The number of Gods is equal to the number of believers. You will learn this when you ask the people to describe their gods. WHICH MEANS THAT GOD IS A MERE PROJECTION OF HUMAN MINDS...STRANGE İSNT İT...
2006-07-21 11:54:44
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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They all call upon God, however all have attributed different things to him and believe him to be different things. For an example, the Bible says it is the words of God, and in those words it states that Jesus is diety/the son of God. Muslims do not agree with that, stating that Jesus was a great man, maybe a prophet even, but not the SON of God- hence for them, the Bible of Christianity is a lie- but there is the Qu'ran for them which has some similar teachings, but more of it bumps heads with what the Bible teaches. I believe Hindu's have multiple gods, however, I can't speak of that since I don't know first hand any of their information.
In that sense, I would say some groups call on their idea/formulation/concept of A god (and i use this word to mean the object of their worship)- which would not be the one true God because of attributes they have projected onto him or credited him with that conflict with his own words.
Hope that wasn't confusing! :-) Have a great day!
2006-07-21 14:19:09
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answer #2
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answered by emmjaye 3
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No, Chrisitians believe in the Trinity, God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit. One God, three divine persons.Like a three-leaf clover - three leaves one clover. As testified in the Word of God the Father spoken to Moses and the Prophets and recorded by the same, the Word of Jesus (God the Son) spoken to his followers and recorded by various disciples, the inspired Word of the Holy Spirit, the rest of the words of the Bible not spoken by God (i.e. Psalms, Proverbs, and Epistles). By establishing that the entire Bible was professed by or written through God, this sanctifies the Entire Bible except for a few opinions of Paul as he denotes. Jews for Jesus fall into this category.
Jews believe in the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. They do not however prescribe to his Words since they do not follow some 300 of the 600+ commandments listed in the Torah. They reject Jesus as the Messiah and believe that another Messiah is coming. They also do not strictly adhere to many of the teachings of the Tanakh or (Old Testament), they have no king, no tribes, no priests, no temple, no genealogy of their People (simply claim to be Jews).
Muslims believe in Allah. The name originally for the pagan God of the Arabian region at the time Mohammed was present. They accept Jesus as a teacher but nothing more, they do not believe he has brought salvation to Mankind, thereby rejecting Him as the Messiah, and they do not believe He is God, despite the fact that he forgave sins, worked miracles, is the Judge, everything was created through him, is eternal and was a ransom for us. They reject any scriptures of other religions that do not compliment the Qu'ran and thereby decree that all others have neen mistranslated or misinterpreted.
2006-07-07 13:24:34
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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To an extent, yes... Jehovah and Allah are one-in-the-same... the Abrahamic god of desert monotheism. Allah is the same old jealous, genocidal, pathological killer of the Old Testament, un-mellowed by time.
What differentiates Christianity seems to be the idea that about 2,000 years ago, god developed Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD), manifesting a hippie-like entity that went around in human form, spreading sweetness and light, and some ghost-like manifestitation with pedophilic tendencies. Christians seem to have farted-off the pathological killer personality, and adopted a fondness for the hippie... although they invoke the spook a lot, too.
The really neat thing is that you can eat the hippie-entity in the form of a cracker.
2006-07-07 13:07:30
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Take it from the lips of an 'ole lady.........
THE God of Abraham, Issac and Jacob is THE ONE Living God in the form of Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Some call Him Yahweh, Yahshua or even the English version Jesus........
He is the same Yesterday, Today and Forever.....
WHOMEVER believes in THE one true God, the Creator and has accepted His blood sacrifice on the Cross for their sins is worshiping the TRUE GOD.
Wherever you put Jesus tells a lot about your God. If He is your Savior, you will go to Heaven, if he is your brother,or just a prophet, then look out..........flames are on the way.
He said He was the way...truth...and that He and His Father are ONE........
I do not understand it! I do not question it! I just KNOW, I know!
We will understand it by and by...........
2006-07-07 16:14:39
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answer #5
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answered by deed 5
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A rather simplistic answer will be--Yes--they do. Jews and Muslims
worship God who might be called God The Father by the Christians.
The Jews and Muslims don't accept the existence of any other God
but God who revealed to their Father Abraham. Jesus according to the Jews is a radical lunatic or imposter or magician. Jesus according to the Muslims is a major prophet of God, but not the God of Abraham himself. I don't know the Jewish view of Holy Spirit. But Muslims believe it either to be the divine blessing or guidance CREATED by God and given to Jesus or maybe the angel Gabriel--but in no sense it is a part of God.
Sikhs believe in one God also. But I suspect if they refer to Abraham. In that sense their description of God will defer from the Abrahamic Faiths.
2006-07-07 13:08:59
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answer #6
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answered by Mahfuz R 1
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The Jewish God, (real) Christian God, and Islamic God, are all believed to be the Almighty, although, if the adherents to any faith fail tounderstand their very own God properly, or perhaps to be so presumtuous as to modify their God's message, then they are certain to be off the mark and for this reason different in faith from those that are clser to the mark. it quite is how there ought to correctly be such hate between the communities because each and every sense that one and each and every of the others are incorrect, although the real thanks to attempt that is to analyze the honestly teachings of that God, not the adult men that got here after that pollute and distract.
2016-11-01 10:03:03
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answer #7
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answered by basinger 4
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The God of the bible and the god of Islam are not the same god. We know this how?
Muslims claim that God has no son; Christianity claims that Jesus Christ is the son of God. Islam declares Jesus did not die on a cross for our sins. The God of the bible has a son, Jesus, who died on a cross, rose again, and is the only way by which a man might be saved.
Islam states that Allah neither begats nor was begotten. Therefore, since the god of Islam is not the God of the bible....no, they are not the same.
When it comes to God and Jewish people, remember what Jesus said to the Pharisees when they claimed to be "children of Abraham". He didn't mince words. "If you were children of Abraham, you would hear my voice. But you do not hear my voice, because you are of your father, the devil, and you do his works."
The only way to the only God is through His son.
2006-07-07 13:13:44
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answer #8
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answered by christian_lady_2001 5
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Jews and Christians both worship the God of Israel. (albeit Christians are somewhat confused about His form).
Muslims worship the "Allah" - a god that praises human sacrifice. Obviously they're not the same god, since the God of Israel forbids such practice.
2006-07-11 22:42:39
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answer #9
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answered by mo mosh 6
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christians and Jews Yes But the Jesus do not believe In Jesus.
christians believe in ONE God, because someone does not understand the trinity it does not make it false.
Muslims NO NO NO
Hinduism = over 330 MILLION gods
2006-07-07 13:08:02
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answer #10
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answered by rbmath2000 3
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They may all think they're worshiping different Gods, but that doesn't mean they are. I believe there is only one God and He doesn't care if you call him God, Hashem, Buddah, Frank, Bob, or George, as long as you're a good person. I believe God gave us different beliefs and religions because we are all at different stages of spiritual growth and we each need different structures, rituals, prayers, or beliefs depending upon where we are in our learning.
2006-07-07 13:03:34
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answer #11
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answered by Anonymous
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