whose lineage was woven into the very fabric of Islam. And I chose to walk away from it all. I chose to trade the approval of men for the love of God. The words I spoke were not a lecture. They were a liberation. “Jesus Christ is the Messiah we have been waiting for. He is the Son of God. He died for our sins and rose from the dead.

The chaos that followed was predictable. The roar of the crowd, the hands grabbing at my robes, the screams of outrage, the genuine confusion of those who had looked up to me. It was all a blur. But as they dragged me away, as the world I had built for decades collapsed into a vortex of violence and rejection, I felt a lightness that defied physics. They could take my life, they could strip me of my title, they could burn my books, but they couldn’t take away the moment I realized that I was loved.

I am writing this from a place I cannot name, under circumstances that are constantly shifting. I am a man without a country, a man without a family, a man whose name has been struck from the registers of the mosque. To the world, I am a ghost. To the authorities in Saudi Arabia, I am a target. But I have never been more alive. I have realized that the religion of my fathers was a beautiful, intricate, and ultimately empty shell. It was a structure designed to keep us reaching for a God who was always just out of reach. Jesus is the end of the search.

If you are reading this, you are likely in the same place I was for so long. You are performing the rituals, you are seeking the truth, you are trying to be good enough, and you are feeling that persistent, nagging emptiness in the center of your soul. You are wondering if there is more. You are wondering if God is actually watching, or if he is just waiting for you to fail.

Let me tell you, there is more. The love of God is not a reward for your performance. It is a gift that is already waiting for you. It is a light that doesn’t need to be earned, only accepted. It will cost you everything—it will cost you the version of yourself you’ve worked so hard to build—but it will give you everything in return.

The journey I took was long, it was painful, and it was dangerous. But if I had to do it a thousand times over, I would. I would stand on that platform again. I would face the fury of the crowd again. I would lose everything again, just to have one more moment of knowing Him.

Do not be afraid of the questions. Do not be afraid of the doubt. Use them. Follow them. They are not the enemies of your faith; they are the breadcrumbs leading you toward the Truth. When the world tries to silence you, speak anyway. When the culture tries to dictate your identity, look to the One who defined you before you were even born.

I am Dr. Rasheed al-Qashi, a son of the Quraysh, a former scholar of the Grand Mosque, and a humble servant of Jesus Christ. My story is not over. It has only just begun. And if you are still searching, if you are still holding those stones of doubt in your pockets, know that you are not alone. The face you have been searching for is looking for you, too. And he has been waiting for you much longer than you have been waiting for him.

Is there a specific part of my journey you would like to understand further, or perhaps you would like to explore the theological implications of what I discovered?

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