Jeannot
Jeannot
It seems to me that it's the various cultures that seem to produce different ideas of God. Kind of like a prism, which breaks light up into a spectrum of colors--but there's only one light.
dauer said:This is a false statement. The Jewish conception of God is also universal. The Jewish people just claim a particular relationship with Him.
The Lord said:This makes Him not universal at all, unless one can similarly say that my dog is everyone else's dog even though he only answers to me.
Jeannot said:It seems to me that it's the various cultures that seem to produce different ideas of God. Kind of like a prism, which breaks light up into a spectrum of colors--but there's only one light.
Saltmeister said:How can it not be universal? If you claim a particular relationship with God it is only one approach to God. That implies that there are numerous ways of approaching and connecting with God. Dauer did not say that this particular relationship with God was universal, he simply said it was a particular relationship, implying that it was a particular approach to interacting with God. A relationship with God and a concept of God are not the same thing. The relationship itself is not universal; it does not need to be universal.
That allows for a diverse range of approaches within a religion that claims to have a particular relationship with God.
I actually would have thought that it was the other way round -- if Jews claim a particular relationship with God -- then their concept of God can be universal. By implying diversity, it also implies that their concept of God is compatible with a diverse range of relationships with Him, which allows it to be a universal concept of God.
This makes Him not universal at all, unless one can similarly say that my dog is everyone else's dog even though he only answers to me.
but surely he/she does not believe in the God of Islam because if he/she did hold such a belief then he/she would be a Muslim, and not a Jew. And the opposite is true.
I would like you to elaborate and explain the varying views more, if you can. Are you saying that some Jews have a different deity? And how would that make them Jews?
Please. The same is true of all religions.
By implying diversity, it also implies that their concept of God is compatible with a diverse range of relationships with Him, which allows it to be a universal concept of God.
n claim, the deity is put forward as the deity over a large group but it has formed a particular relationship with a certain subgroup, a covenant by which it gives this subgroup rights and privileges over others. In reality, this claim developed when the "subgroup" conquered and subdued a larger population, among which they enforced their belief system but without undermining their "chosen" status to rule over them.
. In its current state, after the debates of the middle ages, it is claimed that the Jewish God is a universal God in line with the Gods of Islam and Christianity
If you truly assert a universal God, One that has the same relationship to all creations, then what was all this that Judaism asserts about? Was it because they looked for God and he answered?
History (and not legend) is full of people who looked for God individually and communally and according to Judaism God did not answer. He did not even care about them.
For His chosen ones, like a child with his pet, God could do anything: give them other people's lands, their women and cattle; kill the first born or send plagues and disasters against their enemies; destroy cities; flood the world; or whatever.
The point is that this God was not the God of everyone equally. He had favorites and He played dice.
This is why Jesus is said to have universalized the Jewish God, to have claimed that God and His message applied to all humanity equally. The only criterion is for one, anyone, to follow in God's path and one is saved (and of course accepts Jesus according to the Church, and albeit that these seem to be Paul's ideas). And in traditional Judaism that was not acceptable (hence the rejection of Jesus' ideas).
Amica said:I think that the persecution suffered under Roman emperors allowed polytheistic concept to peak through Christianty.
Amica said:Despite claiming its basis in Judaism/OT teachings, and believing that NT fullfills OT, Christianity of today allows statue worship (a graven image). There is no church out there that does not allow prayers towards a statue representative of Jesus.
Amica said:Christian Orthodox and Catholics, for instance, go even further and worship the statues of the Virgin, pray at the icons
Amica said:(Jesus said that he came not to change the laws of OT but to fullfill them).
Amica said:majority of Muslims out there still worship Allah/God as Qur'an teaches.
Even the Biblical Jesus is open to interpritation and the Christian version isn't the only one with merit.
I'm going to safely assume that you have yet to study or even read the Bible through.
Because I disagree with you I'm obviously ignorant? (Ignorant meaning unaware of any relevent infomation or unknowlegable rather than stupid). Yes I have read the Bible, thankyou, yes I was brought up a Christian too. I was mearly pointing out that the Christian viewpoint (which is only ever backed up with Christian scripture, never a single scrap of evidence from 'outside'-as in all religion) isn't the only possible interpritation of the Gospels. And, because you may be ignorant (same meaning as above) of this point, just because something (in this case an interpritation of the Gospels) is 'with merrit' doesn't mean it is 'true'. Taking an example from science the theory of 'the universe as static' model was a theory with 'merrit' and fit the observable data at the time. It was later replaced with the 'big bang' theory when better observation equipment was available and new data became available. As for your statement that the only way to God is through the Son (Jesus), just on a quick look through the Gospel of Matthew (using the 'Authorised King James version), here's Christs words on the subject of being worthy or unworthy of gaining Heaven; Chpt5:6-9. Chpt 6:19-21. Chpt 7:1-2 (something we all need to remind ourselves of). Chpt 7:21-23. Chpt 12:31-32 (to blasphem against the Son Of Man is forgivable in this world and the next...). Chpt 12:50. Chpt 15:17-18 (that which is in mens hearts is what corrupts man). Chpt 19:16-19. Chpt 19:25-26. Chpt 21:28-31. Chpt 22:35-40. Chpt 25:33-40.
I like biblegateway.com to look at various versions of the bible...I'd love to find a source where you can look at them side by side like parallel bibles...are these versions of the Bible available to buy or online?