Christian/Muslim ThreadsKoran confirms that Jesus is God...Greetings Khaleel, Well…that would depend upon your definition of who “Allah” is…
The reason is crystal clear. My mission is to expose the Koran for what it is…..an attempt to translate the Hebrew and Greek Biblical scriptures into Arabic – in an attempt to replicate the Holy Bible. It is abundantly clear where the authors of the Koran came up with the “deity” of their newly formed god, “Allah”. My paradigm is to look for similarities between the two Holy Books….not differences.. Similarities are often times much more revealing than differences… The Koran is an extra-Biblical confirmation to the authority of the Holy Bible…
The disbelievers. According to the Koran, the disbelievers claim that the god “Allah” is the Messiah. As we already know, the Koran claims that Jesus is the Messiah. Even the Koran is unwilling to make the claim that Jesus (the Messiah) can be associated with the god “Allah”, hence the promotion of the “believers” that claim that the god “Allah” is NOT the Messiah Jesus. Allah is a man-made god spliced together from bits and pieces of borrowed Biblical deity… No man-made god can ever be equal to the real God. Jesus = Yahweh…
First of all, I appreciate your kudos of my work… Secondly, I noticed your silence regarding Yusuf Ali’s word-smithing of the word “trinity”… It does appear, however, that you are more interested in the concept of the Trinity than that of analyzing where the god of the Koran obtains his “deity” from, as per the theme of this thread… Thirdly, in order to use your reasoning, you would have to be dividing into thirds the THREE “thalathatin”. Please tell me….is “thalathatin” a singular thing…? Correction. The Koran says a third “thalithu” of “thalathatin” three. The Biblical God has always been one, not three…
First of all, it is not according to me, but according to Biblical scripture… Secondly, the Creator God of the Holy Bible, the God that transcends all matter, energy, space and time, has chosen to reveal Himself from the vantage point of the Father, the Spirit, & the Son. Each is simultaneously the one God.
No. Again…The Koran says a third “thalithu” of “thalathatin” three. The Koranic ayahs in question start with the premise of THREE. Thus, these ayahs are telling us what the concept of the Biblical trinity is not…. The premise of the Biblical God is one, not three…
Have you bothered to look at this ayah… And when Allah said: "You Jesus Mary's son, did you say to the people 'Take me and my mother (as) two gods from other than Allah?' He (Jesus) said: 'Your praise/glory, (it) is not to be for me that I say what is not for me with (a) right/truth, if I was (had) said it, so You had known it, You know what (is) in my self, and I do not know what (is) in Your self, that You, You (are) all knower (of) the unseens/hidden (unknown).'" (5:116) I think that you can see for yourself where the THREE gods concept comes from…
You conveniently forgot to quote me in my entirety… Here is the rest of what I said…” Each is the one God, from different vantage points…” Take care… |
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