M
Mickey
Guest
I also find it really hard to believe that those holy saints and martyrs who were tortured and killed by Muslims…went to their holy martyrdom thinking that the Muslims worship the same God as the Christians. :nope:
So long as Mommy told child that John was, in fact, Daddy!But the child still knows it is his father.
The child in your analogy knowingly and consciously may call his daddy by his first name, John…but he is also conscious of the fact that this is his daddy.
And so when the Muslims are told that the God of Abraham is Triune…or that Jesus Christ is the Son of the living God…and they reject it…they have adopted another god. Eh?So long as Mommy told child that John was, in fact, Daddy!
No more than when Baptists are told that the Eucharist is Jesus…and they reject it…they have adopted another Christ.And so when the Muslims are told that the God of Abraham is Triune…or that Jesus Christ is the Son of the living God…and they reject it…they have adopted another god. Eh?
Peace.![]()
rinnie, I have never, in any of my posts on this issue up until now, ever addressed the issue of Muslim rejection of the Trinity. You are confusing me with others. That being said, there are a few things you perhaps need to have explained about the Muslim faith.Of course they are not going to see the One True God in the Trinity if it was not revealed to them.
This is a gross misrepresentation of what I have been saying. Review my posts! I have never said anything about their “not seeing him in the fulness of faith.”It is you who continue to say that if they cannot see him in the fullness of the faith, it is a different God
I must tell you plainly rinnie, WHAT THEY SAY is the only reliable source in determining the truth of what Muslims actually believe.Let me say this to you one more time. I don’t care what THEY say, I care what the TRUTH is
Wait a minute! You just said that you don’t care what they say. If your mind is already made up, why does their profession matter?If a Muslims profess to hold the faith of Abraham they have the same God as us.
Actually, I don’t find it hard to see.Why in the world can such a easy teaching be so hard to see
Very good point, Simka. :tiphat:The confusion and complications arise only because Mohammad chose to give his new, revised god the old Biblical name “the God of Abraham”. Had he used some other updated name to match his updated god, we would not be having this discussion. There would be no conflict.
Many thanx for your encouragement and support, Mickey. I look forward to engaging with you again, sometime soon.Very good point, Simka. :tiphat:
Likewise.Many thanx for your encouragement and support, Mickey. I look forward to engaging with you again, sometime soon.
And in denying this they are wrong. :sad_yes:So this denial and rejection of Christian doctrine is fundamental to Muslim doctrine.
Yet when they say that their God has the characteristics of the God that we worship, they are indeed worshiping the same God that we do.And when they say that they worship the God of Abraham, they do not mean the same thing we do, when we use the same words.
Well, I wonder. To reach that conclusion, is it good enough that they share some common characteristics, despite the fact that they are radical opposites in other areas?Yet when they say that their God has the characteristics of the God that we worship, they are indeed worshiping the same God that we do.
Well, yes. Why wouldn’t it be good enough?Well, I wonder. To reach that conclusion, is it good enough that they share some common characteristics, despite the fact that they are radical opposites in other areas?
Typically, things that have some similarities and some differences are not regarded as identical.Well, yes. Why wouldn’t it be good enough?![]()
Right.Typically, things that have some similarities and some differences are not regarded as identical.
That’s exactly where the argument lies, Simka!It turns out that they are better compared by their differences than by their similarities.
It’s not that “I wish” to compare the differences. It’s simply that if one wishes to make a comparison of two things to determine whether they are “the same”, identifying and comparing their differences will give you a much more accurate assessment than merely listing what they share in common. The later, in isolation, will lead you to inaccurate assessments.That’s exactly where the argument lies, Simka!
You wish to compare the differences.
The Church, in her wisdom, has chosen to compare the similarities.
Which do you think has the better vantage point for evangelization?![]()
Ah, yes … but that was not the original question, was it?Which do you think has the better vantage point for evangelization?
You can’t be serious.Ah, yes … but that was not the original question, was it?
By all means, let’s acknowledge the areas of common ground and identify what similarities exist, as part of the overall comparison. Capitalizing on what we share in common is a good thing. But it seems fallacious to find a few of those commonalities, then to conclude on that basis alone that “we worship the same God.”Only that the shadows of truth which they proclaim ought to be given a![]()
Sorry … I meant the original question of our recent dialogue, which was asked in around Post #1040.You can’t be serious.
NO THREAD ever, at page 70, is on the “original question.” :whacky:
It is impossible to mix the unmixable! Because, if you mix the pure thing with a dirty and poisonous one it will become dirty and poisonous as well, but the dirty thing will never become pure. And the poisonous thing will never become nonpoisonous.But it seems fallacious to find a few of those commonalities, then to conclude on that basis alone that “we worship the same God.”
This is a curious paradigm, given that the Incarnation.It is impossible to mix the unmixable! Because, if you mix the pure thing with a dirty and poisonous one it will become dirty and poisonous as well, but the dirty thing will never become pure. And the poisonous thing will never become nonpoisonous.