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The Islamic point of view is that Allah is the Arabic proper noun for the God mentioned in the three original orthodox Abrahamic religions. In other languages it could be different. Just like Jesus is Eisa and Noah is Nooh in Arabic!
Or in some cases Muslims believe that the Jews made up all the stuff in Christianity to hide the truth of Islam and the Christians are supposed to be the fools who believed the dirty lying Jews.
Hum, never heard of that ...
Point taken. Interestingly, Jesus never said He was God.
Slightly off-topic, but does that mean that if I'm a non-Trinitarian I could still be a Christian?
Slightly more on topic, but what does it mean for Muslims and Christians?
The God of the bible has the name Jehovah.
Do Muslims and the Quran recognize this name of God???
The God of the bible has the name Jehovah.
Do Muslims and the Quran recognize this name of God???
The Quraan is in Arabic and Jesus is called Eisa in Arabic and Eisa is recognized by Muslims and the Quraan. Therefore Jesus is recognized by Muslims and the Quraan!
Same thing with different names of the God in different languages used on different books!
The name only is not the real thing, but the reference!
I call Allah God when I speak English, and type/write it with capital G. This does not mean I do not recognize the name Allah!
Sorry for the extended explanation!
Muslims certainly do not worship the Trinity, such as most professed "Christians" do. I agree that Allah is not the same god as Jehovah. So IMO, Muslims do not worship the same God as true Christians worship.
thats ok, i like extended explanations
I know muslims have come to believe that Allah is the name of God... but in reality, Allah 'means' god in arabic. Its not a personal name. If you say 'Allah God' to me, i hear it as 'God God'.
What about if they are active, converted (not raised in the faith) and ardently believe? How can they still be "cultural Christians"?I believe anyone can call himself a Christian but I believe a Christian without the Trinity is a cultural Christian and not a born again Christian.
the grammaire of Arabic is different than English (I mean we don't use verb TO BE in Arabic to link between noun and verb
Exemple :
Allah Akbar (two word in Arabic), it's mean " God is Great " (three words in English )
In fact, God has MANY names and titles in the various languages and cultures, and they are all equally acceptable!
Just a few of these names are: God, Boje, Jehovah, Dieu, Wankantanka, El, Jumala, Gott, Yahweh, Dios, Brahman, Elohim, Allah, Isten, Bog, Yazdan, Adonai, Parvadegar, and Huda.
ANY of these are just fine!
Bruce
thats ok, i like extended explanations
I know muslims have come to believe that Allah is the name of God... but in reality, Allah 'means' god in arabic. Its not a personal name. If you say 'Allah God' to me, i hear it as 'God God'.
I have Muslim friends from around the world. In several conversations, we always discuss about religion. Over time, I have noticed that Muslims from North Africa (especially, those who are from Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia and Lybia) consider the Muslim God the same God of Christianity. However, the Muslims of Asia (Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Iran, etcetera) have a very different position: they say that the Muslim God has nothing to do with the Christian God. So, according to this confusion (perhaps I'm generalizing), I would like you to manifest your opinions about this interesting fact.
thats ok, i like extended explanations
I know muslims have come to believe that Allah is the name of God... but in reality, Allah 'means' god in arabic. Its not a personal name. If you say 'Allah God' to me, i hear it as 'God God'.