C
Confiteor_Deo
Guest
How peculiar. Thank you for the information.Lumen Gentium which quoted above is magisterial teaching, being a dogmatic constitution from Vatican II. However, if it makes you feel better, consider that part of the difficulty comes from the limitations imposed on us by language. “Same” is an vague adjective. There is no doubt that multiple Gods do not run the world. Even St. Paul equated the Greek worship of the “unknown god”, which was clearly pagan to the monotheistic God of Christianity. If one recognizes one Creator God, then that descriptions only fits one being. Yet in another way, the God of Islam is not the same in that He is seen as much difference. From God’s perspective, He is the same. From the perspective of the worship, there are considerable differences.
Another comparison is looking at three perspectives of God which are drastically different. The God of Abraham is the same God we worship today, though there is a huge gap as to how Abraham understood God, and we understand him. For a third perspective, think of how terribly little we know of God now “through a glass darkly” compared to what we will know of God in the beatific vision. We may well look back and think we did not know what we were doing as it seems the worship is so different. Yet it will still be the same God.