But this isn’t true. It has always been taught. You can find plenty of harsh things said by Christians about Muslims, but the only place where you can find Christians saying that Muslims worship a false god is in medieval Byzantium, and that was based on a mistranslation of the Qur’an into Greek, which led Byzantine theologians to think that Muslims worshiped a solid metal sphere.
To say that Muslims worship a false god is to make nonsense of classical Christian monotheism. It reduces the New Testament, the Fathers, and the scholastics (not that you care about the last, but RCs do) to gibberish.
No, nothing of the sort is admitted. The God Muslims worship is certainly Triune.
Muslims just don’t recognize this fact about the God we all worship.
Now if you want to argue that they don’t “know God” in a salvific sense, that’s a different issue. Obviously I stand with Vatican II in taking a more generous view even there, but I grant that this is a bit iffier in terms of the Tradition (though it has some precedent).
Thank you!
You’ve identified what we’ve left undiscussed so far: the philosophical ramifications of the very belief system of monotheism. If there aren’t many superhuman beings known as ‘gods,’ but truly only one Supreme Being who is also totally transcendent… then the idea of “whether they worship the true God or not” becomes nonsensical… there are no false gods, and if there were (Zeus, Thor, whoever…), those creatures aren’t really divine in the philosophical sense or Jewish sense anyway: they are non-transcendent through and through, subject to all sorts of earthly desires and limitations, and they have a beginning in time.
Once you acknowledge the possibility of a One True Transcendent God in the Jewish sense, even if you don’t know Him salvifically, there’s just no more logically tenable possibility of your god being “a false god” … it’s now a matter of basic definition.
You accused me of dismissing a council. Which is false. Apology please.
Ok, not only did you not apologize for insulting me before but you ramped up the insults by accusing me of lying. Please point to where I am not allowed to interpret the documents in light of Tradition and previous Teachings? But DO NOT accuse me of lying.
I’m sorry you’re mad, but it remains incontrovertibly true nonetheless that what you claim this passage of
Lumen Gentium teaches is just not compatible with what can be validly conveyed by the actual words therein. For instance:
Upon conversion, yes. Otherwise those that reject Jesus are no different then those in John 8:44.
The document doesn’t say that. You have
inserted that condition, when the teaching of the document makes this claim *unconditionally *rather than
conditionally. Please. Just look at what it says. Twisting it so much to fit one’s position is just sad; it’s pitiful…
please look at the relevant paragraph
which I quoted in full, from the Vatican’s own website. You will not find in its words nor its context the conditions you have added and seem to be claiming are taught.
What falsehood? That Muslims reject Jesus!?
No, the falsehood that the Church does not teach that Christians and Muslims have the same God.
I will repost the quote from the Church’s teachings in
Lumen Gentium:
But the plan of salvation also includes those who acknowledge the Creator. In the first place amongst these there are the Mohammedans, who, professing to hold the faith of Abraham, along with us adore the one and merciful God, who on the last day will judge mankind.
The antecedent of “these” is self-evidently the phrase “those who acknowledge the Creator.” Thus the document asserts “among [those who acknowledge the Creator] there are the Mohammedans.”
Sorry that you don’t like that the Church says so.
Of course they don’t think God is Triune. I think they are wrong. Why does this simple way of looking at the matter not commend itself to you?
Edwin, I’m starting to think they’re incapable of understanding that way of looking at it. They literally do not understand that position, no matter how clearly you (and others) explain it.
Every time they point out God commanding nasty things in the Qur’an, or teaching that He has no Son, or things like that, they think they’ve proved that our God and theirs cannot possibly the same. For some reason they seem incapable of understanding that it can be the
same God, and that the Qur’an is simply
dead wrong on those counts.
Anyone who approaches this matter from the “whose god is whose/whose god is right” perspective is doing so from an intellectually primitive perspective philosophically wedded to early western polytheism. In truth, there is only one God.
If you believed in all the doctrines of the Nicene Creed, but ascribed approval of Nazi genocide to that God, then yes, I would say that you believe something horribly wrong about the true God rather than that you believe in a false god altogether.
Precisely.