Other Worldviews

Why It’s Hard for Muslims to Convert

Author Alan Shlemon Published on 01/09/2018

Recently, I was asked how most Muslims become Muslim and why it’s difficult for them to convert to another religion. It seems several factors are at play.

First, most Muslims are born in a Muslim country and/or a Muslim family and simply adopt Islam as their religion by default. What that means is that there is a strong cultural and familial component to being Muslim. Abandoning Islam often means abandoning their family and tradition. That is hard to overcome.

Second, the Islamic worldview is all-encompassing, especially when living in an Islamic culture. Consider a pie cut into eight pieces and imagine that each slice represents part of a person’s life. One slice is their career, another is their family, another is their religion, another is their friends, another is their culture, etc. For many Westerners, changing their religion means replacing one slice of pie for another. For many Middle-Easterners, Islam is the whole pie. It affects their family, friends, religion, laws, culture—everything! Changing their religion means changing out the whole pie. That’s a big price to pay.

Third, apostasy is considered a capital crime in some Muslim cultures. Converts to Christianity, for example, are vigorously pressured to recant their turn to Christ. If they resist, the punishment is death. I’ve seen former Muslims go on the run, leaving their family and community and living in safe houses. Such consequences are a huge deterrent to apostasy.

Despite these challenges, we’ve seen how the Holy Spirit can move past these obstacles and still reach those He wishes to reach. That’s why Christians need to pray and ask the Holy Spirit to intercede. It’s only through the power of God that people can come to faith.