Topic: Hindu , musalman , christion are same . | |
---|---|
Belief of God
Buddhist do not believe in god The Buddha believed that religious ideas and especially the god idea have their origin in fear. Hinduism is one of the oldest known organized religions—its sacred writings date as far back as 1400 to 1500 B.C. Hindus is the third largest religion in the world. They believe in the existence of one central truth, Om or Brahman, who is their God. To them, God is encompassed in the world and is in everything, including people, hence the reason they do not eat meat. However, Hindus believe in many other gods to help them get closer to Om. Jews believe there is only One God. Often this God is beyond our ability to comprehend, but God is nevertheless present in our everyday lives. They believe that a prophet is basically a spokesman for God a person chosen by G-d to speak to people on G-d's behalf and convey a message or teaching. Prophets were role models of holiness, scholarship and closeness to G-d. The Talmud teaches that there were hundreds of thousands of prophets. But most of the prophets conveyed messages that were intended solely for their own generation and were not reported in scripture. Scripture identifies only 55 prophets of Israel. The greatest of the prophets was Moses. It is said that Moses saw all that all of the other prophets combined saw, and more. Moses saw the whole of the Torah, including the Prophets and the Writings that were written hundreds of years later. All subsequent prophecy was merely an expression of what Moses had already seen. Thus, it is taught that nothing in the Prophets or the Writings can be in conflict with Moses' writings, because Moses saw it all in advance. Both Catholics and Protestants believe that there is only one God and that he has revealed himself as the Trinity Muslims believe that God is the all-powerful Creator of a perfect, ordered universe. He is transcendent and not a part of his creation, and is most often referred to in terms and with names that emphasize his majesty and superiority. There are a total of 25 people named as prophets and messengers, in the Quran, and several of them also appear in Judaism and Christianity. Muslims believe that every prophet was given a belief to worship God and their respective followers believed it as well. Each prophet, in Muslim belief, preached the same main belief, the Oneness of God, worshiping of that one God, Messenger-Prophets were people whom have been ordered to convey and propagate what God revealed to them. To believe in the Messenger-Prophets means to believe that the God has sent them to creation to guide them, and perfect their life, and their hereafter, and he has aided them with miracles which demonstrate their truthfulness; and that they have conveyed the message of God; and have revealed what they were ordered to reveal to the responsible and accountable individuals; and it is obligatory to respect all of them, and not to discriminate or differentiate between any of them. |
|
|
|
Orthodox Christians believe there are three persons in the Godhead, each divine, distinct and equal. The Father God is the eternal head; the Son is begotten of the Father; the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father. Eastern Christians believe themselves to be the only true and "right believing" Christian faith.
|
|
|
|
U right
|
|
|
|
Belief of God Buddhist do not believe in god The Buddha believed that religious ideas and especially the god idea have their origin in fear. Hinduism is one of the oldest known organized religions—its sacred writings date as far back as 1400 to 1500 B.C. Hindus is the third largest religion in the world. They believe in the existence of one central truth, Om or Brahman, who is their God. To them, God is encompassed in the world and is in everything, including people, hence the reason they do not eat meat. However, Hindus believe in many other gods to help them get closer to Om. Jews believe there is only One God. Often this God is beyond our ability to comprehend, but God is nevertheless present in our everyday lives. They believe that a prophet is basically a spokesman for God a person chosen by G-d to speak to people on G-d's behalf and convey a message or teaching. Prophets were role models of holiness, scholarship and closeness to G-d. The Talmud teaches that there were hundreds of thousands of prophets. But most of the prophets conveyed messages that were intended solely for their own generation and were not reported in scripture. Scripture identifies only 55 prophets of Israel. The greatest of the prophets was Moses. It is said that Moses saw all that all of the other prophets combined saw, and more. Moses saw the whole of the Torah, including the Prophets and the Writings that were written hundreds of years later. All subsequent prophecy was merely an expression of what Moses had already seen. Thus, it is taught that nothing in the Prophets or the Writings can be in conflict with Moses' writings, because Moses saw it all in advance. Both Catholics and Protestants believe that there is only one God and that he has revealed himself as the Trinity Muslims believe that God is the all-powerful Creator of a perfect, ordered universe. He is transcendent and not a part of his creation, and is most often referred to in terms and with names that emphasize his majesty and superiority. There are a total of 25 people named as prophets and messengers, in the Quran, and several of them also appear in Judaism and Christianity. Muslims believe that every prophet was given a belief to worship God and their respective followers believed it as well. Each prophet, in Muslim belief, preached the same main belief, the Oneness of God, worshiping of that one God, Messenger-Prophets were people whom have been ordered to convey and propagate what God revealed to them. To believe in the Messenger-Prophets means to believe that the God has sent them to creation to guide them, and perfect their life, and their hereafter, and he has aided them with miracles which demonstrate their truthfulness; and that they have conveyed the message of God; and have revealed what they were ordered to reveal to the responsible and accountable individuals; and it is obligatory to respect all of them, and not to discriminate or differentiate between any of them. small wonder they appear in Islam,since Islam has hijacked Judaism,Christianity and earlier Pagan Religions! |
|
|
|
Edited by
LUNG1954
on
Fri 05/09/14 03:22 AM
|
|
QUOTE; {small wonder they appear in Islam, since Islam has hijacked Judaism, Christianity and earlier Pagan Religions!}.
