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

Muslims you say allah and we say God, are they the same person (spirit)?

2007-11-02 21:47:06 · 35 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

Ahh the moon god, that is right thank you much people. I forgot about that part, in a minute watch out for my new question that will destroy the muslim faith.

2007-11-02 22:04:20 · update #1

35 answers

NO, Absolutely NOT!!..Allah is a false god , Mohamed is a false prophet, and Islam is a false religion...Inspired by Satan.
This is very easy to prove. Many examples, but I will list a very big one here.....JESUS CHRIST !..........
1. Koran- Jesus is not the son of God, just a prophet. lower than Mohamed...In Islam, Jesus did not die on the Cross, and Resurrect Himself to save the whole world. Mohamed
could not even save himself, let alone the rest of the world !!!
It says Allah has no children in the Koran.............
2. The Bible- Jesus is the first begotten son of God. Conceived of the Holy Spirit, Born of a virgin,..lived a perfect sinless life, then was crucified until His death..Resurrected Himself on the third day...Then He (Jesus) ascended to Heaven..............
3. That difference right there puts the Koran and the Bible at 180' opposites of each other!!..And only one account of Jesus can be right, so that means that one of them is is lying.
And a lot more of the Bible has been backed up by secular
historical records.....so we know it is the true one !!!
And if this answer is offensive to you, don't be mad at me...I am just speaking the truth...Better to be mad now and repent.
Turn away from the false beliefs of Islam, and turn to Jesus..

2007-11-02 23:14:28 · answer #1 · answered by ? 5 · 6 2

Allah means God in Arabic. So the English word is God and the Arabic word is Allah. Simple question you asked and I gave a simple answer. Don't have a clue why others ahve given paragraphs and quotes!

2016-04-02 02:05:43 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

The Muslim and Christian view of God have many similarities. Muslims and Christians agree that there is one God who is the Creator of everything in the universe. Both view God as sovereign, omnipotent, omniscient, omnipresent, holy, just, and righteous. In these ways, Christians and Muslims worship the same God. However, there are also significant differences between Islam and Christianity’s view of God. While Allah possesses the attributes of love, mercy, and grace, Allah does not demonstrate these attributes in the same manner as the biblical God acts.

The most important difference, though, between the Muslim and Christian view of God is the concept of the Trinity. Christians believe that God has revealed Himself as one God in three Persons: God the Father, the Son of God (Jesus), and the Holy Spirit.

2007-11-02 21:54:14 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 4 1

YES.
Allah is the Arabic for God. Even Arab Christians call God Allah and in the Arabic bible God is called as Allah. So, I hope it's clear. Obviously the concept of that one God and they way all religion approaches Him are different. Muslims and Jews worship that one God as in one but Christians worship that one God as in trinty.

No, Allah is not the moon GOD. The crescent moon was later invented by the Ottoman Turks if not mistaken as a symbol of Islam but that's pretty much all about it. I heard the day Prophet Muhammad received the the first revelation from GOD, there was a crescent moon on the sky.

2007-11-02 22:23:46 · answer #4 · answered by Mr.POP 5 · 2 3

"Allah" is the Arabic word for "God." However, although the terminology is the same, the understanding and perception of the character God is not from the Muslims and Jews/Christians. In other words, the God of Muslims and the God of the Jews/Christians are like 2 different Persons, although God is just One.

2007-11-02 21:55:42 · answer #5 · answered by Jedidiah 3 · 4 2

Obviously not, since Muslims say their Allah cannot have children, and God can.

2007-11-02 22:38:08 · answer #6 · answered by BC 6 · 4 0

In Islam, God is Allah. This means (God) the Creator and the Owner of the whole universe and all things.

Allah Subhanahu Wa Ta'la is the only Diety.

Goa is not a person neither a spirit, He is a great Creator. We have no ability to percept Allah Subhanahu Wa Ta'la, we only can see what He creates around us. From their compact creation and the miraclous nature of the universe, we percet that there is Only One Creator for all of these.

Allah Subhanahu Wa Ta'la, did not leave us without learning. Allah sent Prophets and messengers to learn us the nature of life and how to worship him only by evidences that call our minds.

2007-11-02 22:13:43 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 1 4

No, the god of the Bible, whom Christians and Jews worship, otherwise known as Jehovah, is NOT the same god whom the Muslims worship. Allah is a moon god, hence the crescent symbol. You may have noticed Muslims never say "we all worship the same god"; only naive Christians say that! Further proof that Muslims don't think we all worship the same god is that they call anyone who doesn't follow Allah an infidel.

2007-11-02 21:52:43 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 6 5

It depends on who you ask. There are people who converted from Islam to Christianity and still call God, Allah, because that is their word for God if I'm not mistaken.

However the God of the Qu'ran and the God of the Bible are different.

2007-11-02 21:51:38 · answer #9 · answered by Thomas The Servant 4 · 6 3

It refers to God though both factions believe they are different........You ought to know there are many more references made in different parts of the world divided over thousands of religious beliefs...so you can only say though the Muslim and Christian believe that theirs is the only true God / Allah....God is for all mankind and you can refer to him as whatever your language, nation ....calls...I am sure he is not going to be perturbed.......

2007-11-02 23:53:13 · answer #10 · answered by su 2 · 0 2

fedest.com, questions and answers