Jews believe in Yahweh (Jehovah).
Christians believe in the Trinity; God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.
Muslims believe in Allah (God - in Arabic dialect).
I've heard many statements from Christians, and I really can't provide the source right now, but its in some sections in "Answers" section of Yahoo.com, but the Christians I've heard of, and they don't represent all Christians, have said time and time again, that "their God" is superior to Allah, now that either means that those are ignorant people who don't know that all Abrahamic religions believe in the same, singular God, or we're having a "clash of the Gods" moment.
I know that the Christian interpretation on God is far different than the Islamic and Jewish interpretations.
Look at this from Wikipedia:
Hmmm...got me thinking! :?
Christians believe in the Trinity; God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.
Muslims believe in Allah (God - in Arabic dialect).
I've heard many statements from Christians, and I really can't provide the source right now, but its in some sections in "Answers" section of Yahoo.com, but the Christians I've heard of, and they don't represent all Christians, have said time and time again, that "their God" is superior to Allah, now that either means that those are ignorant people who don't know that all Abrahamic religions believe in the same, singular God, or we're having a "clash of the Gods" moment.
I know that the Christian interpretation on God is far different than the Islamic and Jewish interpretations.
Look at this from Wikipedia:
Christians claim to profess belief in one God. Historically, most Christian churches have taught that the nature of God is something of a mystery: while being a unity, God also manifests as three persons: God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit (collectively called the Trinity), the classic Christian "three becomes one" formula. Typically, Christian orthodoxy holds that these three persons are not independent but are homoousios (a Hellenistic Greek transliteration), meaning sharing the same essence or substance of divinity. The true nature of the Trinity is held to be an inexplicable mystery, deduced from New Testament but developmentally is the result of theological debate in the Council of Nicea in 325, codified in 381, and reached its full development through the work of the Cappadocian Fathers.
Hmmm...got me thinking! :?