1. DR LAWRENCE B. BROWN
After the September 11, Islam in the world in general
and the United States in particular has become known notoriously as an
aggressive religion, because it had been associated with the disaster. It was
claimed that Muslims did it out of their religious fanaticism. Since then, some
people have started learning about Islam and either they become Muslims, or
they hate Islam, because of their misunderstanding of it. Another group of
people have no concern about religion. They are atheists who disbelieve our
doubt in the existence of God, among them was Dr. Lawrence Brown.
Dr.
Brown was graduated from Cornell University, Brown University Medical School
and George Washington University Hospital residency program. He is an
ophthalmic surgeon, a retired Air Force officer, and the medical director and
chief ophthalmologist of a major eye centre. He also obtained a PhD in
religion. He was married with three daughters. He converted to Islam in April
1994. Before his conversion Allah had sent him a message which we called a test twice: once with blessing, but he did
not listen to it, and therefore he
failed; the second one with affliction, and feeling helpless, he prayed to
Allah for the first time, and miraculously his prayer was answered. This led
him to Islam.
When his first daughter
Katrina was born he said that:
“… she
did something I have never seen any child
do
before, and that is that she was able to stand from
the
first day of life. From the first day if I put her on her
feet,
she would stand up herself. Now I am a
doctor. I am
a
medical doctor. I understand that there is something
in that
a new born baby is not supposed to be
able to do.
But I
did not see that as a miracle, I saw it as something interesting, something
charming about this child, but
I guess
I did not get the message.”
The second message which we call a
test is when his second daughter Hanna was born ten months later in October
1990. When this baby was born she was brought straight to the intensive care
unit. Although he himself was a doctor he was not told what happened to his
daughter. He found out her body turned dusky blue, because it was not getting
oxygen. He said:
To my great dismay, she
was a dusky, gunmetal
blue
from the chest to the toes. Her body was not
getting
enough blood, and the cause was found to
be a
coarctation of the aorta -- a critical narrowing
in the
major artery from the heart. Needless to say,
I was
shattered. Being a doctor, I understood she
needed
emergency surgery, with a poor chance of
long-term
survival. A consultant paediatric cardio-
thoracic
surgeon was called from across town,
and I
left him in the neonatal intensive care
unit to
examine my daughter.
He knew that his daughter was not getting oxygen she
needed, that she was starving, and part of her body was suffocating and dying.
Even if the doctor opened her chest and
replaced her blood vessel with graft, and if she survived a few years,
given the technology of that time, she would need to have a surgery again to
replace the graft as she grew, and
eventually the graft would fail, and then she would die.
Dr. Brown was very sad. He related his
sorrow, as follows:
And
when I saw that I felt sad. The first time in my life
I needed to turn to some greater power. I was atheist
until
then; I have been raised in a family that was basically Quaker, one of the Protestant’s sect,
but not practicing.
And I
myself did not practice any religion. So, I have to
leave the intensive care unit because they
brought on
a team of doctors, a team of specialist in
their fields, and
while
they were doing their things, I just went to the prayer room and for the first
time in my life I really prayed.
Dr.
Brown prayed in the hospital prayer room and fell to his knees. It was the
first time that he even partially recognized God. He prayed the prayer of a
skeptic,
“Oh
God, if You are there, and if You save my
daughter,
and then guide me to the religion most
pleasing
to You, that religion I will follow.”
About fifteen minutes
later Dr. Brown returned to the neonatal ICU. He was shocked when the
consultant told him that his daughter would be fine. His assessment was true,
as within the next two days her condition improved miraculously, without
medicine or surgery. She grew perfectly normal even when she was approaching
her eighteenth birthday in July 2008. Being a doctor himself, the medical
explanation of his daughter’s miraculous recovery provided by the consultant,
he believed that her salvation was a divine miracle rather than a medical one.
He could have accepted the doctor’s explanation rather than a miracle from God,
but faith had entered his heart, and it would remain there. He had taken
cardiac ultrasounds showing the stricture, and the next day, the other cardiac
ultrasounds showed that the stricture had gone. All he could think was that God
had made good on His part of the deal, and he had to make good on his. Even if
there was a medical explanation, he claimed that it was nothing more than the
pathway by which Almighty God chose to answer his prayer and affect His decree.
He strongly asserted that he would not accept any other explanation.
Dr. Brown remembered his promise to
God, and said that a similar situation
happened to a woman in the hospital, but she did not fulfil her promise and
therefore she did not receive guidance. He said that many people who made
promises to God in moments of panic, but once God relieved them of their
distress, and then they invented excuses to escape their part of the bargain.
This reminds us of Allah’s statement in the Qur’an about people who were
sailing in the ships, they were happy when they got a favourable wind. But, “then
comes a stormy wind and the waves come to them from all sides, and they think
that they are encircled therein. Then they invoke Allah, making their Faith
pure for Him Alone, (saying): ‘If You (Allah) deliver us from this, we shall
truly, be of the grateful.’ But when He delivered them, behold! They rebel
(disobey Allah) in the earth wrongfully…” (Q. 10:22-23). In other words,
when Allah delivered them from the disaster, they forgot their promise to obey
Allah; instead, they rebelled against Him.
