Western South Asia is one of the most crowded and volatile Rooms in the House of Islam. It is home to more than 300 million Muslims whose 186 ethnic people groups are often in conflict with one another and, throughout history, with outside imperial forces. In the midst of this embattled region, God is drawing many thousands of
Muslims to new life in Jesus Christ.
Akbar al-Masih was a Muslim-background believer from Afghanistan who I met in Rawalpindi, Pakistan. Like many of his fellow Pushtun people group, Akbar’s life had been torn apart by war. When he was young his people fought the Russians. After the Russians were expelled, his Sunni Muslim tribe battled against neighboring Shi’ite Muslim tribes. Then, after the US invasion in 2012, Akbar joined the millions of refugees who streamed into camps and slums in Pakistan. It was here that Akbar met a Christian family who discipled him and helped
him rebuild his life. I asked Akbar to tell me how he had come to faith in Jesus.
“My name at birth,” he said, “was Muhammad Akbar.” The name meant “Muhammad is the Greatest.” It was also the name of a Pushtun hero who had driven the
British out of Afghanistan in the 19th century. Many Afghan families named their sons Muhammad Akbar.
“It was between the wars,” Akbar said, “that I was in an open country looking for a job. One day I came upon a cinema that was showing a movie about the life of the Prophet Isa [Jesus]. I decided to go inside.”“I watched the movie alone and learned many things about the Prophet Isa that I did not know. I was brokenhearted when I saw how they beat him and nailed him to a cross. I said to myself, ‘Now Isa will have his vengeance! He will call down the fires of heaven to destroy these evil men!’”
“Instead, Isa looked down at them with compassion. Isa said, ‘Father, forgive them. They do not know what they are doing.’” “It was at that instant,” Akbar said, “that I said in my heart, ‘That is for me.’” “That is when I became a follower of Isa. I knew that this is what my people were missing. We were always seeking revenge, ‘an eye for an eye.’ But Isa al-Masih [Jesus the Messiah] showed me a different way.”
“And that is why I changed my name,” he said, “from Muhammad Akbar to Akbar al-Masih, ‘the Messiah is the Greatest One!’”
LET’S PRAY
- Pray for the war-torn nations of Western South Asia, that they find a new path forward through the Prince of Peace.
- Pray for courageous witnesses like Akbar al-Masih and the missionaries who discipled him.
- Pray for the 300 million Muslims of Western South Asia who do not yet know the peace that passes all understanding that Jesus offers them.
Post credited to the editors at Worldchristian: visit http://www. worldchristianconcern.org/donate to support mission efforts to reach the unreached for Christ.