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Jesus did not speak English, but he spoke a language called Aramaic. that was his original language. now go head type down the word God in that Aramaic-English dictionary and find who is really is. type down the word God.

http://www.peshitta.org/lexicon/

anyone who disbelieve after this, had to be very stubborn, this is your God.

2007-01-17 15:13:53 · 23 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

23 answers

this is true if you watch the Passion of Christ you will hear him say Allah when talking about and too God

2007-01-17 15:22:09 · answer #1 · answered by Layla 6 · 2 0

Well, the spelling of the Aramaic word for God is alef-lamed-heh-alef (corresponding with Arabic alif-lam-ha-alif). In Aramaic, the definite article comes at the end, and the Aramaic word for deity or god is spelled alef-lamed-heh (just like ilah in Arabic), therefore this might literally be thought of as "the God". I have seen some argue that Allaah in Arabic is a contraction of the corresponding construction, "al-ilah" (the God), but I have seen many more deny such. Whatever the case, how is this Aramaic word for God pronounced? Well, in some forms of Syriac it is Alaha, and others it is Aloho. But Jesus was a first century Jew, and thus spoke Jewish Aramaic (similar to that which is found in the Jewish Targums and the two Talmuds), and the pronunciation of the word in Jewish Aramaic is Elaha. Whatever the case, yes, the Aramaic word for God is very close to Allaah (which should not be surprising, since Aramaic and Arabic are very close). But I doubt Jesus said exactly "Allaah" in Arabic (but the difference would be minor).

2016-05-24 02:16:32 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

HELLO EVERYBODY< JESUS AND HIS FELLOW JEWS IN PALESTINE DID NOT SPEAK HEBREW, THEY SPOKE ARAMAIC. THE WORD FOR GOD WAS "ALAHA".

Now, unlike my muslim brother, I do not claim that this means that Jesus was praying to Allah. In fact, it is a coincidence that the words *sound* the same (though they're from the same root)

Sorry brother, your intention is good, but you are misguided. The Arabic word for God is ALLAH, from al-ilah "the God" the aramaic doesn't have a word for 'the' that works this way. So actually, Aramaic "alaha" is only related to the second part of Arabic al-ilah. alaha=ilah NOT alaha=allah.

Your heart is in the right place, akhy, but you are wrong, I'm sorry.

2007-01-17 15:22:13 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Jesus was not around in the Old Testament and would have spoken Hebrew and Greek. Just because the word allah is the word for god does not mean that this is the same god as the muslim religion. The word god in english speaks of a lot of gods, but the God of the Bible is another story. YHWH, Jehovah, Emmanuel, King of Kings, Lord of Lords, I am, Provider, and many more names for the God of the Bible.
Just using a generic word for the muslim god does not make him the same god as in the bible. I can say that muslims, hindus, christians, all worship god. That does not mean it is the same god for each one. You want to make allah into a personal name when it is a generic term.
The god of the muslim is not my god, my god is very different from the god of the muslim. call your god whatever you want, but we don't worship the same god..

2007-01-17 15:22:16 · answer #4 · answered by † PRAY † 7 · 0 1

Aramaic Hebrew=Yahweh.<><

2007-01-17 15:21:36 · answer #5 · answered by funnana 6 · 0 2

Anyone can say they worship God or Allah, but what matters are the character qualities that one attaches to their God. This alone determines if they are worshiping a false god or not.

Islam attaches character qualities to their god that are not consistent with Jesus Christ's teachings, therefore Islam is worshiping a different god than those who profess and follow Jesus Christ.

2007-01-17 15:38:31 · answer #6 · answered by NONAME 4 · 0 1

I seeked Gods face, and asked If His name was Allah, God said Back to me, I do not Know Allah. then I asked if it was Buddha, I Got a Devilish Dream with a hole bunch of demons Worshipping Buddha, then I asked is Your name Jesus, God spoke back with a soft Voice My name is not Jesus U do not Know MY name, as He spoke To me with softness he showed Me It was the Father I was Speaking To, Not his Son. That's what I know, As I searched To find Out If God excited or not by, simply seeking his face. My walk so far He is a Unknown God, would not tell me his name, But everyone Tell's me his Name Is Jehovah. I Got I am Here From him, when I was in a panic and thought that He Left me.

2007-01-17 15:34:42 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Not...He called God Father, and Jehovah.

Muslims (and Islam) say Jesus was a prophet but they reject all His teachings ....that is hypocrisy.

They reject Christ's divinity;
they reject his claim to be the Son of God;
they reject his death on the cross...
they reject His ressurrection..
They reject Jesus is the Christ/ Messiah...
Need I say more...?

Don't be deceived. The Islamic god is totally different than the God of Jesus Christ.

The Bible calls Muhammed and those like him false prophets:
"Who is a liar but he that denies that Jesus is the Christ? He is anti-Christ, that denies the Father and the Son. He that denies the Son, the same has not the Father." (I John 2:22)

2007-01-17 15:16:46 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 4 2

Jesus Christ is God! To answer your question, NO, Jesus did not worship the pre-islamic moon god, allah. Why would He?

2007-01-17 15:19:20 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

all that you are proving is he said God in his language Allah means God but what you belive God to be and how you chose to belive it is what counts it also means beliving or not beliving in Jesus Christ

2007-01-17 15:19:15 · answer #10 · answered by auzzie_bloke21 2 · 0 0

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