Jewdisn & Islam
2006-10-13 14:58:08
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answer #1
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answered by SunniGirl 2
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NONE!
In Islam there is Only One God.
In Christianity there are 13 Gods in a trinity that is a simple puzzle for simpletons.
There is no religion named Judaism in any Scripture, not even in corrupt Scripture like the Bible.
Christianity says Christ was crucified.
Islam says Christ was not crucified.
Christianity says Jesus was crucified.
The Quran never says that Jesus was not crucified because there is no Jesus in the Quran.
The people you call Jews are part of the Hoax of the Bible and the Quran never uses the name Jews and the Old Testament of the Bible never uses the name Jews.
Christians say Jesus ascended to Heaven of Zeus and will come again.
Ignorant Muslim agree that Jesus will come again but this is not anywhere in the Quran.
2006-10-13 15:14:35
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answer #2
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answered by mythkiller-zuba 6
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depends on which part you emphasise all three are different in many respects and similar in many as well
AND
depends... Biblical Judaism or Rabinical Judaism
many feel that in Biblical Judaism, the Bible is the final authority and recognizes Jesus is the Messiah, and Biblical Jews are Messianic Jews and is consistent with Biblcial Christianity
.. whereas the same feel that in Rabinic Judaism, the consensus of rabbis may reject Jesus as Messiah, despite the scriptures
Islam is quite different from both in some ways, the scriptures are different, God is richer in mercy in both Chrstianity, New and Old Testmane for example Islam recognizes however that Jesus is virgin born, the Messiah adn coming again and a prophet, Rabbinic Judaisn does not
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All the conservative ones tend to believ in an almight God of creation
All believe in mercy and justice in their own ways
All share many of the prophets although the content of the prophesies of the individuals may differ
Christianity and Messianic Judaism confess Jesus as Messiah
Christianity and very conservative Judaism both claim the Old Testamaent is reliable and God's word
Chrsitianity and Judaism tend to allow more respectful voicing of minority opinions and dissagreement,but this really depends on the individuals and hard to generalize
Islam and Judaism both deny Jesus rose
Islam feels it is a sin to call God father or say He has a son
and in this regard it ismore a question of what is true... if it is true it is not a sin
2006-10-13 15:03:31
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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While all are different, Judaism and Christianity are more similar than Islam is with either of them. Much of what Christians think of as soley Christian actually comes from the Old Testament. Jesus's famous quote: Love god with all your heart and all your mind and all your soul and all your strength, and love your neighbor as yourself -- the very foundation of Christianity -- is an old testament quote. Christians have the old testament -- Muslim's dont. They only have some references to it in the Koran, with some interesting approaches -- for example, when Gabriel appeared to Mary, the mother of Jesus ("Mariam" in the Koran) he addressed her as Moses' sister (Miriam). An easy mistake to make -- confusing Marium with Mirium -- except that Moses and his sister Miriam lived about 1500 years before Mariam -- I mean Mary. Another interesting twist -- remember Joseph's interpretation of dreams while he was in prison? Remember the baker, whom Joseph said would be "impaled upon a stake"? The Koran said the baker was "crucified" -- a torture developed by the Romans some thousand years later.
The koran just has references to the old testament -- Christianity considers the Old Testament part of our holy scripture.
2006-10-13 15:34:59
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answer #4
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answered by Freedom 4
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Neither. Christians and Jews share many of the same beliefs, at least up until the time of Jesus Christ. Christianity (to Christians) is the fulfillment of the Jewish faith. After Christ, however, the two faiths part ways.
2006-10-13 15:02:28
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answer #5
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answered by CrazyChick 7
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Islam probably has more in common with Judaism, thats probably why they fight so much.
Christianity is very unique in that it acknowledges Jesus as the Son of God of whom I believe can save us all if we let him!
Jesus answered, "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me." -John 14:6
2006-10-13 15:16:10
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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Islam. i think of Mama gave an extremely precise answer; i've got not greater to characteristic, yet do ought to make a minor correction to a diverse poster: Halal is somewhat much less strict than Kashrut. people who shop on with Islamic nutritional regulations can consume Kosher, yet people who shop on with Jewish nutritional regulations might have a challenge with some Halal meals or coaching.
2016-10-19 08:54:08
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answer #7
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answered by kreitzer 4
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Judaism and Islam are closer in laws and traditions.
Chrsitianity is all messed up since the Council of Nicea in 325AD
2006-10-13 15:01:41
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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There is no difference in any of these religions. They all believe in a powerful God that loves us and wants that love to extend to all of his children.
The problems in the world are not from religions, but from individuals that twist the word of God to fit their needs. I'm sure you'll get some sick answers that reflect that.
2006-10-13 16:28:54
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answer #9
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answered by Common Sense 7
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Neither of your choices are correct. The answer would be Christianity and Judaism. Have you never heard the term Judeo-Christian pertaining to our similar tenants?
2006-10-13 15:02:39
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answer #10
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answered by Robert L 4
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