Dr.
Brown started his religious search with Judaism, then Christianity with its
sects. He studied various sects of Christianity: Seventh Day Adventist, Mormon,
Quakers, Southern Baptist, Roman Catholic, and Greek Orthodox. When he came to
the tenet he liked some parts of it, but he had problems with others. He kept
asking the preachers, “how about this, how about that,” and they could not
explain it, and they just shrug their shoulders.
Dr. Brown contends that there is no
foundation of the teaching of the “trinity” in Christianity, as it is not
mentioned in the Bible. Jesus himself never spoke about it explicitly. The
quotation about “the father, the son and the holy spirit” was not written in
the original manuscript. It was only a marginal note written by the scribes in
the margin on one of the manuscripts, but was later copied into the
scripture. It was then an illegitimate
insertion, and he wonders why the priests are teaching it as if it is the
truth. He states further that Jesus Christ described himself in the Bible as
“the son of man” 88 times, but nowhere does he call himself “the Son of God”.
This doctrine of Trinity was introduced three hundred years after the time of
Jesus.
Dr. Brown encountered
the Jewish scriptures’ reference to three prophets to follow Prophet Moses. He
assumes that John the Baptist and Jesus Christ were the two, and in the New
Testament Jesus Christ spoke of a final prophet to follow him. He found in the Qur’an the teaching of Oneness of God,
and Muhammad as the final prophet. He
also read the Biography of Prophet Muhammad s.a.w. by Martin Ling based
on the earliest sources which increased his belief in Islam. He found peace
entered his heart, and that in Islam all his questions were answered, that “all
puzzles came together.”
Dr. Brown admits that it is not a matter of
intelligence that he found Islam, as there are more intelligent people who have
not found the truth of Islam. It is a matter of what he calls “enlightenment”
which we used to call hidāyah, “guidance” without which a person will
remain disbelieve. He cites the translation of the following verse:
إِنَّ الَّذِينَ كَفَرُوا سَوَاءٌ عَلَيْهِمْ أَأَنْذَرْتَهُمْ
أَمْ لَمْ تُنْذِرْهُمْ لَا يُؤْمِنُونَ. خَتَمَ اللَّهُ
عَلَى قُلُوبِهِمْ وَعَلَى سَمْعِهِمْ وَعَلَى أَبْصَارِهِمْ
غِشَاوَةٌ ..(البقرة:6-7)
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)
He also cites the translations Qur’anic verses as evidence that this
“enlightenment” is only from Allah, as follows:
... وَمَنْ يُؤْمِنْ بِاللَّهِ يَهْدِ قَلْبَهُ... (التغابن:11(
…whoever
believes in Allah He will guide his
heart … (Q 64:11),
... اللَّهُ يَجْتَبِي إِلَيْهِ مَنْ يَشَاءُ وَيَهْدِي
إِلَيْهِ مَنْ يُنِيبُ (الشورى:13(
… Allah chooses for
Himself whom He wills and
guides
to Himself whoever turns back
[to
Him]”
( Q. 42:13)
and
... وَاللَّهُ يَهْدِي مَنْ يَشَاءُ إِلَى صِرَاطٍ مُسْتَقِيمٍ (النور:46(
… and Allah guides whom He
wills
to a
straight path. (Q. 24:46)
At
the end of his discourse Dr. Brown said:
“So I thank Allah that He chose to guide me, and I
attribute that guidance to one simple formula: recognizing our Creator, praying
to Him and to Him alone, and sincerely seeking His guidance. And whom He
guides, none can lead astray.”
Following
the chain of revelation through the Abrahamic religions from Judaism to
Christianity Dr. Brown eventually came to Islam. He relates the result of that
study in his books, among which are as follows:
The First & Final
Commandment: A Search for Truth in Revelation within the Abrahamic Religion – September 1, 2004
The Eighth Scroll – February 22, 2008
God'ed?: The Case for
Islam as the Completion of Revelation
- Feb 22, 2008
MisGod'ed: A Roadmap of
Guidance and Misguidance in the Abrahamic Religions – February 22, 2008
Bearing True Witness:
"Now that I Found Islam, What do I do with it?" - July 14, 2010
The Returned - November 15, 2011
The Zion
Deception – May 11, 2012
Miracles happen to us many times, but
we do not notice them, until we realize that they are beyond reason. Staunch advocates
of atheism like the English evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins and the
American neuroscientist Sam Harris, if Allah wills, could be easily
“enlightened.”
(Civic, 8 January, 2016)
BIBLIOGRAPHY:
http://www.islamreligion.com/articles/503/laurence-brown-medical-doctor-usa-part-2/
http://negativity-sucks.blogspot.com/2009/02/dr-laurence-b-browns-conversi
https://archive.org/details/Are.you.sick.of.Religion
ttps://wechooseislam.wordpress.com/2012/12/28/how-i-came-to-
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