Anyone who does not believe that God (Allah, G-d) sent His prophets to teach people will say the same for Christianity has hijacked Judaism, and Judaism has hijacked pagan religion. The fact is all religions from one God. We have to respect all of them and their followers. |
|
|
|
QUOTE; {small wonder they appear in Islam, since Islam has hijacked Judaism, Christianity and earlier Pagan Religions!}. Anyone who does not believe that God (Allah, G-d) sent His prophets to teach people will say the same for Christianity has hijacked Judaism, and Judaism has hijacked pagan religion. The fact is all religions from one God. We have to respect all of them and their followers. Nobody "hijacked" anything. The biggest difference between particularly Christianity and the rest mentioned is Christianity is about the New Testament. Thus "Christ"ianity. Before Jesus and or the New Testament there was no "Christ". And some did not believe Jesus to be whom he claimed to be, thus why they didn't advance into the next covenant God made with us through his blood. |
|
|
|
Edited by
CowboyGH
on
Fri 05/09/14 06:34 AM
|
|
Orthodox Christians believe there are three persons in the Godhead, each divine, distinct and equal. The Father God is the eternal head; the Son is begotten of the Father; the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father. Eastern Christians believe themselves to be the only true and "right believing" Christian faith. Incorrect sort of. "God" is not a being in itself. Know ye not that ye are gods? 1 Corinthians 3:16 You shall have no other gods before me. Exodus 20:3 Then we have there is but one God, even the devil trembles. James 2:19 And no they are not all equal. John 14:28 28 Ye have heard how I said unto you, I go away, and come again unto you. If ye loved me, ye would rejoice, because I said, I go unto the Father: for my Father is greater than I. And thus why even Jesus refers to his father as "My God" Matthew 27:46 46 And about the ninth hour Jesus cried with a loud voice, saying, Eli, Eli, lama sabachthani? that is to say, My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? And what makes the Father his God? John 5:30 30 I can of mine own self do nothing: as I hear, I judge: and my judgment is just; because I seek not mine own will, but the will of the Father which hath sent me. Jesus humbled himself, lowering himself and placing the father higher and in more "authority", thus why he refers to him as "God". For again God means "authority" in a noun sense of form eg., the being in authority/control, thus making the Father God and Jesus OUR God eg., Lord God. But to us, they are one God, because it's not like they are up their arguing over this or that, they are one in their wills and desires for us and work accordingly in perfect harmony, thus making them one God, one authority. |
|
|
|
The Oneness of Religion
God, the Creator, has intervened and will continue to intervene in human history by means of chosen Messengers. These Messengers, are principally the Founders of the major revealed religions, such as Abraham, Moses, Jesus, Muhammad, and so forth. It is the spirit released by the coming of these Manifestations, together with the influence of Their teachings and the social systems established by Their laws and precepts, that enable humankind to progress in its collective evolution. Simply put: the Manifestations of God are the chief educators of humanity. With regard to the various religious systems that have appeared in human history. Thus the principle of the unity of religion means that all of the great religious Founders--the Manifestations--have come from God, and that all of the religious systems established by Them are part of a single divine plan directed by God. In reality, there is only one religion, the religion of God. This one religion is continually evolving, and each particular religious system represents a stage in the evolution of the whole. Many orthodox adherents of various religious traditions, on the other hand, argue that the Prophet or Founder of their particular tradition represents a true revelation of God to humanity, but that the other religious Founders are false prophets, or at least essentially inferior to the Founder of the tradition in question. For example, many Jews believe that Moses was a true Messenger of God, but that Jesus was not. Similarly, many Christians believe in Jesus' revelation, but consider that Muhammad was a false prophet, and hold that Moses was inferior in status to Christ. Religious truth is not absolute but relative, all the great religions of the world are divine in origin, their basic principles are in complete harmony, their aims and purposes are one and the same, their functions are complementary, they differ only in the nonessential aspects of their doctrines, and their missions represent successive stages in the spiritual evolution of human society. |
