No*s
Captain Obvious
are you speaking about prophets and the scriptures or something else?
sorry but i have difficulties understanding thie question, i hope you don't mind explaining it to me a bit more.
Not at all. We are dealing with something difficult.
By "Word" I have in mind a two-fold concept: first we can think of "Wisdom", the Wisdom of God. However, I also have in mind the Word in the sense of what came to the holy prophets. To us, the Orthodox Christians, these two are one and the same.
There's a lot of thought to unpack in that, but I don't know what Islam thinks about it. It would be wise not to unpack it too far just yet.
in islam it says this: when ever Allah wants something (wants to create something) he just says BECOME and (the thing he desires) becomes.
again sorry but i do not undestand that breath thing, i ussualy get confused easily, i hope that doesn't bother you
Don't worry about it. We all do when it comes to God. Some time in the future, I should tell you a story about that relating to St. Augustine when he was thinking about God. It hurts all our heads.
I don't know how to explain this except by analogy with our bodies and to reference the Holy Scripture. Forgive me; it's not an easy thing to explain.
As a man, you have several things in your self. You have a body, and you know that it lives because it breathes. If you see another person, you know they live, because they breathe. When you fall down and get your breath knocked out of you, it is as if you had the life knocked out of you.
In the Hebrew Scriptures God's Breath makes the world go round. When He creates the world, His breath hovers over the waters. He breaths on the Red Sea, and it splits. He breaths into a lump of dirt (or clay) and it becomes Adam. The entire world moves in His breath. It is like His hand that upholds the world, creates things, and makes us all alive.
I know this is a difficult thing to explain, and I do not know the Islamic parallel. I had thought the best analogy would be the creation of Adam, because I heard that Islam also teaches that God created Adam out of the earth and brought him to life by breathing on him.
understanding what?
islam consideres christianity and judaism to be close to it, but just some beliefs aren't exact (example they do not accept Muhammed (saws) as being the last prophet).
i personally prety much understand a lot of things but not all
I read your opening post about the Trinity, and I hoped to explain how Christians came to understand it. I saw that you got a lot of answers, and they seemed to be rather confusing and difficult to read. This isn't a good thing. If someone is going to explain the Trinity, he needs to be very careful and go very slowly. There have been many errors on this doctrine over the centuries, and it is not easy to convey.
I thought I might be able to help, but I would have to go slowly to do this. I also have to make sure we understand our ideas and terms the same. So, I have to ask you how Islam defines something at each step. I apologize for having to do it this way, but weighty matters deserve weighty approaches.
I also apologize for not saying this. I had quoted the post where you asked about it, and I thought that would be a good enough context to indicate what I was doing.