Practice Practice is a guided two-step setup. Pick a scenario and a persona — the trainer always plays the persona in real time. When you need help, pull it from the chat toolbar: hint, source, model answer, pause-for-review, or end-and-review. Every session ends with coaching on both content and character.
1 Step 1 Scenario 2 Step 2 Persona Step 1 — Choose a scenario Pick the kind of conversation you want to practice. The scenario sets the topic; you'll choose the persona in the next step.
General — no specific topic Friendship-first practice. Whatever your friend wants to talk about is the conversation.
Coffee with a Muslim friend
Witness
Sit down, talk, listen. No specific argument. Just be present and curious. Best for the very first reps.
Your friend asks why you're a Christian
Witness
A cultural Muslim friend asks the open question many Muslims actually ask: why are you a Christian? Practice giving your testimony without a sermon.
Apologetics
An open debate floor. The persona drives — they pick the topic, the angle, and the pace. Practice staying calm, cited, and gospel-centered when nothing has been pre-arranged.
Witness scenarios Friend-to-friend conversations grounded in a real topic. Relational, slow, listening-first.
The Islamic Dilemma over coffee
Witness
Your Muslim friend says the Bible was changed. Walk the Qurʼān itself with them — Q 5:46-47, Q 5:68, Q 10:94 — without making them feel cornered.
Q 5:47 — judge by the Gospel
Witness
A respectful Muslim friend argues the corruption claim. Practice walking them through Q 5:47 in context — the Qurʼān itself commands the People of the Gospel to judge by their Gospel.
Defending the Trinity without strawmen — over tea
Witness
A respectful Muslim friend says you worship three gods. Practice correcting the description first, with patience, before defending the doctrine.
Witness
A curious Muslim friend asks, 'why is the death of a prophet good news?' Practice walking the gospel — sin, sacrifice, finished work — without jargon.
Witness
A cultural Muslim friend describes the scales of judgment, hopeful but unsure. Practice the gospel of grace — not as an attack on Islam, but as good news he has not heard.
Witness
A cultural Muslim friend, who likes you, has never heard a Christian speak of assurance. Practice walking Romans 8:1, 1 John 5:13, and Hebrews 10:14 with care.
Jesus is coming back — for both of us?
Witness
A respectful Muslim friend mentions the return of ʿĪsā at the end of the age. Practice using this rare point of contact as a doorway, not a debate.
Apologetics scenarios Rigorous engagement and debate prep. Best with confident, hostile, or academic personas.
Did Muhammad confirm the Bible? — with a dawah speaker
Apologetics
A confident dawah speaker leads with the corruption argument and Q 5:47. Practice answering rigorously, with the Qurʼān itself, in [Source] mode.
Apologetics
An academic apologist argues from Q 61:6 that John 14-16's Paraclete is Muhammad. Practice testing every detail Jesus actually gave.
Apologetics
An academic Muslim asks why Christians can possibly maintain the historical crucifixion against Q 4:157. Practice the response with care.
Defending the Trinity without strawmen — debate prep
Apologetics
A confident dawah speaker says Christians worship three gods, plus Mary. Practice correcting the description first, then defending the doctrine in apologetics mode.
Can Allah's word be changed?
Apologetics
A confident dawah speaker asserts the Bible has been corrupted. Practice the Qurʼān-internal counter — Q 6:34, Q 6:115, Q 10:64, Q 18:27 — that no one can alter Allah's words.
Did Jesus claim to be God?
Apologetics
A confident dawah speaker says Jesus never explicitly said 'I am God.' Practice walking the deity claims in their Jewish biblical categories — John 8:58, John 10:30-33, Mark 14:61-64, John 20:28, Matthew 28:18-20.
Historical evidence for the crucifixion
Apologetics
An academic Muslim apologist asks how Christians can be sure the crucifixion happened. Practice walking the first-century evidence — 1 Corinthians 15:3-8, Tacitus, Josephus, hostile Jewish memory — calmly and rigorously.
Is Muhammad in the Bible? — debate prep
Apologetics
A confident dawah speaker argues Deuteronomy 18:18, Song of Songs 5:16, and Isaiah 42 foretell Muhammad. Practice the contextual response — read in context, with grammar, with the New Testament's own use.
Scientific miracles in the Qurʼān?
Apologetics
A confident dawah speaker argues the Qurʼān's embryology (Q 23:12-14) and other passages prove divine origin. Practice the sober, sourced response — Galen, the Talmud, ancient cosmology — without sneering.
The illiterate-prophet argument
Apologetics
A confident dawah speaker argues from Q 7:157 that Muhammad's illiteracy proves the Qurʼān's divine origin. Practice the textual response — including the contested meaning of *ummī*.
How do we know the Bible we have is the same as the original?
Apologetics
A thoughtful Muslim friend asks the honest question many Muslims actually want answered. Practice walking the manuscript record calmly — Codex Sinaiticus, P52, Irenaeus naming the four Gospels — without sounding defensive.
Hadith reliability — with a confident dawah speaker
Apologetics
A confident dawah speaker quotes a ṣaḥīḥ Bukhārī report as if it were Qurʼān. Practice the deeper response — Bukhārī's own selection ratio, the common-link problem, the Mawḍūʿāt literature — without contempt.
Specific events in the sīra — with a confident dawah speaker
Apologetics
A confident dawah speaker dismisses concerns about Banu Qurayza, ʿĀʾisha's age, or Zaynab as 'orientalist attacks.' Practice citing the canonical Muslim primary sources — Bukhārī, Ibn Isḥāq — calmly and accurately, without attacking the man.
Select a scenario above to see its briefing and continue.
Next: choose a persona
About help during a session The trainer always plays the persona in real time — there is no upfront help level. When you need a nudge, tap a button in the chat to pull help on demand:
Hint — one-line nudge.Show me a source — the most relevant verse.Model answer — what a sharp Christian would say.Pause for review — coaching mid-conversation.End and review — wrap and grade the session.Mistake check — passive flag for a fallacy or misquote in your last reply (toggle on in step 2).Drills Short reps that build the muscles a real conversation requires: knowledge checks, single-skill responses, verse memorization, mistake recognition, and annotated debate study.
Open the drills hub