Do Muslims Worship the Same God as Catholics?

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With respect it’s still a false challenge… see below
But still a valid question, surely?
You ask 100 people what it is in front of you. 99 say it’s a chair. One says it’s an elephant.
The fact that not everyone agreed does not mean you can’t know what it is in front of you. Thus not all Moslems have to agree to something for it to be considered Islamic
OK, I’m a little vague; so the chair is equivalent to what?

…and the elephant is equivalent to what?
 
I would LOVE some people on this thread to quit attacking Christians who know a lot about Islam and get back to the main topic as soon as possible. Thanks 🙂
 
I would LOVE some people on this thread to quit attacking Christians who know a lot about Islam and get back to the main topic as soon as possible. Thanks 🙂
I hope no-one feels attacked, whether they know a lot about Islam or not.

What is happening is that views are being challenged, as they will be; personally, I am trying to challenge portrayals of Christianity that, IMO, seem hypocritical or one-eyed in their approach to Islam. 🙂
 
Koran at-tavba 009: 005 Then, when the sacred months have passed, slay the idolaters wherever ye find them, and take them (captive), and besiege them, and prepare for them each ambush. But if they repent and establish worship and pay the poor-due, then leave their way free. Lo! Allah is Forgiving, Merciful.

The same chapter:

009:029 **Fight against **such of those who have been given the Scripture as believe not in Allah nor the Last Day, and forbid not that which Allah hath forbidden by His messenger, and follow not the Religion of Truth, until they pay the tribute readily, being brought low.

🙂 I hope someone will show me similar verses from the OT!
Do not think that i am trying to defend islam, cause i am not. However, im sure if you presented this to an islamic theologion, that he would argue that the interp that you are trying to imply from the words, is either out of context, or is wrong.

Prove to me that your interp is correct, since i see many things in the OT ( much of which i am told is in the koran) that, at first glance, make God appear to be unjust, such as asking Moses to slay children.
 
… “The prophet of Allah said: When a man calls his wife to satisfy his desire, let her come to him though she is occupied at the oven.” Mishkat al-Masabih, English translation, Book I, Section ‘Duties of husband and wife’, Hadith No. 61. Not only that, she is admonished for not doing so; “The prophet said: ‘When a man calls his wife to bed and she does not come, the husband spends the night being angry with her, and the angels curse her until morning. The one who is in heaven is displeased with her until the husband is pleased with her.’”(Sahih hadith, chapter 558).
This verse for example seems very mechanical, This is where i find error with Muhummads atitude towards God and what he thinks God is. Somebody who doesnt believe God to be reasonable, you would think that God cammands us to give are bodys against are freewill; when in fact, it is reasonable to assume that such a command is relitive to the emotional and physical state of the human beings involved. I do not believe that if my wife is upset or in some kind of destress, that an angel would be upset with her if she doesn’t want to have sex with me. God is perfect, and therefore is reasonable person; not just a cold mechanical, command and conquer type dude.
 
I once asked a Muslim if she believed in the same God as the Jews; the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. She said, “There’s only one God, Allah, and he is the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The Jews say they believe in the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; so yes.”

In my opinion, that left the question unanswered.
 
Once a person finds out that Islam claims to be a universal religion with everlasting decrees coming supposedly from Allah, that person never falls into the snare of making comparisons between the OT and the Islamic Scripture 😉

Peace,
Angelos N.
 
This verse for example seems very mechanical, This is where i find error with Muhummads atitude towards God and what he thinks God is. Somebody who doesnt believe God to be reasonable, you would think that God cammands us to give are bodys against are freewill; when in fact, it is reasonable to assume that such a command is relitive to the emotional and physical state of the human beings involved. I do not believe that if my wife is upset or in some kind of destress, that an angel would be upset with her if she doesn’t want to have sex with me. God is perfect, and therefore is reasonable person; not just a cold mechanical, command and conquer type dude.
Those “attributes” can very well be applied to Muhammad! Get the picture??:rolleyes:
 
I said it once, and I’ll say it again–Muslims profess to worship the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, so yes they do worship the same God we do…
Sure, they profess to worship God; But do they actually worship God.
We all worshhip the same GOD…
No we don’t; We all believe in the same GOD… but we don’t all worship Him.
Let me expand on that. We all worship the same God, it’s just some think God favors one of us over the other.
Wrong again. If you replace the word “worship” with “believe in”, then it makes sense.
 
Muslims pray 5 times a day and fast at least 30 days in a year.

The fact of the matter is that the average Christian in the West prays less often in a whole year than a practicing Muslim would pray in a single day.

