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

14 answers

As best as I can tell, the beliefs of the Old Testament of the Bible they all have in common. The idea that man fell from perfection because of his falling for the idea of becoming more than he was (by gaining knowledge of good and evil) and that now man needs a redeemer seems to be the underlying theme of all three religions.

Judaism believes that the savior (Messiah) hasn't come yet. But that when He does He will deliver the Jews in their hour of need. Christians believe that the Savior came in the form of Jesus, who saved us in our hour of need by dying for our sins. Muslims believe the Savior came in the form of Mohammed, who gave teachings that are supposed to bring us back to God by showing how to serve Him properly.

But all three religions agree that man needs(ed) a Savior to restore us to what we once were--perfect creations of God.

2006-12-19 03:36:09 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Well all three religions can all claim ancestry to Abraham. One of his sons descendants are supposed to be the Muslims, and the other sons descendants are the Jews and ultimately the Christians since the Jews begot the Christians. So ultimately they all believe in the same God head whether they call him Allah, Jehovah, or Yahweh, the difference comes in terms of who they believe was his highest prophet. From my understanding, Muslims believe this was Muhammed, yet the Jews and Christians both deny the existance of a prophet by the name of Muhammed. The Christians believe that not only was Christ God's highest prophet but was God himself manifested as a man and thus is the Messiah. The Muslims acknowledge a prophet by the name of Jesus but deny he was Gods highest prophet. And the Jews I believe don't even believe that Christ existed and the few that due believe he was a person of no significance. The Jews are still waiting for their Messiah. All three religions are monotheistic and all claim Jerusalem as a holy city each occupying certain areas of the city-Muslims(The Dome of the Rock), Jews(Wailing/Temple Wall), and Chrisitans(Church of the Holy Sepulchre). Hope this help!

2006-12-19 04:23:22 · answer #2 · answered by jetsetter 1 · 0 0

Monotheism. The after life ? Christianity starts with the New Testament. Judiasm with the Old Testament. No Judiasm,no Christianity. Jesus was a Jew. Islam has only one Prophet. But, they believe in the after life like Christians. I don't know if Judiasm permits the after life. I've seen Islamic and Christian depictions of Angels. But, Im not sure if religous Jews believe in that.

2006-12-19 03:43:51 · answer #3 · answered by sandwreckoner 4 · 0 0

What you are looking for is on this website. It lists all of the similarities and differences and the origins of each religion. First came judaism, then came christianity, then islam.

http://www.religionfacts.com/islam/comparison_charts/islam_judaism_christianity.htm

2006-12-19 03:46:49 · answer #4 · answered by trvlbug 2 · 0 0

The 5 Pillars of Islam are all based off issues in Judaism. one million. Shahada--statement of religion. In Judaism, we've some thing referred to as the Shma, which we are referred to as to recite a number of circumstances an afternoon, in simple terms as Muslims could recite the Shahada...in spite of the reality that the Shma is a lot longer than the Shahada, they the two serve the comparable purpose. 2. Salah--praying 5 circumstances an afternoon. In Judaism, Jewish adult males are required to desire thrice an afternoon. 3. Zaka--almsgiving. In Judaism, we've tzdekah, which interprets to justice, yet is charity. we are required to offer between 10 and 20% of our earnings to the less fortunate. 4. Sawm--fasting. In Judaism, we quickly to do not forget the terrible issues that have befallen the Jewish human beings and additionally to make ourselves closer to G-d on Yom Kippur. 5. Hajj--pilgrimage. in simple terms as Muslims are required to make a pilgrimage to Mecca as quickly as of their lives, so are Jews required to make pilgrimages to Jerusalem thrice a 12 months (in the event that they might)

2016-12-30 15:51:02 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

All of them believe in God, believe in Abraham as the messenger of God, there are some difference after that. Judaism believe in Mosses & Jibraele as partners of the God, Christianity believe Jesus as the son of the God and Islam believe in only one God and the day of judgement, and believe Abraham, Mosses, Jesus and Mohammad PBUH and many other historical figures as the human being and messangers of God. Islam also makes all accountable to their good or bad acts and believe in the reward for good acts and punishment for bad ones.

2006-12-19 03:57:03 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Simply stated all three share the same original Hebrew texts. We Christians see clear evidence of Jesus as God in many of it's passages. Muslims however, are taught that the study of these original texts are secondary to the teachings and example of Mohammad.

2006-12-19 03:40:54 · answer #7 · answered by FreeRadical 3 · 0 0

we believe in the same god, but people get confused because muslims call our god Allah. That is because since the Quran is in Arabic, the word God in Arabic is Allah. So Allah is the same as Yahweh, just different language.

2006-12-19 05:45:27 · answer #8 · answered by .....u made me do it 2 · 0 0

Well we all believe in One God.

I am a Bahai, and Baha'ullah teaches us that there is only One God , One race, One religion.

Meg
http://www.bahai.us/

2006-12-19 03:30:16 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

They focus on one Divine being (God,Allah)

2006-12-19 03:32:55 · answer #10 · answered by Hiroko 2 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers