Christian worship of Jesus..

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This thread is the latest thread that confirms my opinion of my personal finding that the explanation of the definition of God in christianity would require hundreds and hundreds of pages of debates, arguments, research, etc. And even that would not be satisfactorily to everyone.
While definition of God in Islam is very simple as stated in QS. Al-Ikhlas
 
^^ Grace Seeker, I am sure you didn't notice my post at page 5 otherwise you would surly reply. I am still waiting your reply "if" you have the time to address it.
:sl:

I'll do my best. But I fear you may think naidamar is right by the time I'm done. May peace be upon you in your search for Allah's ‘hidayah.


You said that there was no time where the father was not really a father .
I am very sure that I asked a question about who did create Jesus and a Christian here answered that it was God "the father"....I can't tell where and when exactly I posted that, but anyways what is your answer to such question?
Let's be clear. Are you talking about Jesus or are you talking about God the Son? The fact that God has always been an eternal Father tells us that God the Son is also co-eternal with him. In other words, there never was a time when the Son was not. To orthodox Christian understanding, the Father, the Son, and the Spirit are all co-eternal and have always existed in community and relationship with each other from before the beginning of time. In fact, with regard to creation itself (which would include the creation of time) our Christian scriptures have this to say:

For by him [the Son] all things were created: things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or powers or rulers or authorities; all things were created by him and for him. (Colossians 1:16)

So, we don't believe that the Son was created, but was the creator. But you also asked about Jesus and that needs a different answer. That might be confusing for a moment, if you are jumping to certain conclusions. So, let me just address what one of those possible issues right away with the following assertion: while Jesus has always been the Son, the Son was not always Jesus.

Now what do I mean by that? I mean just what I said. God has always existed. Hence God the Son has always existed. But this does not mean that Jesus is pre-existent. Another set of scriptures might help with this.

John 1

1In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. 2He was with God in the beginning. 3Through him all things were made; without him nothing was made that has been made.

If you accept, as Christians do based on later passages, that "the Word" being referred to in this passage is one and the same as "God the Son", then this passage pretty much says the same thing as the previous one did in terms of creation and the pre-existence of the Son (or Word in this case). Now if we keep reading we find that a little more is disclosed regarding the Word:
The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth. (John 1:14)
In saying that the Word become flesh and made his dwelling among us, Christians understand this as a reference to incarnation. To be incarnate (with the stem word "carne", meaning "flesh") tells us that there has been a change in the way the Word relates to the world. The word is not just the creator outside of the world, but not enters into the world as a person just like the rest of us. This may be an outrageous and completely unacceptable concept for Muslims, but we Christians can't just dismiss it. It is right there in our text. And when read in the context of the rest of the chapter, it is pretty obvious that the person that is being referred to who is the incarnation of the Word is none other than Jesus. So this is one of several texts that causes us to say that Jesus is not just a man, but uniquely the one and only God who has incarnated himself among us.

The actual word for "dwelling" here is in older English versions translated as "tabernacled." So, the Word became flesh and "tabernacled" among us, reminding the reader of the stories of how God used to dwell in the tabernacle (a tent used in place of the temple during the nation of Israel's Exodus experience) where God would converse with Moses. And it might be helpful to think of Jesus' body as God putting on a fleshly tent in the same way that we put on clothes. Although I warn you that some people have taken that picture too far and tried to suggest that this means that Jesus wasn't really human. In all honestly, that is one of the difficult things about Christianity. God is constantly stretching our understanding of him. Jesus is God. Jesus is human. Jesus is both at the same time.

How exactly this can be is never something that we will explain to everyone's satisfaction, we hardly explain it to our own. What we have to remember to do is to keep the two concepts in tension, never allowing one understanding of Jesus' nature to dictate completely our understanding of the other aspect of his shared nature. So, Jesus is completely God. And we know that God has no needs. Yet Jesus is reported to have been hungry, tired, thirsty, even angry and to have felt sorrow -- all very human things. Perhaps this was just God dwelling ("tenting") among us like a person putting on a costume for a masquerade? Except such an understanding would make Jesus (and therefore God) into a fraud as he shared that human side of himself. Further, Paul's letter to the Philippians records specifically that
Philippians 2

