But the one God theory we have to admit is a Christian perspective? And one Islam doesn’t restrict itself to.
I don’t know what you mean by this. Again, in my experience Muslims generally say that we worship the same God. Clearly not all do, as the recent Muslim poster here shows, not to mention the attempt in Malaysia to ban Christians from calling God “Allah.”
Final answer?

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I have no idea what you mean. I do wish you would stop trying to be cutesy and cryptic or whatever you are trying to do. It’s probably just your way of expressing yourself, and mine is unclear as well at times, I know. But it comes across as very demeaning and insulting. (I know that this is true of my way of expressing myself sometimes too, and I try to work on that

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You can’t know a thing without Gods grace, what happened in Islam?
You appear to be endorsing the “divine illumination theory” which was common before the time of Aquinas. I have a soft spot for it too. But Vatican I clearly endorsed Aquinas’ view that God can be known by natural reason.
Of course it depends on what you mean by grace. We can’t even
exist except by God sustaining us. But insofar as there’s a theological distinction between nature and grace, the Church seems to have come down pretty clearly on the side of Aquinas’ view that we can know things, and even God [not a personal knowledge but a knowledge that God exists and has certain attributes] by natural reason.
I agree but that ignorance resolved itself by Gods grace. And Paul never killed another soul, very much on the contrary. My point still stands, what happened to Mohammed? Still in ignorance thus no divine revelation.
I don’t know where you think I’m arguing that Muhammad experienced divine revelation. If he did, he clearly understood it badly in a number of ways

I’m certainly not arguing the point. I think the Qur’an is perfectly explicable as the work of a very remarkable, poetic intellect under the influence of garbled versions of Judaism and Christianity.
Could have been demonic I would rule that out either.
I don’t rule out demonic deception either, although I’m uncomfortable with the category of “demonic revelation” (I tend to think that demons can’t “reveal,” exactly, but can only distort what God is revealing). Nor do I think that it’s a good habit to jump to demonic explanations of other people’s beliefs. It doesn’t foster habits of charity and justice, and from a purely rational point of view it violates Occam’s razor.
Like Mohammed a god not God. God is the Father son and Holy spirit is The one and only. And not the same God as the jews all self admitted by Islam. I do believe we should respect them and not impose other thinking on them.
Where do you find any educated or official Islamic voices saying that they worship a different God from either Jews or Christians? Historically, it seems to me that Muslims have quite clearly affirmed that they do. Clearly there are exceptions these days, but I would put that down to the rise of modern fundamentalism. Again, as I said before some pretty conservative Muslims I encountered in Fort Wayne, who left no doubt that they thought we would go to hell if we didn’t become Muslim, were clear that they believed we all worship the same God. I think this is by far the majority position among Muslims.
But God is the Father son and Holy spirit is The one and only according to your definition of God and god. So they worship god by your own definition.
No. They don’t worship a god (“God” without an article refers to the one God). They worship God, just as people did before the coming of Jesus. I don’t see why this is so hard to get across.
Oh I get what it means just fine. But I see your back to forcing a Christian perspective on it. And one Islam does not accept.
I’m not “forcing”–I view things from a Christian perspective, naturally. But the fact that in my experience (except for the one poster on this forum and the reports I’ve heard from Malaysia) Muslims pretty clearly think they worship the same God we do certainly confirms my commitment to this position. If Muslims did consistently say that we worship a different God, it wouldn’t change my position, but it would make me less zealous in contesting the issue.
Muslims misunderstand the Trinity pretty badly (though as meltzerboy just pointed out, many Christians do too!), and in my experience seem to think that Allah is equivalent to God the Father, and that we err by “associating” two other beings with Allah.
People profess many things.
That’s not the part on which my argument rests. It’s the phrase “together with us they adore the one, merciful God.” I think that’s pretty clear, especially the “together with us.”
The plan of salvation is none other that Jesus Christ and the Good News of his public revelation. All of which Mohammed rejected.
Whatever it is they profess, its not that. :
Right. But it embraces them anyway, according to Church teaching!
Edwin