 Yeah, my doubts had to do with, especially with the Trinity, because in Christianity we believed that God exists as one being, but in three persons. God the Father, God the Son, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit. I always found it very hard to understand the concept, because in Christianity Jesus Christ dies on the cross, but he is God, so God dies. So I asked the minister, when I was 12 or 13, how is it possible that something that is infinite, the God is infinity or infinite, how is it possible that it dies? Because then it is ending, so that's impossible, and if he is dead and he is alive at the same time, that's something like a square circle, that's impossible. And then they said, well, it's a mystery, but you have to believe it, but if I try to believe it, I can't, because it's a mystery, and I don't find that very satisfying. So that's something that, and there are a lot of theologians who have very nice concepts, but in the end it's coming back to the question, is the God of Jesus Christ, is it one or three? And in the whole Bible, there is no sentence in the Bible that says God is three, and it isn't there. And the parts that are referring to something that could be interpreted as three are added later, and it's even in the Christian Bible, you can see that it's almost always between, I don't know how I said it, we call it hakes, quotes, no, not the quote, yeah, that one. And in the Bible it says that the sentences between those things are added later, so in the Bible there is no, there's no, there's no reveration to God as three, and there is even a sentence that Jesus Christ says, here, oh Israel, your God is one. Well, that is exactly the same as Prophet Muhammad said, there is one God, that's Allah. So it wasn't logical for me, so the Trinity thing was an issue for me, and another thing I talked about earlier, short, it was about whether there should be a murder before God can forgive, and I found that not logical, because in the Bible there's a story about a prodigal son. It's a story that there's a father, and he has two sons, and it's a very rich father, and it's a very successful company, and one of the sons goes away, and he says, well, dad, if you use a rich, and one day you will die, so can't you give me the money I'll get when you die? He says, okay, if you want that, here's the money, and he goes away, and he does everything he shouldn't do, he's partying all the time, going to hookers, and I don't know what he does, and he comes back, he's totally wasted, and he doesn't feel like a man anymore, and he says, well, what am I doing suddenly? I wish I'd never gone away, and he regrets it very much, and after a few years he goes back to his father, and his father sees his son coming, and he says to his assistant, well, bring him the best clothes that you have, put a silver ring on his finger, and let's celebrate that my son, my lost son, is back, but the other son says, well, I was working all the time for you, I did everything that I had to do, I abide you, I abide the law, we pray together to God, and a weird, weird willy there goes and does everything wrong, and you're celebrating his return, and it's a story that Jesus tells in the Bible, and then the apostles, the people, the Jesus followers, okay, what's the point here? And Jesus says, well, okay, the father is happy that his son returned, after he did so much things wrong, he still accepts him, and there is no condition, there's no son or whatever who had to die first, or there's no slapping, or no screaming, there's nothing, he just forgives his son. And it was for me, I thought, okay, well, the practical son story that Jesus tells, it's almost 180 degrees opposite of one of the dogmas of Christianity, because if Jesus tells this story to show the rachma of God, how is it that the Christian church teaches that God wants to see someone get killed first? But there was another point for me that I thought, well, the Islamic narrative is much more logical, and it's, in a sense, even more Christian, than the Christian teaching the doubts I had when it comes to the Trinity of God, and the crucifixion, the fact in Christianity, people believe that God had to sacrifice Jesus Christ, so he could forgive the world. But at the same time in the Bible, it says that God is almighty and does what he wants to do. And I always thought as a child, well, if you are almighty as God, why can't you just forgive? Why is there a son who had to die before you can say, okay, I forgive? So I thought it was illogical. And I still think Christianity is a nice religion, only I didn't believe the truth with a capital T. It wasn't there for me anymore. And strangely enough, when I was writing the book, I got Islamic answers to Christian questions. And yeah, that was a point for me that I thought, yeah, it gave me a lot of rest. And my heart and my head resonated. And that's something that I didn't have before. So when I felt that, and of course, you believe it, that made me in the end deciding to become a Muslim. And that's what I did. And I still am.