The average Christian too would fast less often in his entire lifetime than a Muslim would fast in a single year.

Don’t Christians consider praying and fasting to be acts of worship?
 
We are in the middle of Lent. The Muslim fast is only during the day. At night they often stuff themselves. Many if not most Catholics pray daily. I pray the breviary 5 times a day and celebrate Mass, plus the rosary and other devotions. We have monks who pray much more then that. Also many Muslims don’t understand Arabic and so they don’t know what they are praying. Even when we used Latin our people had missals with translations, so they would know what was being said. The more I learn about it the less I am impressed with Islamic prayer.
 
What a lovely ad hominem! And so sarcastic too! Oh, I’m so impressed by your maturity and ever so grateful for your charity!
Thank you. I’m not super impressed by your argument to date.
(see below)
Keep going… Finish the sentence.

I R R A T I O N A L L Y

I wasn’t levelling that criticism at you specifically, but some people on this thread have made arguments that undermine both Islam and Christianity. That’s the thing that bothers me. And your sarcasm.
I didn’t think you were directing anything at only me.

The fact you think we can’t criticise Islam (regardless of capacity) based on a belief it’s an off-shoot of Christianity is not logical for
a) it doesn’t follow that we’re responsible for what they do with their faith
and
b) they’re not an off-shoot of Christianity, although I’m aware that some early Christians saw that them as mere heretics, but then so did some Jews.
 
But still a valid question, surely?
If you think so.
OK, I’m a little vague; so the chair is equivalent to what?

…and the elephant is equivalent to what?
You make the challenge that everyone must agree to something. You ask, in order to find out what that ‘something’ about Islam is, is by whether everyone agrees to it. Not everyone in Islam has to agree to it for it to be considered Islamic.

Exceptions don’t break the rule, in this case, nor with the chair example.
 
I hope no-one feels attacked, whether they know a lot about Islam or not.

What is happening is that views are being challenged, as they will be; personally, I am trying to challenge portrayals of Christianity that, IMO, seem hypocritical or one-eyed in their approach to Islam.
But your claims are so far evidence free. People give you evidence from the Koran and you provide no counter to this, except to speculate that it isn’t so… based as it is on your opinion that it isn’t so.

Even when people point out the differences in motive, you don’t address it.
 
Do not think that i am trying to defend islam, cause i am not. However, im sure if you presented this to an islamic theologion, that he would argue that the interp that you are trying to imply from the words, is either out of context, or is wrong.
I’m sure that they would, there’s many Islamic apologists about.

But, when you read in the Koran “Slay all the idolators” and you read in the Hadith that they should do this, and you read examples from history of people who did this, and of historical Islamic opinion that they should do this, and you hear clerics calling for holy war now, and you see people now blowing themselves up, the fact you can’t see a connection is truly amazing.
 
This verse for example seems very mechanical, This is where i find error with Muhummads atitude towards God and what he thinks God is. Somebody who doesnt believe God to be reasonable, you would think that God cammands us to give are bodys against are freewill; when in fact, it is reasonable to assume that such a command is relitive to the emotional and physical state of the human beings involved. I do not believe that if my wife is upset or in some kind of destress, that an angel would be upset with her if she doesn’t want to have sex with me. God is perfect, and therefore is reasonable person; not just a cold mechanical, command and conquer type dude.
Except that the Islamic texts also say she is curesed by the angels.
 
I once asked a Muslim if she believed in the same God as the Jews; the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. She said, “There’s only one God, Allah, and he is the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. The Jews say they believe in the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob; so yes.”

In my opinion, that left the question unanswered.
They believe that Moses was a messenger of God who brought a different message than the one Jews know (and Christians know). And that the message was corrupted by the Jews, either wilfully or through neglect.

Thus when a Moslem says “We believe Moses was sent by God” they don’t mean in the same way as in the Judeo-Christian understanding.
 
Muslims pray 5 times a day and fast at least 30 days in a year.

The fact of the matter is that the average Christian in the West prays less often in a whole year than a practicing Muslim would pray in a single day.

The average Christian too would fast less often in his entire lifetime than a Muslim would fast in a single year.

Don’t Christians consider praying and fasting to be acts of worship?
That’s assuming that all Moslems follow what they must do. I have a Turkish co-worker. She takes the a holiday at Ramadan. She and her Turkish husband love their beer.

As an Orthodox we don’t (this is what we’re supposed to do/not do, as opposed to what might happen) eat foods from red-blooded animals during Great Lent, and many other days of the year.

One Orthodox Christian Father said we should pray as often as we breathe.
 
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