English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Do we worship the same God (the olny true God).

2006-07-16 17:17:16 · 45 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

The Loard our God has many names, why not Allah.

2006-07-16 17:45:10 · update #1

45 answers

Nope, they worship a moon god and follow a pedophile who taught them to kill and hate non-muslims.

2006-07-16 17:19:25 · answer #1 · answered by A Person 5 · 0 0

The answer is "yes" and "no", depending on the perspective. If we say that the Muslims worship the one and only true God, then the answer is "yes". However if we say that the Muslims worship God as understood by majority of Christians, then the answer is "no".

For the Muslims, there is only one God who created all things (human beings, animals, plants, universe etc). Islam teaches that God has many attributes that show His almightyness, soverignty etc (at least 99 attributes of God are known to mankind). Some of the attributes are "Loving", "Almighty", "Compassionate", "All Seeing", "All Hearing" and "Wise". However Muslims do not believe that one God with 3 personalities or "entities" as understood by Christians.

Christians believe in "trinity" that is God with 3 personalities, i.e. the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. Trinity is against the basic teaching of Islam. To Muslims, the concept of "Trinity" is against the reality of one God.

According to the Islamic teaching, Jesus is not the the Son of God but only a prophet and messenger of God. What is called "the Holy Spirit", from a Muslims' point of view, is actually the angel Gibrael who bring the soul of Jesus to be put into Jesus' physical body.

As a conclusion, Muslims believe that there is only one God in this world, the entire universe. They believe in and worship this one and only true God. However the Muslims do not believe the concept of God as understood by Christians especially regarding the concept of "Trinity".

2006-07-16 17:48:38 · answer #2 · answered by Ray Mystery 3 · 0 0

There can only be one God. Anything else that you can imagine just simply isn't God. We, human being are like a group of blind people trying to describe what an elephant looks like. I am not saying that God is like an elephant or anything like that.

Each of these blind men will describe the elephant as what they feel. The one that holds the trunk will say that the elephant is long like a tree trunk, so on and so forth.

Christians, Muslims, Jews are supposed to worship the same God. It's just that the teachings and the interpretation of these religions may lead them to believe into something other than God. These religions are all related. It started with the religion of Abraham with Torah as the holy book, then followed by Moses with Zabur as the holy book. Then Jesus and finally Muhammad. Each of these holy books does mention the prophets that will be sent as successors. The Quran mentions all of these prophets and recognize all of them as the prophets chosen by God. There are 25 prophets mentioned in the Quran starting from Adam, Idris, Noah until Isa (Jesus) and Muhammad. Once a holy book is revealed, it supercedes the previous books. It's like a new revision to old documents. And it also mentions that Muhammad shall be the last prophet for mankind to follow. please read it so it will enlighten you.

2006-07-16 17:40:18 · answer #3 · answered by mr_tight_butt_4u 1 · 0 0

They say moon god, cause the pagan moon god's name was Alilah ( fact ). Alilah had 3 daughters ( fact, according to their *pagan* religion ) and all 3 names appear in the Koran.

The moon god's symbol was a crescent moon and 3 stars , the same symbology used on the Koran.

Now, does the Koran teach the Christian or Judaism God as the same? They want you to think that. The truth is, for you to be a Muslim, you denounce Christs Crucifixion, and proclaim Mohammed to be a prophet.

Knowing what we know about Satan, and how he mocks, and deceives, this would fit perfectly to what Satan would do. Renounce Jesus, and say his possessed minion is a prophet, mocking God, and everything he has given us.

2006-07-16 17:44:02 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

When you look closely at all the major faiths, both historical and existing in the world today, you find beneath them some simple truths that override the cosmetic differences.

They all believe there is a Creator of all things, an original cause and though they call this Creator by different names and even perceive 'him' differently, it still amounts to the same thing. The French have been Christian for hundreds of years and they call God Dieu. The Muslims call God Allah. These words do not signify a different God, merely different languages. As for our concepts of God and his nature, it is clear that any being capable of creating all that is and existing for the vast stretches of time that have been, are and will be is far beyond our comprehension. The reality of such a being must be so large that I can perceive one part of it, you can perceive another part of it and though our perceptions do not coincide exactly, we could both be truly perceiving a part of him.

The other basic truth, aside from the existence of God, within all the sacred texts (Bible, Torah, Koran, etc.) is the Golden Rule: Do unto others as you would have others do unto you. It too is written in many different languages and translated with many different words, but they all amount to the same thing: love thy neighbour as thyself.

Human beings have, of course, messed up the message often in all faiths. Whether they be Islamic Jihadists who misunderstand the meaning of the word (jihad) to mean violent conflict against non believers rather than the struggle within one's own spirit between good and evil or Christians who use their faith to justify persecution of Arabs and Moslems and wage war against them for profit, they too amount to the same thing.

God/Allah taught us to do neither of those things.

2006-07-16 17:38:55 · answer #5 · answered by Rory McRandall 3 · 0 0

No, They believe that Jesus is just another Prophet of God like Mohammad. True Christians know that Jesus is God(I and the Father are One).

Didn't a little box pop up when you wrote your question letting you know that someone asked the same or very similar ? before. Look for it next time and then you can read that answer without loosing 5 points.

2006-07-16 17:26:59 · answer #6 · answered by Makemeaspark 7 · 0 0

Muslims do not worship Jesus if you mean that. They worship Jesus's God, the God who created the Universe, the God who made Adam and Eve, the God who send down Prophets like Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus and Mohammad to guide people on the right path.

2006-07-16 17:21:54 · answer #7 · answered by NchantingPrincess 5 · 0 0

Nope...

The Muslim picture of God is very different from the Christian God.

--

The Christian God manifests himself as the Trinity; the Muslim God does not.

Here is a brief synopsis of the Trinity:

There is only ONE God. He manifests himself in three personas/persons/manifestations for the purposes of the redemption of, and relationship with, human beings.

Contrary to what some people say, there is nothing irrational or illogical about this concept (of the Trinity).

For an explanation (and defense) of the doctrine of the Trinity, see http://www.godsci.org/gs/sect/doc/trinity.html

Cordially,
John

2006-07-16 17:20:23 · answer #8 · answered by John 6 · 0 0

As a Muslim, we only worship to one true god Allah. The one create you, me and everyone else. I don't know why some ignorant people misinterpreting by saying we worship moon god or whatever. It's a sin. But that's not what Bible teaches. People should know better.

2006-07-16 17:36:13 · answer #9 · answered by Muslim 4 · 0 0

Only if Muslims believe that the G-D of Abraham Isaac And Jacob is the Only G-D that He has a covent with Israel that will last forever and ever. That Yeshua is the only begotten Son of G-D. That He died and rose again and sits on the right hand of the Father. And that Yeshua is the only way to Salvation. Then yes the would believe the same as I do.

2006-07-16 17:28:58 · answer #10 · answered by David 3 · 0 0

We Have Only One GOD..Its Just People Have Different Names For Him..Allah Mean God..!!

2006-07-16 17:58:37 · answer #11 · answered by ❀Mother Of 2❀ 6 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers