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

Jesus did not speak English or hebrew, but he spoke Aramaic, the original language of Jesus. find out the God that Jesus worshiped. type down the word God in that Aramaic dictionary.
http://www.peshitta.org/lexicon/

and if u insist that Jesus did not speak Aramaic, then here is an evidence that he actually did:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aramaic_language

brother and sisters, why being stubborn to believe in Allah the most generous to you, who created you and created Jesus Son of Mary from a word of God and supported him with the holyspirit for a sign to the children of Israel that he is their Massiah?

2007-03-22 10:26:43 · 88 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

88 answers

Yes, of course Jesus spoke Aramaic. There's no dispute over that. I fail to see how that's a case for Islam.

2007-03-22 10:29:32 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 27 2

Yes, Jesus spoke Aramaic, and Hebrew both... It is well known that Jesus Spoke Aramaic... I'm not sure of the question here. Allah, is the Aramaic word for God.... It sounds like you are inferring that they are different... The fact is that The God of Abraham is the God of the Jews, the God of the Christians, and the God of Muslims... The Same God, so if you are asking if I as a Christian, believe in Allah, the answer is yes!!! They are one in the same... I call Him God, you refer to him as Allah... The difference is the Christians and Jews for that matter do not follow the teachings of Muhammad... Still not sure what your question was!

2007-03-22 11:42:47 · answer #2 · answered by jonbjammin 5 · 0 1

Jesus did speak Arabic, although the reason for establishing this fact is beyond my knowledge. Many Christians say, that Allah is not their creator or whatever they want to call it, but they don't understand that it is just God in another language. So few people realize how much Christianity, Judaism, and Islam actually parallel each other. The Quran and the Old Testament are extremely similar as well. these three religions believe in the same general God. Everyone is so caught up in being right, they look for differences instead of similarities. That is why the world sucks ***. Nice job world, lets kill each other because we can't agree on the significance of Jesus.

2007-03-22 11:43:16 · answer #3 · answered by diziPPP 4 · 0 2

Jesus did speak Aramaic. That doesn't mean that He worshiped the god of the Muslims. He was God, incarnate, and claimed that He was. Was put to death because He claimed that He was. Proved it by rising from the dead. He was not a created being. He was the Word of God that spoke all things into existance. (John 1:1)
He said," before Abraham was, I am." (John 8:58) In your own language you should know what that means.

Now, why can't you believe what He said?

2007-03-22 11:26:02 · answer #4 · answered by jb 2 · 1 1

Yes, Jesus did speak aramiac, I believe he spoke both hebrew and aramaic. Aramiac was widely used as a trade language among the ancients. Aramaic was not spoken in synagoge. Hebrew was.

So, Jesus probably spoke and knew several languages.

1. Hebrew That would be the language used in the temple in jeruaslem. Jews who worshipped in the Temple spoke hebrew, not aramaic.
2. Aramaic. As a carpenter, he would have worked on commissions, that is being paid to do or build specific pieces.
3. If Joseph had done work for the Herods, greek probably would have come in handy.
4. And lets not forget that during the time in Egypt, Jesus would have had playmates in the jewish community, and non jewish community. so, being able to speak egyptian arabic would have been a plus.
5. Remember, Jesus is capable of speaking all languages!

But while the guessing of what language he spoke, or did not speak, is interesting. What he did with his life is much more interesting!!!!! Healing cripples, raising people from the dead. Taking away the sins that weve commited, is much more important!!!!1

2007-03-22 11:00:44 · answer #5 · answered by rss_beatty 4 · 2 3

I have known since I was a child that Jesus spoke Aramaic. I've also known since I was a child that Yahweh, Jehovah, and Allah are all names used by the three Abrahamic religions for the same deity. For centuries, countless thousands of good people have died in stupid religious wars fighting over such trivial details as God's proper name. That's why people in the West simply call Him God. It's a lot less inflammatory than choosing sides by preferring one name over another. Since you live in America, it's your perfect right to call Him whatever you wish. Just know that if you call Him Allah, you are insulting those who call Him Yahweh or Jehovah and one day some religious extremest will repay your insult by taking your life. The truth is, there aren't enough police in America to protect us all from each other. It is better to avoid conflict with our neighbors by using language that is not an insult to those whose beliefs are different than ours. This is why Westerners refer to Him by his title, God, rather than by His name. It allows us to be sensitive to the feelings of our neighbors who have different beliefs.

2007-03-22 12:07:27 · answer #6 · answered by Diogenes 7 · 0 0

Please read thoroughly... Because...; I believe that there is not a religious "god", but a sole CREATOR, not just a creator of one lonely world, but a creator of many worlds and many galaxies, No, I'm not one of those types saying 'hail all' for the aliens, that is redundant, but there is only one CREATOR, and that is whatever the CREATOR is... I do not believe in a worldly "god".... I believe that Muhammad and Jesus were here for a reason, true, to show us the tru meaning of living, there are so many aspects on the facts of life, but so many of the worlds modern societies are misguided and lead themselves to a doom of their own. I do not believe in hell nor heaven, for when asked of hell, Jesus split the ground and of the heavens he pointed to the sky. There is no way a "god" of love and forgiveness would doom a person to hell for eternity for a mere 60 yrs of hardship an trial on this here earth... Muhammad and Jesus were both great spiritual leaders and prophets, tru, but never once did either of them mention the words "Christianity" or " Muslum",, they were not religious leaders but they were very wise!!! They tried to show humans a way of good life, without all the negativities of which we have today... And so very tru that jesus did did not speak english, he did speak Aramaic, but, with research, he also spoke hebrew, which is why the jews had punished him to death is it not??? How could the jews condemn a man in which they knew not what he spoke??? Mere translators, i think otherwise... Regardless,, I would love to hear your feedback and thoughts... Thank you... Asalaam alaykem...

2007-03-22 11:39:18 · answer #7 · answered by elsuicidareydecorazones 1 · 0 1

The christian, jewish and muslim god are one in the same. Of the sons of Abraham, jews, and from jews, christians came from Isaac. Muslims came from Ishmael.

For those who believe "thier" god couldn't say, do, etc the same as the islamic god, just think of the differences in the christian religion. One christian could say god loves all, another kills a homosexual for that same god.

You have need to get a better grasp of logic.
First, Wikipedia is not useful as a "proof", often inaccurate info is there as it is the users who are authors.
Second, the word god is not specific of a particular god, Zeus is a god, and if he were my diety I may refer to him as God. It doesn't make that god the same as any other. You showed only the language difference of a noun.
Third, you are making a inappropriate assumption that your readers subscribe to the idea of religion. That they believe in only one diety, as opposed to two or more, and that thier single diety is male.
Forth, you are making an assumption that there was such a person as jesus as a prophet/part of god/etc.

If you truely wanted to use proof, you should start with three and four, so your basis would be sound, then move on to how the dieties are the same. Although Abraham comes from bible, I know it only as a work of fiction. It is the same as discussing the family tree of Sirius Black. And yet I do not believe in Lord Voldermort.

2007-03-22 13:02:41 · answer #8 · answered by Giggles 4 · 0 1

I don't believe that my God is Allah simply because at the time Muhammad claimed to have received his first visitation, there were 300 gods being worshipped in Mecca by pilgrims who came there each year to pray at the Ka'aba, a small cubic building that housed a black meteorite and effigies of the various gods. One of those gods was Allah, the moon god.
Muhammad decided to proclaim that there was only one god - and he selected Allah as that god. That's the reason the crescent moon became the symbol of Islam. Muhammad also proclaimed that he was the prophet of Allah.
Initially, Muhammad expected both Jews and Christians to receive his new revelation. Thus, early passages in the Koran speak admiringly of "the people of the Book." These are the passages that Muslims in the West love to quote in their effort to prove that Islam is a tolerant religion. An example is Sura 5:82 which says: "You will find that those who are nearest in love to the believers [Muslims] are those who say, 'We are Christians.'"
But when the Jews and Christians rejected Muhammad, he turned fiercely against them, and later passages in the Koran speak of them disparagingly:
Sura 5:51 commands Muslims not to take Jews and Christians as friends.
Sura 9:29 commands Muslims to fight against Jews and Christians until they either submit to Allah or else agree to pay a special tax.
Sura 2:65-66 and Sura 5:60 contain references to Jews and Christians as "apes and swine to be despised and rejected."

I think that I have said enough (if you want me to say more as to why I don't accept Allah as god, let me know).

2007-03-22 11:53:59 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Sorry, your facts are in error. Jesus spoke Hebrew, not "aramaic".

God is not Allah, they're two separate beings. Read Rev 6:8 to find out what the Bible says is Allah's REAL name, and what naturally follows his current popularity.

As far as being stubborn, you should ask yourself.
.

2007-03-22 11:25:33 · answer #10 · answered by s2scrm 5 · 3 1

Aramaic is a northwest Semitic language closely related to Hebrew. The earliest Aramaic inscriptions date from the ninth-tenth centuries BC Its square script replaced the Hebrew archaic script, and by the time of Jesus was the normal script for writing in Hebrew.
You seem to think that Aramaic is a close cousin of Arabic; you are so wrong.
Some of you Muslims are so confused!

2007-03-22 10:49:59 · answer #11 · answered by Anonymous · 3 2

fedest.com, questions and answers