6[Christ Jesus] Who, being in very nature God,
did not consider equality with God something to be grasped,
7but made himself nothing,
taking the very nature of a servant,
being made in human likeness.
It is interesting that this is not just Paul's own thought. It is actually one of the earliest hymns of the church that Paul has borrowed to make his point in this letter. Namely that in coming to earth in the person of Jesus that God the Son has emptied himself of those divine perogatives that we are so familiar with ascribing to God:
  • omnipresence -- dwelling in the flesh, Jesus cannot be in more than one place at a time
  • omniscience -- dwelling in the flesh, there are things that Jesus doesn't know, things that he reports are only known by the Father or only known by him as the Father reveals them to him
  • omnipotence -- the one who once had by the power of his word simply spoken world into being, is now going to be subject to the actions of cruel evil mean

Hardly sounds like God, does it? And it shouldn't. Jesus may be God the creator, but he dwells on earth just as every other created being does, so much has he humbled himself in order to identify with his creation. And so, while his spiritual, divine nature is eternal, his human, earthly nature actually has a beginning, a conception when the cells which will become the baby Jesus are given life within the womb of Mary. (Whether this is one more miracle of creation of an embryo ex nihlo or the miraculous generating of life from Mary's own eggs without the need for sperm cells the scriptures do not say. We are just told that what was conceived in Mary was through the power of the Holy Spirit, not the normal form of mechanical biological reproduction.)

So, that's a long way to finally answer your question: Jesus' human body does have a beginning as God created a body for himself by which he could enter into creation, even as God the Son has always existed and is the creator, not a part of creation until he arrived to dwell on earth in the person of Jesus.




If they are both Gods sharing the same features, and even communicate with each other, then why they don't "pray" or lets use your word "converse" with each other?
why its only one way from the son to the father?
First they are not both Gods (plural). They are both God (singular). We believe in just one and only one God. Again, you can see that in the very passages we have already looked at:

The Word became flesh and made his dwelling among us. We have seen his glory, the glory of the One and Only, who came from the Father, full of grace and truth. (John 1:14)
comapre that with
No one has ever seen God, but God the One and Only, who is at the Father's side, has made him known. (John 1:18)
God makes God known. And this God who makes God known is the Word who dwells among us. And at the same time is God the One and Only. There is no other God for us Christians, than the one and only God who created the world (remember we have already seen that this is the Son), who made covenant with Abraham, and who tabernacled in the desert with Moses and command to the nation of Israel that they were to have no other gods before Him.

But just as long before the time of Jesus we can see recorded in the Old Testament itself how the God's monotheistic people personified God's Spirit and God's Word (for examples see Gen. 1:2; Job 32:8; Ps. 33:6-9; Ps. 104: 29-30; Is. 11:2; Is. 55:10-11), so too Jesus' own disciples in understanding that Jesus had made God known to them, did not consider that the God Jesus had made known to them was any different God than Yahweh whom they had always worshipped. Indeed, when you see in the (Greek) New Testament that Jesus is called Lord, the writers are using the very same term ("kyrios") as the Jews used to speak of Yahweh in their own Greek translation of the Tanakh, it was not just another way of saying "Sir" as some suggest, but an announcement that whether referring to Jesus or the God worshipped by the Jews, these followers of Jesus were referring to one and the same being, just in known to them in different personas (of the Father and of the Son, and ultimately also of the Spirit).

Perhaps no biblical writer links Jesus so closely with the Jewish concept of Yahweh as does Paul. (Not surprising as he was a rabbinically schooled pharisee, and always wrote of Jesus within the context of God's covenant with Israel.) Picking up the song Paul was quoting in Philippians were we left off, he goes on to record of the man Jesus:
Therefore God exalted him [Jesus] to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every name... (Philippians 2:9)
The "name" which is being referred to, that the early church said was given to Jesus is the name that was so high that it could not even be spoken aloud and when written was written without the vowels so that no one might accidentally speak it. It was the name revealed in the Old Testament as the sacred name of God, the tetragammaton (YHWH) -- four consonant which orthodox Jews do not dare to speak for its holiness and which, even today, most English Bibles simply print as 'LORD'.

What is particularly striking is the way that two Old Testament passages are combined in this early Christian hymn Paul borrows:
Philippians 2

9Therefore God exalted him to the highest place
and gave him the name that is above every name,
10that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow,
in heaven and on earth and under the earth,
11and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord,
to the glory of God the Father.


