He called God "Abba", which means "Father".
2006-08-13 14:01:45
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answer #1
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answered by ashcatash 5
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Allaha just means G_d. Therefor whet-her you worship G_d or Allaha you are still worship ping the same supreme being. Please note the description below says that it is the same as the Jewish concept of G_d. And everyone knows that Jesus was Jewish.
Allah is the Arabic term for "God" in Abrahamic religions, and is the main term for the deity in Islam.
Most Arabic-speaking Muslims, Christians and Jews (including the Teimanim, several Mizraḥi communities and some Sephardim) use "Allah" as the proper noun for 'God.' "Allah" is found in the Qur'an and in Arabic and Indonesian translations of the Bible. In the Qur'an, it refers to The Only God.
Outside the Arab world, Allah is associated with Islam, and is used to refer specifically to the Islamic concept of God. It is the same as the Jewish conception of God [1][2] , but differs from the Trinitarian Christian conception of a single God.
Islamic scholars often translate Allah directly into English as 'God', especially Qur'an Alone Muslims. Other scholars feel that Allah should not be translated arguing that Allah is the term for "The God" in a glorified pronunciation. This is a significant issue when translating the Qur'an.
2006-08-13 14:11:21
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answer #2
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answered by Honest and fair 3
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Jesus called God many stuff, by using fact he probable spoke 2 Semitic languages (Hebrew and Aramaic, that are particularly heavily appropriate) and 2 Indo-ecu languages (Greek and Latin) on a daily basis. As stated till now, Hebrew and Aramaic are very close languages, and share surprisingly a lot an identical root words. the basis letters for "God/god" are "l" and "h". The Hebrew, Aramaic, and Arabic words for God/god are elohim, alaahaa, and allah, respectively. regardless of if, by using fact all Semitic languages are so comparable, there could unavoidably be very comparable words for "God/god". besides, in simple terms like Aramaic and Arabic are 2 distinctive languages, so are the words alaahaa and allah very distinctive words. P.S. Jesus often called God "eli" - my God, whilst on the bypass, and "abba", Father, in the process his lifetime. His final words have been "Eli, eli, lmaanaa saabachthaani?", or "My God, my God, why have you ever abandoned me?" (a quote from Psalm 22).
2016-10-02 01:12:09
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answer #3
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answered by ? 4
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Yahweh. YHWH.
Old Canaanite words
for God – Allaha, Allah, your own post page is for the word god or a higher power. god is not a name but a title.
2006-08-13 14:08:49
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answer #4
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answered by DaFinger 4
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just fyi, as someone who reads and understands aramaic, there is no word "allaha" in aramaic. there is ellaha. a tzeireh under the aleph makes all the difference...
2006-08-13 14:05:21
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answer #5
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answered by rosends 7
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You are right! God's name is Allaha in Aramaic. But in English we know Him as God. I wonder what His name is in Chinese, German, Russian, etc., etc. He has many names, but He is the same God.
2006-08-13 14:08:19
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Jesus worshiped the one true God. NOT allah.
2006-08-13 14:05:08
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answer #7
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answered by Captivated 4
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So even though Jesus is the third member of the triune God, he was confused about the name of one of the other members? Doesn't sound very rational, does it?
2006-08-13 14:03:57
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answer #8
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answered by TheSlayor 5
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Umm yeah. Allah, Jehovah, God, Lord, Almighty, "The Big Man Upstairs" .... all the same.
2006-08-13 14:03:41
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answer #9
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answered by arewethereyet 7
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if Jesus and Allah are the same thing, why are you offended if I choose to worship Jesus? It's the same thing
2006-08-13 14:09:14
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answer #10
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answered by one_sera_phim 5
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Fascinating if true! As to your question, I don't worship Allah OR Jesus, or the Judeo-Christian god, but thanks for asking :)
2006-08-13 14:04:51
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answer #11
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answered by TwilightWalker97 4
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