YO-ELEVEN-11
Watcher
If The Evil Ones All Belive In God, Why Can't We Humans (non-nephilim Or Jinn) Believe The Same Way About God?
YO-ELEVEN-11 said:If the evil and Knowledgeable ones (Nephilim, Jinn, Angels etc...) belive in GOD on the same level. Why Can't we humans do the same. I seriously can not understand why religious "dogma" has taken over our ability to come to the reaization that there is a "GOD". How can we even begin to understand GOD when so many disagree about such small matters in religion. When will we realize that "water" is still water, and always will be "water" all over the earth, regardless if it came out the Atlantic, Pacific or Indian oceans or any other source. It is still water. Get it?
YO-ELEVEN-11 said:If the evil and Knowledgeable ones (Nephilim, Jinn, Angels etc...) belive in GOD on the same level. Why Can't we humans do the same. I seriously can not understand why religious "dogma" has taken over our ability to come to the reaization that there is a "GOD". How can we even begin to understand GOD when so many disagree about such small matters in religion. When will we realize that "water" is still water, and always will be "water" all over the earth, regardless if it came out the Atlantic, Pacific or Indian oceans or any other source. It is still water. Get it?
mansio said:Only one God but at least three different revelations.
didymus said:I want to add to this discussion verses from Mark that are revealing of Jesus' real identity. I respect anyone's opinion that Jesus is God and only want to throw in my 2 cents.
Mark 10:17-21
As Jesus started on his way, a man ran up to him and fell to his knees before him. "Good teacher," he asked, "what must I do to inherit eternal life?"
"Why do you call me good?" Jesus answered. "No one is good except God alone. You know the commandments: 'Do not murder, do not commit adultery, do not steal, do not give false testimony, do not defraus, honor your father and mother.'
"teacher," he declared, "all these I have kept since I was a boy."
Jesus looked at him and loved him. "one thing you lack," he said. "Go sell all your things and give to the poor, and you will have treasure in heaven. Then come follow me."
This comes from Mark , the first gospel written about 20 -30 years after Jesus' death. Jesus clearly seperates himself from God stating that only God is good. What I find even more important is his answer to the man's inquiry of eternal life. "follow the commandments," he said. He didn't say, believe that I am God or profess with your lips that I am lord of the universe, the first and the last, come to judge mankind. He said follow the commandments. Jesus was offering something beyond the law. he was preaching a giving of self to others, a complete emptying of the spirit for mankind. The man already had his fate sealed according to Jesus, eternal life for practicing the 10 commandments. But he knew one could go even further than that, he broke all the taboos and the societal barriers, he wasn't afraid to go outside the box of the Pharisees and Saducees.
OzAndy said:...I believe at least at this point there is a difference of understanding in the Abrahamic faiths. As I understand it Judaism and Islam both believe God is merciful. I know too that there is at least some understanding of God being a God of grace in Judaism. I do not know if there is a place for grace in Islam. Yet at the same time there is an understanding that certain things must be done, there must be a particular measure of obedience, in order to receive salvation. Though God is a God of Mercy and perhaps Grace then as I understand it, in Islam and Judaism, God's mercy and grace do not overwhelm God's requirement of obedience.
For Christianity God's mercy and grace overwhelm God's requirement of perfect obedience.
Do I have it right? Is this differing understanding of salvation and God's character one of the main difference between the Abrahamic faiths' understanding of God? Or is it irrelevant? Is the Christian preocupation with salvation something peculiar to Christianity? (I know some forms of Judaism do not believe in life after death for instance.)
Saltmeister said:I think the reason is because God and human beings cannot be likened to water, air, fire, stone and metal because all these things are lifeless entities and don't have a mind of their own.
To say that "God is God" in the same way that "water is water" is to compare God to water. Water is simple matter but God is not. God has a mind of His own but water does not. Water simply follows the laws of nature. Water is easy to discern, but God is not. We cannot simply treat God the same way as water. People have probably argued about water before for the purpose of science. One may ask if mud, poison, medicine and oil are water. We now know that they're all mixtures of water with other things, with the exception of oil.
Doing this to human beings can be just as bad. You can't even compare a human being to water because human beings also have a mind of their own. They think. We think, therefore we are. You can say, "I think, therefore I am." We are self-aware beings. God is much greater than us. He says, "I had no beginning, I am the First and Last and so I AM." God's I AM is much greater than the little "I am's" of us human beings. He is self-aware to a much greater extent than us, even to the point that He knows us better than we know ourselves.
My point? Don't compare God to water!!!
God and human beings live on meaning. Water does not live at all.
Water is a simple substance if you know the physical laws behind it. The behaviours and personalities generated by the human mind are many times more complex. We are sophisticated beings that cannot simply be compared to water. If you can't do that to something God created, then likewise you can't do it to God Himself.
The reason why there are so many arguments about God is because this comparison of God to water is obviously unreasonable. God expects a lot more from us than to simply compare Him to simple fluids. Our hearts can break at the sight of so much bickering over the concept of God. Perhaps we can say that the differing beliefs are legitimate, but the arrogant, bitter, hateful and spiteful dissensions and factions are not.
A person with a sophisticated concept of God can be just as sincere and acceptable to God as one who has a simple concept of Him. Neither is considered better just because one is more meticulous and discerning or simplistic and straightforward in conceptualising God than the other. Each has its own merits.
The meticulous and discerning would say "why take shortcuts to God? Doesn't that mean you don't really love God?" The simple and straightforward would say "why make it so complicated? You're fighting over nothing."