Isaiah 45

22 Turn to me and be saved,
all you ends of the earth;
for I am God, and there is no other.

23 By myself I have sworn,
my mouth has uttered in all integrity
a word that will not be revoked:
Before me every knee will bow;
by me every tongue will swear.
Six times in that chapter of Isaiah comes the refrain in which God declares, "there is no other." Clearly God is emphasizing his uniqueness, the fact that God and God alone is the one and only -- there is no other God, but God.

The other passage incorporated into this hymn about Christ is also from Isaiah:
Isaiah 42

8 I am the LORD; that is my name!
I will not give my glory to another
or my praise to idols.

By using this hymn which incorporates this language to speak of Christ, the monotheistic Jew, Paul, is taking some of the strongest language about the sovereignty and identity of God found in the Tanakh (the Old Testament) and saying that it applies to Jesus, before whom every knee will bow in worship. This sort of adoration would not be used by any Jew of Paul's pharisical background and rabbinical training to refer to any mere creature, not even an angel, and illustrates the completeness with which the early church identified Jesus as the one God.

Curiously, they never bothered to relate how or why they came to this view, only that they did. But from that understanding, any time that we see Jesus in prayer, should be understood as a time of communication with his Father. And it begins at a very young age.

One of the few accounts of Jesus non-adult life is the story of him remaining behind in the temple after his parents had made a journey to Jerusalem. When they realize that Jesus is missing from the family caravan headed home, Joseph and Mary return to Jerusalem looking for the boy-Jesus and finding him discoursing with the elders in the temple. On questioning him for why he caused them to worry and search for him, he cryptically responds: "Why were you searching for me? Didn't you know I had to be in my Father's house?"

And all four gospel accounts record that at the beginning of Jesus' ministry, the Father did indeed speak so that others could hear his affirmation of Jesus as his beloved Son. But most of the time that we see Jesus praying, he goes off by himself. We simply aren't priviledge to those experiences but rarely. One of those times was when Jesus invited Peter, James, and John to go up with him to the top of what today we call the Mount of Transfiguration. For Jesus the conversation (which included a manifestation of Moses and Elijah) was about Jesus' approaching death; for the disciples what they heard was another affirmation of Jesus as the beloved son of God. While we were not party to what Jesus was praying, the way Luke (chapter 9) tells the story, I expect the arrival of Moses and Elijah was perhaps in answer to the conversation he was having with his Father.

The other time we are invited to join Jesus in prayer is in the garden of Gethsemane. Unfortunately, the disciples were not very attentive at the time, and one wonders how the gospel writers are even able to report what they do, unless it might have been shared with them later, perhaps by Jesus himself in the days between his resurrection and ascension. Anyway, the form of the report that we have is like listening to just one end of a telephone conversation. I don't think that just because we don't hear the voice on the other end ourselves, and only that of the person in the room with us, that we should suppose that it is a one-way conversation.

You can see how the Father is indeed responsive to Jesus' prayers, but that we are generally going to be privilded to listen in from the story of a time when the Father's response was actually intended for us. On that occassion the conversation was one that others heard as well:

John 12 [Jesus knows that his death is less than a week away as he speaks.]

27"Now my heart is troubled, and what shall I say? 'Father, save me from this hour'? No, it was for this very reason I came to this hour. 28Father, glorify your name!"

Then a voice came from heaven, "I have glorified it, and will glorify it again." 29The crowd that was there and heard it said it had thundered; others said an angel had spoken to him.

30Jesus said, "This voice was for your benefit, not mine."





Is it really two-way communication?
because as I said they don't pray to each other. They are equal in features, so there must be no problem of any of them to "converse" with the other!
My own conversations with God are not one-way, why should Christ's have been when he prayed?

That Jesus did receive information from the Father is clearly seen in these comments that Jesus made to his disciples:
"The world must learn that I love the Father and that I do exactly what my Father has commanded me" (John 14:31).
and​
"Everything that I learned from my Father I have made known to you" (John 15:15b).





Didn't he say "My God! My God why have you forsaken me?" is he his God when Jesus himself is a God? Can a God call another God "My God"?
I've already spent quite a bit of time above discussing that we are not talking about two different gods, but just one. I can understand how it might be that someone from outside of our faith might think in terms of two gods, or a big God and a little god. Indeed, some of the early church fathers had trouble with this sort of language at times themselves. But even the idea of Jesus being subordinated to the Father, other than that which he did so voluntarily in terms of obediently seeking to fulfill and submit to the Father's will (which of course was his whole purpose in entering into identification with humanity on earth), is not supported in the orthodox Christian understanding of scripture.

The passage you quote is, in my opinion, often misunderstood as a cry of deriliction and abandonment. I don't see it this way at all. The reason I don't is that I happen to know where it comes from. It is the opening line of(i.e., the equivalent of a title or way of referencing) Psalm 22
Psalm 22

1 My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
Why are you so far from saving me,
so far from the words of my groaning?
2 O my God, I cry out by day, but you do not answer,
by night, and am not silent.

3 Yet you are enthroned as the Holy One;
you are the praise of Israel.

4 In you our fathers put their trust;
they trusted and you delivered them.

5 They cried to you and were saved;
in you they trusted and were not disappointed.

6 But I am a worm and not a man,
scorned by men and despised by the people.

7 All who see me mock me;
they hurl insults, shaking their heads:

8 "He trusts in the LORD;
let the LORD rescue him.
Let him deliver him,
since he delights in him."

9 Yet you brought me out of the womb;
you made me trust in you
even at my mother's breast.

10 From birth I was cast upon you;
from my mother's womb you have been my God.

11 Do not be far from me,
for trouble is near
and there is no one to help.

12 Many bulls surround me;
strong bulls of Bashan encircle me.

13 Roaring lions tearing their prey
open their mouths wide against me.

14 I am poured out like water,
and all my bones are out of joint.
My heart has turned to wax;
it has melted away within me.

15 My strength is dried up like a potsherd,
and my tongue sticks to the roof of my mouth;
you lay me in the dust of death.

16 Dogs have surrounded me;
a band of evil men has encircled me,
they have pierced my hands and my feet.

17 I can count all my bones;
people stare and gloat over me.

18 They divide my garments among them
and cast lots for my clothing.

19 But you, O LORD, be not far off;
O my Strength, come quickly to help me.

20 Deliver my life from the sword,
my precious life from the power of the dogs.

21 Rescue me from the mouth of the lions;
save me from the horns of the wild oxen.

22 I will declare your name to my brothers;
in the congregation I will praise you.

23 You who fear the LORD, praise him!
All you descendants of Jacob, honor him!
Revere him, all you descendants of Israel!

24 For he has not despised or disdained
the suffering of the afflicted one;
he has not hidden his face from him
but has listened to his cry for help.

25 From you comes the theme of my praise in the great assembly;
before those who fear you will I fulfill my vows.

26 The poor will eat and be satisfied;
they who seek the LORD will praise him—
may your hearts live forever!

27 All the ends of the earth
will remember and turn to the LORD,
and all the families of the nations
will bow down before him,

28 for dominion belongs to the LORD
and he rules over the nations.

29 All the rich of the earth will feast and worship;
all who go down to the dust will kneel before him—
those who cannot keep themselves alive.

30 Posterity will serve him;
future generations will be told about the Lord.

31 They will proclaim his righteousness
to a people yet unborn—
for he has done it.

This was known even then as a Psalm representative of the Messiah, as God's anointed suffering servant who comes to make atonement for God's people. Note that while it starts off in distress that it culminates in praise of the God who does NOT abandon his servant: "But you, O Lord, be not far off; O my Strength come to help me" (vs. 19). And the events that Jesus is himself suffering are very much alluded to in the Psalm itself. If you accept the idea of prophecy, I think it even looks ahead to the time of the Church when: "Posterity will serve him; future generations will be told about the Lord. [And] they will proclaim his righteousness to a people yet unborn— for he has done it [made atonement]" (vs. 30-31). Thus, Jesus' cry is anything but a sense of being forsaken, rather it is a proclamation of the grace of God at work even in the midst of so much suffering, and Jesus' trust in the final outcome that he had already wrestled while praying in the garden.





Interesting!
if someone need something from God and the spirit came as you said to intercede for people in what they cant express. Can't they pray to the Spirit himself directly to grant them what they wish for?
Indeed we can, and there are examples of this even in scripture itself. After all, praying to the Spirit is just praying to God.





Why the Spirit has to pray on behalf of them to another God?
He doesn't and isn't. Again, just one God. Three persons, but just one God.




Another thing, what about the "communication" between Jesus and the holy spirit? did anyone pray to the other?
Jesus claimed that the Spirit of the Lord was an anointing upon him and his ministry:
Luke 4

14Jesus returned to Galilee in the power of the Spirit, and news about him spread through the whole countryside. 15He taught in their synagogues, and everyone praised him.
16He went to Nazareth, where he had been brought up, and on the Sabbath day he went into the synagogue, as was his custom. And he stood up to read. 17The scroll of the prophet Isaiah was handed to him. Unrolling it, he found the place where it is written:
18"The Spirit of the Lord is on me,
because he has anointed me
to preach good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners
and recovery of sight for the blind,
to release the oppressed,
19to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor."

20Then he rolled up the scroll, gave it back to the attendant and sat down. The eyes of everyone in the synagogue were fastened on him, 21and he began by saying to them, "Today this scripture is fulfilled in your hearing."

And we are frequently told about how the Spirit led Jesus: "Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, returned from the Jordan and was led by the Spirit in the desert" (Luke 4:1).






At the end, thanks a lot for your continuous answering to most of my questions here. I really appreciate your time.

Peace

Are you sure? I can't imagine you expected a response this long. You asked a lot of good, but involved, questions that deserved as full of an answer as I could provide right now. My apologies if overwhelms more than addresses what you were seeking to know.
 
Sometimes is good to laugh especially when there is serious things involved , as you are muslim you dont need to know about the christians faith from the christians because you have the holly quran that explain everything to you without involving with a serious matters which you will give sheytan opportunity to play with your mind and religion and ALLAH SWT knows best

Read my post and you will know what you need and you can see even i post it twice nobody could discuss it with me because they knows iam right ALHAMDOLIALLAH , They are going only to the weak muslims people

I agree with mariyyah...if im not wrong, ur that girl who said one of the qualities u will be looking for in ur husband is interest in other religions...y would u even care about exploring other religions?
 
The bible is so confusing..is it really the words of god? y are there updates every now and then? like last time, the nuns must cover their hair...now, they can reveal it...who is updating them? can the words of god be updated? at one passage, the bible says jesus should be worshipped..then, another passage quotes jesus saying there is only one who has the right to be worshipped..y so confusing? y must all the neutrals be a rocket scientists to understand the bible? now compare it with the Quran...is there any confusion or contradicting statements of your Rabb?
 
Fantastic post Grace Seeker! I can't speak for our Muslim friends, but it certainly helped me out!
 
The bible is so confusing..is it really the words of god?
If you mean like in recitation or dictation, then NO. I don't believe so. There are a few places where such things are reported, but on the whole it is not that sort of document which can claim to be God speaking directly to us through some prophetic writer. I understand it to be very much a book in which humans are reporting what they understand with regard to God's revelation of himself.

However, there are some Christians more conservative than myself who would have answered differently and claimed that it is indeed the dictated words of God.


y are there updates every now and then?
Again, No. I understand that Muhammad (pbuh) did get periodic updates in the receiving of the Qur'an. But just as that eventually came to an end, so to we believe that all that is to be part of the Bible has been received and the canon of scripture is closed.

like last time, the nuns must cover their hair...now, they can reveal it...who is updating them?
Now you are not talking about updates to the book, but interpretations of it. At some level each person has to reach his/her own understanding of what it says and how it is to apply to their own life. Sometimes pastors, priests, and theologians are called upon for assistance in this process and sometimes people each go their own way.

can the words of god be updated? at one passage, the bible says jesus should be worshipped..then, another passage quotes jesus saying there is only one who has the right to be worshipped..y so confusing? y must all the neutrals be a rocket scientists to understand the bible?
No, you don't have to be a rocket scientist to understand it.

now compare it with the Quran...is there any confusion or contradicting statements of your Rabb?

Yes, there are passages in the Qur'an that I find confusing. Parts of the Hadith that I find contradictory. Outsiders always see a text differently than insiders do. If we saw them the same way we wouldn't be outsiders and insiders.
 
If you mean like in recitation or dictation, then NO. I don't believe so. There are a few places where such things are reported, but on the whole it is not that sort of document which can claim to be God speaking directly to us through some prophetic writer. I understand it to be very much a book in which humans are reporting what they understand with regard to God's revelation of himself.

However, there are some Christians more conservative than myself who would have answered differently and claimed that it is indeed the dictated words of God.


Again, No. I understand that Muhammad (pbuh) did get periodic updates in the receiving of the Qur'an. But just as that eventually came to an end, so to we believe that all that is to be part of the Bible has been received and the canon of scripture is closed.

Now you are not talking about updates to the book, but interpretations of it. At some level each person has to reach his/her own understanding of what it says and how it is to apply to their own life. Sometimes pastors, priests, and theologians are called upon for assistance in this process and sometimes people each go their own way.

No, you don't have to be a rocket scientist to understand it.



Yes, there are passages in the Qur'an that I find confusing. Parts of the Hadith that I find contradictory. Outsiders always see a text differently than insiders do. If we saw them the same way we wouldn't be outsiders and insiders.

Ur bible is not clear...let me tell u why...does ur bible mention heaven and hell? it does right? i have heard of it...my bro-in-law is a catholic...just confirm with me...it mentions heaven and hell right?
 
:sl:

I'll do my best. But I fear you may think naidamar is right by the time I'm done. May peace be upon you in your search for Allah's ‘hidayah.

lol, I already read and agreed to what naidamar said before you even post your reply, the God definition is very confusing in the Christianity I must admit.


okay so you said there are two distinct beings, they didn't start at the same time? Jesus "the human" was created by God. Jesus "the son" wasn't created since he is uncreated.

while Jesus has always been the Son, the Son was not always Jesus.
I think you mean that for a certain time, there was a time where the son God identity was not known yet?


Namely that in coming to earth in the person of Jesus that God the Son

has emptied himself of those divine perogatives that we are so familiar

with ascribing to God:

* omnipresence -- dwelling in the flesh, Jesus cannot be in more than one place at a time
* omniscience -- dwelling in the flesh, there are things that Jesus doesn't know, things that he reports are only known by the Father or only
known by him as the Father reveals them to him
* omnipotence -- the one who once had by the power of his word simply spoken world into being, is now going to be subject to the actions of cruel evil mean

Hardly sounds like God, does it? And it shouldn't. Jesus may be God the creator, but he dwells on earth just as every other created being does, so much has he humbled himself in order to identify with his creation. And so, while his spiritual, divine nature is eternal, his human, earthly nature actually has a beginning
yes, hardly!
Isnt he supposed to be the God and the human at the same time? how can there are some things that he doesn't know except the father reveal them to him?




* As for God to speak to Jesus, I didn't mean normal speech its either you misunderstood me or me misunderstood you. I mean if God can answer his son's prayer as the bible stated in many places, and since they are both are equal, then why the father cant ask the son to grant him something? that seems to be illogical actually "astaghfiralluah" but anyways.


* You have provided the communication or praying this way:
from Son to Father
from Son to Spirit "something like Spirit is powered Jesus, as I understand"

but not:
from God to son
from Spirit to Son

I hope you really get what I mean when I tried to differentiate between normal conversation or communication AND praying "asking for something"

Are you sure? I can't imagine you expected a response this long. You asked a lot of good, but involved, questions that deserved as full of an answer as I could provide right now. My apologies if overwhelms more than addresses what you were seeking to know.
Yup, I expected such length for such topics, its a confusing matter and even pages and pages won't be enough to explain it. Even though I found it hard to read it all in one day because of exams I am having these days so even if I got a reply I doubt it that I will post again in the next couple of weeks or we may even continue this through PMs but not now.

thanks for your reply again, even though I did notice that you went a little off topic that's why your reply was very long...but thanks anyways. I appreciate your time.
 
Talking about Danah...
thanks for notifying me about that.......I thought he was talking to sis marriyah

if im not wrong, ur that girl who said one of the qualities u will be looking for in ur husband is interest in other religions...y would u even care about exploring other religions?

you should direct this to me bro instead of sis marryiah to avoid confusion. Anyways, I just remembered now where did I say such thing here in LI, hence I went to the thread I said that in and was surprised that you quoted me there 2 weeks ago. Sorry it has been ages since I read any new posts in that thread. I will reply to you there inshaAllah
 
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Ur bible is not clear...let me tell u why...does ur bible mention heaven and hell? it does right? i have heard of it...my bro-in-law is a catholic...just confirm with me...it mentions heaven and hell right?


The English word "heaven" is found 404 times in the translation known as the NIV. ("Heavens" is found 167 times and "heavenly" 35 times.

The word English word "hell" is found 14 times.

The exact phrase you ask about "heaven and hell" is never used.

Similar, but not identical, counts would be found in other English translations.


Of course the words which are translated as either "heaven" or "hell" in these English translations are from a number of different terms in the original languages, with connotations that vary widely from one usage with its particular context, to a different context and hence completely different meaning in another passage. Just as one should learn to read Arabic is one seeks to fully understand the Qur'an, it is also advisable to read Hebrew and Greek if one is going to have a nuanced discussion of the Bible.
 
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As to the other part of your statement: To me this sounds like a human dictating to God what God can and cannot do.
well, what can we say about you when you believe that your god was tempted by satan, ate, slept, cried, went to washroom, humiliated and died on the cross by the hands of his creation, etc. etc. I do no think anyone want such a powerless god. However, since your are sort of advertising the idea that god can do anything: can your god lie, can he have sex with his creation, can he give birth? get my drift

For myself, I don't see how it necessarily makes God less than God to enter into humanity
because god entering into creation is a pagan idea and not prophetic idea. what is the point of test if god is going to roam around in his creation? you are telling us to not limit god yet you believe he was limited by time and creation laws and boundaries. Why was your god raised up and to who? is he now inside of his creation or outside of it?
 
lol, I already read and agreed to what naidamar said before you even post your reply, the God definition is very confusing in the Christianity I must admit.
Definition? Our definition is probably not that much different than your own. We define God as that being who reveals God's self to us as the one and only supreme being of the universe, the creator of the world, sustainer of all the lives, and pro-active redeemer of a humanity that has turned its collective back on God but whom God has nevertheless not turned aside from seeking to be reconciled with for God's own name's sake, because it is in the nature of God who loves us and to bring peace and justice to our lives. But as this is only fully available in a right relationship with God, God makes the way for us and shows us the path back to God's self, yet ultimately God gives us the freedom to follow God's guidance to life or not follow it to the natural consequences of life apart from God.

So, I don't think it is our definition of who God is and what God does that is so different from Islam. I think it is more our experience and understanding of how it is that God interacts with human kind that is so different. It is out of that different experience of meeting God revealed in the person of Jesus that arise all our theological differences.


okay so you said there are two distinct beings, they didn't start at the same time? Jesus "the human" was created by God. Jesus "the son" wasn't created since he is uncreated.
No. I would never say "two distinct beings".

Yes, the human body of Jesus was created by God just like every other human body was/is.

True, the Son was not created.

The physical human body known as Jesus is a manifestation of the incarnation of the one and only God. That God is one being (not two or three), but known in three persons: God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, three persons, but still just one being. And that being is the one and only God.

The one eternal divine being entered into time and space and became incarnated in the body of Jesus. He was made known to us as the Son of God, which I indicated earlier in this thread needs to be discussed as to whether it was just a title or if it has signficance beyond that. I believe it has significance beyond just being a title. And, when speaking of Jesus (and not everyone else of whom it is sometimes casually used in a different way), I believe the term "Son of God" should be understood as being synonymous with saying "God the Son", the second person of the triune God.


I think you mean that for a certain time, there was a time where the son God identity was not known yet?
Precisely. From before the creation of the world till the birth of Jesus, God was still God. And as God, God's nature was still that of a triune being. (That is why I spent some time talking about how even the Jews personified God's spirit and God's Word prior to the time of Jesus' birth. I think this shows that holding to the idea of a monotheistic faith such as the Jews are known to possess does not mean that one has to reject the idea of the one singular God being known in a plurality of persons.) But the distinct personages of Father, Son, and Spirit were not immediately revealed. By the time of Jesus God was already spoken of by Jews as "Father" and it was known that God's Spirit was active in the lives of humankind. But it would not be till Jesus himself that the revelation of God the Son would be experienced by humanity.



yes, hardly!
Isnt he supposed to be the God and the human at the same time? how can there are some things that he doesn't know except the father reveal them to him?
He is God, but not "the God". I don't mean to be belittling, but this has to do with some of the eccentricities of the English language. To say "the God" would be to imply that Jesus is 100% of God, and eliminate the idea of the Father and the Spirit.

