No. If you denied one part of the Trinity then your denied all of it.
2006-08-18 05:17:34
·
answer #1
·
answered by Kenneth G 6
·
1⤊
6⤋
Sure, why not? Christians believe in a God love, but also a God a hate-and you can tell this by listening to some of things some Christians will tell you. Some Muslims believe in a God of war-as do many Christians. And I know this, because I asked a question a while back, here's the link
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AhNvhvxMm5lmYNNQbioa5tXsy6IX?qid=20060713001531AAKHxLj
Check out some of the answers I got.
2006-08-18 05:19:22
·
answer #2
·
answered by Agent Double EL 5
·
0⤊
2⤋
Yes it is. Abraham is the father of Ishmael and when Sarah sent him and his mother into the desert, God promised Hagar (the Mother) that he would build Ishmael a great nation.
its in Genesis Chaper 16 to 25 tells the story.
PS, Jews don't believe in the Trinity either, are you saying Jesus spoke of a different God when referring to the God of Jews? People interpret the teaching differently. And Muslims and Jews are still awaiting their Christ (which mean MESSIAH - not his last name)
2006-08-18 05:21:03
·
answer #3
·
answered by Lotus Phoenix 6
·
2⤊
0⤋
I don't believe in the same god as you do and I don't believe in the trinity. Very few really worship the true God. In luke it said few are being saved. In Noah's time the earth was full and one family survived.
In Jesus day there were religious leaders and he condemed them. Not many Christians and not any Muslims serve God.
The only way to the father is thru me, Jesus Christ.
Not if you believe what he said.
2006-08-18 05:20:46
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
1⤋
Both Muslims and Christians worship the Hebrew God Yahweh. The Christians call him "Lord or Jehovah" and Muslims call him "Allah". The way he is worshiped is just a bit more different then the way one Christian worships compared to another.
Everyone worships differently because everyone makes God in their own image.
2006-08-18 05:26:39
·
answer #5
·
answered by Stephen 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
Check your history. Prior to Christ, every one in the middle east were Jews. Christ came along and we all know what happened. 300 years later, people declared themselves "Christians" that followed the teachings of Christ. They didn't worship a new god, they simply now believed that Jesus spoke for him on Earth.
250 years later, Mohammed claimed that he was the prophet and his followers broke of form Judaism to become Muslims. Again, same God, just different beliefs.
There is as much difference between muslims christians and jews as there is between catholics, protestants and baptist. It's all the same god, just different beliefs.
2006-08-18 05:21:35
·
answer #6
·
answered by hyperhealer3 4
·
2⤊
0⤋
Muslims believe in the God of Adam, Moses, Abraham, David Joseph, Muhammad. This God did not become a man and get flogged by his creation. None of the above prophets believed in the trinity. the trinity is an idea that came about after greek and roman methology influenced the early church.
Please note that a bible written in arabic calls called Allah, as do christian arabs. Also many prophets in the bible fought battles. eg. David
2006-08-18 05:16:38
·
answer #7
·
answered by abdulaziiz 3
·
3⤊
2⤋
Sure, it's the same. Allah is the same old jealous, petty, capricious, mass-murdering psychopathic Abrahamic death-cult diety of desert monotheism that is described in the Old Testament... Yahweh... Jehovah... whatever.
Christians seem to think that around 2,000 years ago, this diety developed some kind of Multiple Personality Disorder (MPD), in which he manifested a hippie-like personality (Jesus... spent some time on earth... now can be eaten in the form of a cracker), and a Casper the Ghost-like character with pedophilic tendencies (suspected of having impregnated a 12 or 13 year-old virgin... and being venerated for it).
Moslems, however, do not share that belief; they see him as his same-old psychopathic self, essentially unchanged since his old-testament days... except that he seems to have updated his reward system about 1,500 years ago, when he started handing over virgins (in heaven) to be defiled by insane zealots, as a show of gratitude for them having carried out mass-murder and killing themselves in his name. (I think that's what happens to Catholic nuns, after they die. Where else would they find enough virgins?)
Sweet.
I find him very interesting to note that most Christians... including Christian preachers... haven't got the slightest clue about the historical roots of their own religion, let alone any other religion.
2006-08-18 05:28:28
·
answer #8
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
If you know the history of Judaism Christianity and Islam, you will clearly see that the origing of all three is the Jewish god, Yahweh.
The difference is that each religious body tells different stories and therefore the least educated among us will believe that each has a different god.
Also, there are so-called religious leaders who, for their own purposes, are propagandizing that there are different gods for each of these religions. This, among other things, is to create an "US & THEM" mentality among the followers.
2006-08-18 05:24:30
·
answer #9
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Yes, the god that Muslims worship is the same god as Christians worship. It is not a god of war. Perhaps you should try talking to some Muslims before you make assumptions about them, yes?
2006-08-18 05:18:54
·
answer #10
·
answered by Girl Wonder 5
·
4⤊
1⤋
If you want to split hairs over the God of War thing, read the Old Testament. If you are so sure the concept of "Allah" is any more warlike than "YHWH" (apologies to CPT), read the Koran and compare it.
Their view of the Deity comes from the same roots, so one could say its the same God from that context. As was said above, how we perceive and interact with that God comes from within, so alas, there is no litmus test for same-God-ism.
2006-08-18 05:19:22
·
answer #11
·
answered by S M 2
·
2⤊
0⤋