
I write to you not to argue or impose, but from a heart that genuinely cares about you and wishes you well. I understand that you don’t believe in God. Perhaps you reached that conclusion through difficult experiences, unanswered questions, or personal disappointments. But allow me to invite you to a deep reflection—one based on reason, conscience, and the search for truth.
Let’s start with a simple question:
Can nothing create something?
Is it logical to believe that this magnificent universe—with all its harmony, precision, and perfectly tuned laws—came from nothing, for no reason, and with no purpose? The human mind instinctively rejects such a notion. In our daily experience, everything has a cause. Nothing comes into existence by chance without explanation.
Now think about yourself:
Who formed you in your mother’s womb?
Who provided for you when you were just a fetus, helpless, unable to ask for anything?
Who shaped your body with such perfection—your brain, your heart, your eyes, your senses?
Was all this the work of random chance? Of blind “nature”? Can something without knowledge or will produce such wisdom and beauty?
Nature has no mind, no emotion, no intention. So how can it create a mother’s love for her child? Or instill in us a sense of justice, of compassion, of beauty, or the pain we feel for others?
Where did these values come from? Where did the soul, with all its depth and awareness, originate?
Everything in the universe points to a Creator.
Look at the sky: Who holds it up without pillars?
Look at the sun: Who set it on its precise course, without fail, day after day?
Look at your heart: Who causes it to beat, without your permission, day and night, without stopping?
Would you believe that a complex book appeared by accident after an explosion in a printing house?
Then how can we believe the universe—far more complex than any book—came from a random explosion?
I understand that some people deny God because they see suffering, injustice, or war in the world. But the existence of pain doesn’t mean the absence of purpose.
This life is a test, not the final destination.
Complete justice will be in the afterlife, not here.
Islam doesn’t ask you to abandon your mind—it calls you to use it.
God says in the Qur’an:
“Is there any doubt about God, the Creator of the heavens and the earth?”
And He says:
“And in your own selves, do you not see?”
The Qur’an is not an ordinary book.
It was revealed more than 1400 years ago, challenging all of mankind to produce something like it—and no one ever has.
It contains truth, wisdom, laws, stories, and knowledge—some of which science has only discovered in recent centuries, like the stages of embryo development, the water cycle, and the structure of the universe.
And Prophet Muhammad (peace be upon him) was an illiterate man, raised in the desert, with no formal education or power—yet he changed history, brought people out of darkness, and taught humanity the way of faith, justice, and peace.
Dear friend,
God does not need anything from you—but you need Him.
He created you, sustains you, protects you, and gives you time to think, reflect, and return.
He never turns away a sincere heart. If you come back to Him, He will forgive you, guide you, and give your life meaning.
I’m not asking you to believe blindly—but I invite you to be honest with yourself and say:
“O Creator, guide me to You, and show me the truth.”
If you say this sincerely, humbly, God will not ignore you. He is closer to you than you imagine.