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2007-03-21 15:04:00 · 22 answers · asked by Chad H 1 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

22 answers

Jesus is my Lord and Savior. He is only God who has come to the earth to show us how to have a personal relationship with God. He was here in a human form so He knows how it is here. He is the only God who has made the way for us to heaven. We need to accept Him as our Lord and Savior. : )

2007-03-21 15:20:05 · answer #1 · answered by SeeTheLight 7 · 1 1

1. He is the one God, Who has no partner.
2. Nothing is like Him. He is the Creator, not created, nor a part of His creation.
3. He is All-Powerful, absolutely Just.
4. There is no other entity in the entire universe worthy of worship besides Him.
5. He is First, Last, and Everlasting; He was when nothing was, and will be when nothing else remains.
6. He is the All-Knowing, and All-Merciful,the Supreme, the Sovereign.
7. It is only He Who is capable of granting life to anything.
8. He sent His Messengers (peace be upon them) to guide all of mankind.
9. He sent Muhammad (pbuh) as the last Prophet and Messenger for all mankind.
10. His book is the Holy Qur'an, the only authentic revealed book in the world that has been kept without change.
11. Allah knows what is in our hearts.

2007-03-21 23:22:34 · answer #2 · answered by BeHappy 5 · 0 0

"God" follows from the argument from contingency which draws on the distinction between things that exist necessarily and things that exist contingently.

Something is “necessary” if it could not possibly have failed to exist. The laws of mathematics are often thought to be necessary. It is plausible to say that mathematical truths such as two and two making four hold irrespective of the way that the world is. Even if the world were radically different, it seems, two and two would still make four.

Something is “contingent” if it is not necessary, i.e. if it could have failed to exist. Most things seem to exist contingently. All of the human artifacts around us might not have existed; for each one of them, whoever made it might have decided not to do so. Their existence, therefore, is contingent. You and I, too, might not have existed; our respective parents might never have met, or might have decided not to have children, or might have decided to have children at a different time. Our existence, therefore, is contingent. Even the world around us seems to be contingent; the universe might have developed in such a way that none of the observable stars and planets existed at all.

The argument from contingency rests on the claim that the universe, as a whole, is contingent. It is not only the case, the argument suggests, that each of the things around is us contingent; it is also the case that the whole, all of those things taken together, is contingent. It might have been the case that nothing existed at all. The state of affairs in which nothing existed at all is a logically possible state of affairs, even though it is not the actual state of affairs.

It is this that the argument from contingency takes to be significant. It is because it is thought that the universe exists contingently that its existence is thought to require explanation. If the universe might not have existed, then why does it exist? Proponents of the cosmological argument suggest that questions like this always have answers. The existence of things that are necessary does not require explanation; their non-existence is impossible. The existence of anything contingent, however, does require explanation. They might not have existed, and so there must be some reason that they do so.

Critics of the argument from contingency have sometimes questioned whether the universe is contingent, but it remains at least plausible to think that it is so.

The only adequate explanation of the existence of the contingent universe, the argument from contingency suggests, is that there exists a necessary being on which its existence it rests. For the existence of the contingent universe must rest on something, and if it rested on some contingent being then that contingent being too would require some explanation of its existence. The ultimate explanation of the existence of all things, therefore, must be the existence of some necessary being. This necessary being is readily identified by proponents of the cosmological argument as "God."

The argument from contingency, then, can be summarized as follows:

(1) Everything that exists contingently has a reason for its existence.

(2) The universe exists contingently.

Therefore:

(3) The universe has a reason for its existence.

(4) If the universe has a reason for its existence then that reason is "God".

Therefore:

(5) "God" exists.

2007-03-21 22:34:50 · answer #3 · answered by Charles 6 · 0 0

God is turning out to be a culture from another planet that visited our primitive earth and man of the that time turned them in to Gods because they did not know any better.

In modern time the indoctrinated are tying their hardest to bury the truth.

Hey that is just what they are finding out through the study of ancient Sumerian civilization and the religious can't handle the truth.

To those that are religious get your head out of your bibles long enough to learn a more documented truth.

2007-03-21 22:18:36 · answer #4 · answered by T-Rex 5 · 0 0

The God that created the universe and everything that is of all physical matter, and gives everything that the body desires is one. The God of want

The God that has already created u, and pours wisdom from her words on to u, so u will not starve, she blew air into u, and u stood on your feet and u walked, she opened your mind to teach u knowledge, is another. The God of need

Which God u choose to worship is up to u.

2007-03-21 22:20:02 · answer #5 · answered by matrix_1982 1 · 1 0

The apostle paul said  "For even though there are those who are called “gods,” whether in heaven or on earth, just as there are many “gods” and many “lords,” there is actually to us one God the Father, out of whom all things are, and we for him; and there is one Lord, Jesus Christ, through whom all things are, and we through him." (1 Corinthians 8:5-6) This one God, the Father has a name; a name that his enemy Satan has tried to obscure or erase from even God's own word the Bible. (Compare various Bible translations and you will notice this) In the King James Version of 1611 you will find this name at Psalms 83:18 where it says: 18That men may know that thou, whose name alone is JEHOVAH, art the most high over all the earth.

2007-03-22 00:37:18 · answer #6 · answered by babydoll 7 · 0 0

God is a supreme being from everlasting to everlasting and created every thing . He reigns in heaven , and came to earth in human form named Jesus , Immanuel ( God with us ) to pay for the sins of the believers.

2007-03-21 22:09:10 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

"You alone, Jehovah, are the God above all other gods in supreme charge of all the earth." (Psalms 83:18)

Is There Only One True God?
- Figments of the Imagination
- Jesus, the Angels, and the Devil http://www.watchtower.org/e/200602b/article_01.htm

2007-03-22 05:02:05 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

God who created for you all that in the earth ; then he turned towards the heavens and perfected them as seven heavens ; and he has perfect knowledge of everything

2007-03-21 22:26:44 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

God is the Creator. His name is Jehovah, meaning "He Causes to Become." Which means that He can become or accomplish whatever is needed to fulfill His purpses. Jehovah God is the only one we should worship.

2007-03-22 15:55:35 · answer #10 · answered by shibboleth839505 2 · 0 0

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