That's not to say God necessarily accepts everyone. The reasoning would have to be right. Even that's different for everyone. Some focus on something transcendent, others on something ideological, sentimental, practical, dogmatic, philosophical, etc.
What a mix!!!! It's probably not the same even for those following the same religion.
Quahom1 said:Got it. There is but one God...and there are more than one prophets to His name...
Is there more than one to choose from? (Rhetorical question).Muhammad-Khalifa said:Eventhough we (Muslims, Christians and jews) have many different beliefs by addressing our All-Mighty God differently , by debating on whether, or whether not Christ is son of God, etc... Is it not so, that he (our God) revealed to us his message by all three holy books (Qur'an, Gospel and Torah), Is it not so that God is 'Most mercifull', 'All-wise', 'All-knowing', 'All-mighty', etc, Is it not so that there is a last day (the day of judgement), Is it not so that there will be a torment (Hell-Fire) for the wrong doers and there will be a reward (Paradise) for the riteous.
As a Muslim my belief is that Moses, Jesus and Muhammad (P.B.U.Them) were all Prophets and messangers of God. They were all serving there and our Creator, and they were all given a message by God to reveal to mankind. My belief (as a muslim) is that, that message was simply to worship God and him alone, for he is the only one worthy of that worship, and to obey him and his messages.
~Jonathan~ said:I personally believe there to be One God with the revealed prophets all being a path to that God. I guess that doesn't sit well with a lot of Christians but it's what I feel.
Ouch! How about: Faith, Love, and Truth... in that chronological order. Bring that to a church and they will say hope... Paul's word that combines faith and truth, but not something Jesus (pbuh) taught. You say Law? Jesus (pbuh) taught the law is a matter of Faith, and Mercy, and Judgement. (Matthew 23:23) See a pattern? (BTW, its Faith... not faithfulness) Justice maybe, but people are the unjust judges. What is the greatest commandment... Love your God (swt) with all your soul, heart, and mind... the 2nd is like it, Love your neighbor as you love yourself. So what happened to LOVE? God DOES LOVE YOU!Quahom1 said:Well, there is the God of Law, and the God of Faith, then there is the God of Logic...
I think that about sums up the three Abrahamic faiths...
How ironic that they follow the same precepts of a oldest child, a middle child and the younest child, respectively, concerning thought and pattern.
v/r
Q
Who judges whether a scholar is righteous? Who does the scholar judge is righteous? Who places Faith in whom?Admiral_HangTuah said:Believe means to think someting is true or correct or real. So, in order to believe we have to think. Then later see the facts, and choose to deeply believe it, and later declare that "yeah, man... this is true, correct and real.
To believe in one religion, we have to study all about that religion. But, to compare? Well, it is hard because the upbringing is different from one to another. The only way is to be open, and learn the truth inside it and ask anything from the righteous scholars.
Thats all.
cyberpi said:Ouch! How about: Faith, Love, and Truth... in that chronological order. Bring that to a church and they will say hope... Paul's word that combines faith and truth, but not something Jesus (pbuh) taught. You say Law? Jesus (pbuh) taught the law is a matter of Faith, and Mercy, and Judgement. (Matthew 23:23) See a pattern? (BTW, its Faith... not faithfulness) Justice maybe, but people are the unjust judges. What is the greatest commandment... Love your God (swt) with all your soul, heart, and mind... the 2nd is like it, Love your neighbor as you love yourself. So what happened to LOVE? God DOES LOVE YOU!
Without covering the many stories of Faith in Judaism lets talk 'logic'. How many times is that word in the bible? The Qur'an? Where do you get logic from? Worshipping logic or intelligence to me is like worshipping the strength of the arms or the stride of the legs. Khalifa used it 4 times in translation in place of 'sound judgement' or similar. That is a mistake in this computer age. If the eyes and ears are biased then so are those comparators. I'm not saying worship the eyes and ears either, its just to say that you choose where to look and listen and that people are guided by God (swt) and can guide each other. Marvel at the decaying flesh, but please don't make it into a religion. In my humble opinion, Logic is just another tainted word for the corpse. I see no 'mind' in 'logic'... I see 'logic' as a garment of the mind... or the soul... but especially the heart.
cyberpi said:Without covering the many stories of Faith in Judaism lets talk 'logic'. How many times is that word in the bible? The Qur'an? Where do you get logic from? Worshipping logic or intelligence to me is like worshipping the strength of the arms or the stride of the legs. Khalifa used it 4 times in translation in place of 'sound judgement' or similar. That is a mistake in this computer age. If the eyes and ears are biased then so are those comparators. I'm not saying worship the eyes and ears either, its just to say that you choose where to look and listen and that people are guided by God (swt) and can guide each other. Marvel at the decaying flesh, but please don't make it into a religion. In my humble opinion, Logic is just another tainted word for the corpse. I see no 'mind' in 'logic'... I see 'logic' as a garment of the mind... or the soul... but especially the heart.
Quahom1 said:Of course this is only my opinion (subject to debate by anyone). However, the fact is that the Jews are the people of the "Law". The priest hood consisted of two camps, the Sadusees and the Pharasees, yet the commonality was the law (613 Mizphat). Hence the first was Law.
Christ came along and the message was "Faith". Do you believe...was the question. If so, then you are saved. No works required. Just believe. Hence the second is Faith.
Mohamad presented the Five Pillars of Islam. Carry out these functions with willing heart, and one is basic Muslim. A+B+C+D+E=Islam. Hence the third is logical.