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Secret Believers: What Happens When Muslims Believe in Christ | 
enlarge | Authors: Brother Andrew, Al Janssen Publisher: Revell Category: Book
List Price: $14.99 Buy New: $5.09 You Save: $9.90 (66%)
New (27) Used (4) from $4.96
Avg. Customer Rating: 13 reviews Sales Rank: 58123
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 272 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8.4 x 5.5 x 0.8
ISBN: 0800732642 Dewey Decimal Number: 291 EAN: 9780800732646 ASIN: 0800732642
Publication Date: May 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: **Please note this book is BRAND NEW AND UNREAD however it will display a remainder mark and possess a MINOR defect (I.E. bent corner, scratched cover or slightly torn jacket). It is still in very good condition, but IS NOT PERFECT! **PLEASE** read Amazon shipping policies before purchasing this item and leaving feedback. Amazon allows 4-14 BUSINESS DAYS AND SOMETIMES UP TO 21 DAYS for delivery. Thanks!
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Product Description In his most incredible and eye-opening book to date, Brother Andrew invites you to meet brave men and women you never knew existed. This is the riveting true story of the Church in Islamic countries struggling to come to grips with hostile governments, terrorist acts, and an influx of Muslims coming to Christ. The names and places have been changed to protect the real people in the real places. But the stories are true. Now available in paperback, Secret Believers not only gives you a glimpse of the lives of these courageous believers, it also proposes four practical initiatives for Christians in the West to help these persecuted brothers and sisters. It calls us to join a new kind of jihad, leaving vengeance behind in favor of forgiveness, radical love, and unyielding prayer.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 8 more reviews...
Thought provoking read August 27, 2008 This book really touched my life. It made me think about how I live my life before others. The challenges issued pertain not only to how to live before Muslims but also the world in general. If they cannot see the difference in the lives of believers, how can they know the gospel?
Secret Believers August 24, 2008 Great personal view of the emotions and feelings of Muslims who are seeking Jesus. I am overwhelmed at the sacrifice of these new believers. It put me to shame about how casually I treat my faith in Jesus.
A very interesting perspective July 16, 2008 Brother Andrew, author of the classic GOD'S SMUGGLER, and veteran author Al Janssen open this insightful look into the plight of Christians in Muslim cultures with the Arabic translation of Paul's words in 2 Timothy 4:7. We know that verse as "I have fought the good fight." The authors inform us that the last three words of that verse are rendered in Arabic as "the good jihad."
The "good jihad"? As Andrew and Janssen point out, to Western ears that sounds like an oxymoron; we associate jihad with a holy war waged against those who radical Muslims call "infidels" --- meaning Christians, as well as members of other faiths and secularists and anyone else who has committed an offense against Islam. But the very purpose of SECRET BELIEVERS is to call Christians everywhere to join in the good jihad --- a prayer effort to bring Muslims to faith in Jesus Christ.
Instead of telling us about the persecution of Christians in Muslim countries --- specifically, Muslims who profess faith in Christ --- the authors wisely show us what that persecution actually looks like through a fictional account that comprises more than three-quarters of the book. The story they present focuses on the lives of a number of MBBs --- Muslim Background Believers --- based on real people who have converted to Christ and have chosen to remain in hostile Islamic countries in order to bring God's love to other Muslims.
Among the people we meet are Butros, Brother Andrew's contact in an unnamed Islamic country where the story unfolds; Ahmed, who comes to faith in Christ through the influence of his MBB friend Zaki; Father Abuna Alexander, a Christian priest who has to come to terms with Muslims-turned-Christians whose presence threatens the safety of his congregation; Salima, a young woman whose family isolates her when they discover a Bible in her room; and Mustafa and Hassan, who become the target of radical Muslim extremists.
Through the stories of those believers and others, the authors reveal both the hunger for Christ's love and forgiveness that exists among Muslims and the hatred for Christians that exists among extremists. As has been his approach since he first began smuggling Bibles behind the Iron Curtain in the 1950s, Brother Andrew emphasizes compassion over fear and hostility toward those who persecute Christians. In the nonfiction portion of the book that follows the fictional story, he and Janssen --- who serves as communications director for Open Doors International, which Brother Andrew founded --- offer a four-pronged response to the growth of Islam and the threat posed by Muslim extremists. Not surprisingly, the challenges focus on love, forgiveness, the imitation of Christ, and prayer and sacrifice --- which to Andrew and Janssen are anything but nice-sounding Christian words. They're calling for a good jihad, remember. They're in a fight, and they know it.
For whatever reason, I didn't expect the fictional portion to be as absorbing as it was. I was pleasantly surprised when I found myself caught up in the stories of the people and the hardships faced by Christians --- former Muslims as well as others --- in Islamic nations, in this case in the Middle East. And the call to jihad, with its focus on loving Muslims into the kingdom of God, is a message Western Christians can't hear often enough.
--- Reviewed by Marcia Ford
Everyone should read this book January 14, 2008 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
What an enlightening book. Everyone in the free world should read this and appreciate the freedom of religion that we have. We live here in this culture and never give a thought to how people in other parts of the world live and what they have to deal with, especially if they are Christians in Muslim countries. I have added the Muslim countries to my daily prayer list. I only wish I could do more.
Tip of the Iceberg? December 28, 2007 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
This book offers something different from many of the books written about the present state of Islam vs. the world. Brother Andrew, while advocating the spread of genuine Christian faith, ends up completely loving Muslims. This is not a hateful or disrespectful book.
I particularly enjoyed seeing how ex-Muslim Christians can move around in a Muslim country, work, marry and have their lives. Islam does not seem to be as completely pervasive in the so-called "Islamic World" as I once thought. I was also interested to see that sometimes the most devout and loving Christians started out as hate filled members of the Muslim Brotherhood. Go figure.
I don't want to overstate it either. Many of these former Muslims pay for their new faith with the ultimate price: a bloody and violent death. But as was once said about the early church "the blood of the martyrs is the seed of the faith" so too do we find a deep vein of Muslims looking for a way out of the hatred.
This book shows that everywhere there are opportunities for Christian belief. I was particularly impressed with the ex Muslim who instead of lamenting that his passport still described him as "Muslim" sees in it rather an opportunity to go to Mecca on the hajj so he can tell people about Jesus Christ!
One gets the impression that much more of this kind of "underground" conversion is going on in the Islamic world than we were once led to believe.
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