Do u believe in the Easter Bunny to?
2006-08-14 00:43:55
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answer #1
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answered by yahwhoon 4
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The first five books were written by Moses (the Torah or Greek the Pentateuch) and so he was writing the history of mankind up to the point as per the spiritual influence and presence of the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. So the Hebrew/Jewish manuscripts are speak of this same God as understood now by Christians being The Father, The Son and The Holy Spirit as also testified of in the Old Testament and even in the first five books. The Koran was written by one man over a period of 23 years (c.570–632 )Muhammad as per given by the angel Gabriel and other prophets such Adam, Noah, Moses and even Jesus and has its own version of a sort of Gospel (Injeel or evangel). The New Testament reveals that Yeshua Messiah is the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob...It is not hard to see when you realize the cohesive unity of all scripture from Genisis to Revelation..reading especially the book of Psalms. Love in Christ, ~J~ <><
2006-08-14 08:02:03
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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There can be or there must be only one God. Because otherwise there will be war of Gods. We must be calling the ultimate wisdom as God. Until we meet him, we cannot define exact what and how He is.
Jewish, Christian and Islamic teachings are based on the same God. But later visions or revelations divided them to be in the groups they are today. This can be due to the difference in understanding. If we closely watch them (without any favouritism towards any of these groups) we will know that, ever since the beginning these groups are travailing away from the truth. Which means Jews have traveled almost 4000 years from truth. Christians over 2000 years and Muslims almost 1500 years. That too in difference directions. So the odd shapes for groups now and none of them will reach back the truth.
2006-08-14 07:51:35
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answer #3
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answered by latterviews 5
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The God I worship as a Christian is the same God that is being revered by Jews and Muslims alike. What I highlight in this particular point of inter-faith dialoguing is the difference in our respective understanding of one and same God. I approach God through the person of the historic Jesus of Nazareth because Jesus highlights a God who is graceful and a staunch advocate for social justice. In my particular case, God's grace provides the bases for tolerance and mutual understanding, something I find difficult to appreciate from the perspectives that my Jewish and Muslim brothers and sisters maintain.
2006-08-14 07:45:07
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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God is God. But there is a difference. To be brief, Christians believe in one God who is like 3 people in one. This is Father God, son Jesus, and the Holy Spirit. Still one God. The other religions don't believe this way.
2006-08-14 07:43:06
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answer #5
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answered by RB 7
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Most Christians believe that there is one God with three manifestations. Some religions that call themselves Christian -- like the Mormons -- believe in a Godhead of three individual beings that work together for a single purpose.
2006-08-14 07:51:54
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answer #6
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answered by Ranto 7
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It is the same fictitious character but a different name. That's why all the holy wars between christians and muslims are so stupid. Imagine having a war about the name of your imaginary friend.
2006-08-14 07:45:12
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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there are many gods, but only one God, the creator. for example, satan is the god of this world, but he is not the God. the jews and christians have the same God. but the jews have not accepted that Jesus was God in the flesh. i know this doesn't answer fully your question, but it should set you on the right path.
2006-08-14 07:43:44
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answer #8
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answered by bakbiter 3
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i personally think jews and muslims worship the same god, but christians worship a different one
2006-08-14 07:43:57
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answer #9
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answered by JewishGirl 2
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Wow, I don't know. I think there is only one God for everybody, but all religions kind of see him (her?) differently. In the end, it won't matter because we will all see the same maker someday and all religions will get along in the afterlife.
2006-08-14 07:42:26
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answer #10
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answered by catsup.joe21 1
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