Well the Jew and Muslim follow close enough dietary laws that they should get along fine as long as they don't talk politics.
2007-12-09 13:54:47
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answer #1
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answered by M. 2
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from a messianic zionist perspective once they began their critical thought discussion, God will intervene and show the Jew and the Muslim that Yeshua is the anointed One and they both would be persuaded and the Christian would understand the the pre-tribulation rapture theory is as off as is evolution and understand with the Jew and Muslim that ii thessalonians chapter one and two tells of Christ's glorious return will be shortly forthcoming,..and all other verses of the Second Advent prophecies are unfolding in our time and will tell their brethren of the Gospel,..they would eat and drink and have fellowship with one another in anticipation of the Gathering,..
on the other hand they may just argue as the atheist and evolutionist and christian do on this forum,..
matthew 13: 24-30 kjv preferred,..
i e a e,..
unificationist,..
2007-12-09 14:40:33
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answer #2
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answered by unificationist 2
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I have done it. It was not a big deal.
I was the Jew, we had a Muslim from Kuwait, and an Evangelical Christian, and two other guys who were not really actively anything.
And we all lived in one room for a few months.
It did help though that the Muslim was not observant, and I avoided talking about religion in genneral.
2007-12-09 14:03:28
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answer #3
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answered by Gamla Joe 7
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... and then the bartender said, "What's this, a joke?"
Seriously, it would depend on how religious they were, how strong their ethnic identity was, and their personal temperaments. I mean, it would be one thing if you had a nominal Muslim, a Unitarian, and an atheist Jew, and quite another if you had a hard-core political Muslim, a Lubavitcher Chassid, and a Jehova's Witness.
The latter arrangement would be very interesting to watch... from a distance.
2007-12-11 03:45:23
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answer #4
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answered by Melanie Mue 4
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This sounds like the beginning of a potentially lame joke!
I think it would depend on the personalities and characters of the three individuals. If they were all really entrenched in their respective dogmas, it could be pretty grim, if not downright violent! (Gee, just like the "real" world!)
2007-12-09 14:00:30
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answer #5
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answered by pat z 7
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They'd play a nice, long game of My Religion is Better Than Your Religion.
2007-12-09 13:59:47
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answer #6
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answered by I'm Still Here 5
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It depends on their attitudes toward each other.
They should establish common ground with each other, not argue, debate, or fight about who's in the "right religion" or who's going to "burn in hell-fire".
No one must be out to convert the other.
2007-12-09 22:09:58
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answer #7
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answered by Shafeeqah 5
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i think it would depend on the person...if the christian was very very orthodox, he may be racist to the other two, and likewise with the muslim and jew.
2007-12-09 13:54:41
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answer #8
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answered by Ali 2
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loose will, whilst permitting evil, is likewise a call for for romance. to that end, to do away with any danger of evil, God might additionally do away with the skill to love. a worldwide wherein persons might desire to love, even they might do evil, is larger than a worldwide devoid of the two love and evil. And God did no longer create evil (the be conscious is extra suitable translated "calamity"). He in elementary terms created the skill for evil, it is people who desperate to apply it.
2016-11-14 06:22:54
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answer #9
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answered by ross 4
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If they were fanatical fundamentalists they would argue night and day.
If they were liberal types they'd decide not to discuss religion and get along just fine.
2007-12-09 14:17:00
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answer #10
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answered by youngmoigle 5
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