Malcom X
Former American-born boxer Cassius Clay, who changed his name to Muhammad Ali after converting to Islam. He changed his name because he wanted to live out his life through the faith he felt strongly about, so he changed it to one originating from the Middle Eastern part of the world, where much of the world's Islamic-based followers reside.
Both of the words convert and converted can be used as nouns. Convert is singular while converted is implied plural: The convert donated to the church. The Rabbi preached to the converted.
Nation of Islam
Soon after St Paul travelled to Athens and preached the Gospel, in the First century AD.
St. Andrew preached Christianity in Greece. The Greek Orthodox Patriarchy is traced all the way back to him.
The Nation of Islam was founded in 1931 by Wallace D. Fard. He presented himself as a muslim prophet and preached a message of "black redemption withtin Islam".
It means that Ireland was primarily inhabited by the Druids who were pagans and did not believe in the Christian God. St. Patrick preached to them and brought them to Christianity.
Through the power of the Holy Spirit and committed Christians who lived their faith and preached it by their way of living. That is what converted the Roman empire.
He was a teacher in a place where Monks studied and his ideas about the Church were converted during that stay, he preached what he knew
Saint Lucy was not a confessor, someone who preached the faith. However, there are untold numbers who may have converted to Catholicism because of her life and martyrdom.
Preached is the past tense of preach.
The early centuries of Christianity were marked by division between the two major branches known today as proto-Catholic-Orthodox and Gnostic Christianity. Gradually, the well-organised Catholic-Orthodox gained the upper hand, especially after Constantine adopted that faith. Unlike the Catholic-Orthodox branch, Gnosticism was inherently fragmented, with new sects developing as beliefs evolved. In the tenth century, a Bulgarian priest, Bogomil, preached in his homeland a Gnostic faith that by the eleventh and twelfth centuries had spread to other Balkan countries and to Asia Minor. After 1180, the Orthodox Serbs became the dominant regional force and drove the Bogomils westward to Dalmatia and Bosnia, where it became the state religion and continued until the Turkish occupation in the fifteenth century. At this point, tired of centuries of persecution by Orthodox Christians, many Bogomils converted to Islam.