|
|
|
The Oneness of Religion God, the Creator, has intervened and will continue to intervene in human history by means of chosen Messengers. These Messengers, are principally the Founders of the major revealed religions, such as Abraham, Moses, Jesus, Muhammad, and so forth. It is the spirit released by the coming of these Manifestations, together with the influence of Their teachings and the social systems established by Their laws and precepts, that enable humankind to progress in its collective evolution. Simply put: the Manifestations of God are the chief educators of humanity. With regard to the various religious systems that have appeared in human history. Thus the principle of the unity of religion means that all of the great religious Founders--the Manifestations--have come from God, and that all of the religious systems established by Them are part of a single divine plan directed by God. In reality, there is only one religion, the religion of God. This one religion is continually evolving, and each particular religious system represents a stage in the evolution of the whole. Many orthodox adherents of various religious traditions, on the other hand, argue that the Prophet or Founder of their particular tradition represents a true revelation of God to humanity, but that the other religious Founders are false prophets, or at least essentially inferior to the Founder of the tradition in question. For example, many Jews believe that Moses was a true Messenger of God, but that Jesus was not. Similarly, many Christians believe in Jesus' revelation, but consider that Muhammad was a false prophet, and hold that Moses was inferior in status to Christ. Religious truth is not absolute but relative, all the great religions of the world are divine in origin, their basic principles are in complete harmony, their aims and purposes are one and the same, their functions are complementary, they differ only in the nonessential aspects of their doctrines, and their missions represent successive stages in the spiritual evolution of human society. What you're suggesting still fails to carry any grounds. Most to all religions/beliefs state they are the one, and all other's are false. This would not be true if what you said was in fact true. One can not worship this God as creator of all, then that religion worships this other God as creator of all. And this religion says this is right, but that religion says this is right. That would be a failing method rather then uniting us all together. It would keep is all divided, which would not be prosperous for a God to do. spiritual evolution of human society. Why would something have to "evolve" if it was made perfect in the first place? And the changing and or "evolving" would again keep us separated as a whole and segregated among ourselves as a whole. Evolution is for a lesser creature/being to grow and be strong enough to survive. Again, would not apply to God for he would not make something so fallible in the first place. |
|
|
|
Unity of different religions Pope Francis urged members of all religions and those belonging to no church to unite to defend justice, peace and the environment and not allow the value of a person to be reduced to “what he produces and what he consumes”. Francis, met leaders of non-Catholic Christian religions such as Orthodox, Anglicans, Lutherans and Methodists, and others including Jews, Muslims, Buddhists and Hindus. “The Catholic Church is aware of the importance of furthering respect of friendship between men and women of different religious traditions,” the Argentine pontiff told the religious leaders in an audience at the Vatican. Speaking in Italian in the frescoed Sala Clementina, he said members of all religions and even non-believers had to recognize their joint responsibility “to our world, to all of creation, which we have to love and protect. “We must do much for the good of the poorest, the weak, and those who are suffering, to favor justice, promote reconciliation and build peace,” he said. Francis told the religious leaders to fight “a one-dimensional vision of a human person, according to which man is reduced to what he produces and what he consumes,” which he said was “one of the most dangerous snares of our times”. While he said history had shown that any attempt to eliminate God had produced “much violence,” he reached out to those who seek truth, goodness and beauty without belonging to any religion. |
|
|