The way that Patrick explained this to the Celts in Ireland was by the use of a shamrock. It has a single leaf with three distinct lobes. Each lobe is 100% shamrock, but no lobe by itself is 100% of the leaf. Now, this is physical illustration of a spiritual truth, so don't expect that there aren't flaws in the comparison, there are. But look to that which it is capable of presenting and you will see why I can't say that Jesus is "the God". That would be like saying that just one of the three lobes of the leaf is the shamrock. It is only the shamrock in part.

And so, Jesus is not the Father. There are things that are unknown to Jesus that are known only to the Father. Likewise, though we don't talk about it much, there are things known to Jesus that are completely unknown by the Father -- things like hunger, thirst, blistered feet, human things. The Father (not even your concept of Allah) can known these things, for they are known only through experience.

My second langauge is Spanish. And in Spanish we have many different ways of expressing knowledge of something. There is the more general word "saber" which means simply "to know". And then there is knowing about, and knowing through acquaintance, and knowledge that is actual comprehension, and then understanding that is more than just head knowledg but heart as well, and my favorite word "cachar" which means "to get", like in grasping an idea.

Well if you grasp what I am talking about, there are different ways of knowing and being known. I've known my kids all of their lives. But I know them different than there mother does. Sometimes my kids would say that I don't understand them at all. It is at times like these that my wife comes alongside me and helps me to know them differently, as perhaps she knows them. And when I begin to see them through her eyes, they appear completely differently to me than I perceived them before. Now, none of us has changed. But the way I know my kids has changed. That is because there is a different part of me (for I and my wife are really one) by which I have come to know them. Again, this is just a very human way of presenting an idea. It likewise may not be any good in explaining that part which you are struggling with regarding how the Father and the Son might not know all things equally if they are one and the same being. But then again, it might. So, if my analogy does speak to you, great. If it doesn't, then discard it and don't dwell on it. It is after all my attempt to paint a picture with regard to God, and not the real God that we are talking about.

And that is the way it is with what is called the doctrine of the Trinity itself. It is just a word picture. It attempts to be descriptive of God. But it is not God. God is God. And there is none like him. So, all of our word pictures and descriptions will come up short. Don't worry about them if they don't help you. While I do believe that Jesus is God incarnate, I don't know that you need to believe exactly as I do in order to be saved. A heretical view to some Christians no doubt, but I'll have that conversation with them later.


* As for God to speak to Jesus, I didn't mean normal speech its either you misunderstood me or me misunderstood you. I mean if God can answer his son's prayer as the bible stated in many places, and since they are both are equal, then why the father cant ask the son to grant him something?
Well, there is no reason that the Father can't ask the son to grant him something. In fact, I believe he did just that. I believe that the Father and the son, agreed that the Son would voluntarily give his life as an atoning sacrifice to reconcile humankind back to God. This conversation took place before "the foundation of the world". And it was again that conversation which we hear the one side of as Jesus prays in the garden of Gethsemane. Beyond this, there is nothing that the Father needs to ask of the Son, for not confined to the limitations of human flesh there is nothing that the Father needs that he does not already contain in himself.

Try this on for size. When Muhammed prays to Allah, is that a one-way or two-way conversation? Is it just Muhammed asking things of Allah, or might Allah ever ask anything of Muhammaed. At first one might think that there is nothing that Muhammed can provide to Allah that he doesn't already have. But there is. Allah seeks an obedient servant. Allah seeks a voice. Allah seeks one to go forth in Allah's name. Muhammed can provide that. And so Allah does actually ask these things of Muhammad. And in the Christian understanding the Father asks these things of Jesus. Jesus is carrying out his Father's will. How does he know it? He asks, and the Father speaks to Jesus and asks his Son to carry out the Father's will.


that seems to be illogical actually "astaghfiralluah" but anyways.
No more so than Allah speaking to Muhammed.


* You have provided the communication or praying this way:
from Son to Father
from Son to Spirit "something like Spirit is powered Jesus, as I understand"

but not:
from God to son
from Spirit to Son

I hope you really get what I mean when I tried to differentiate between normal conversation or communication AND praying "asking for something"
Well, I get that you think that they are different. I'm not sure that I agree that they are. Yes, I do understand that we use the word "to pray" as a synonym for "to ask" or "to entreat". But, I've already tried to show how it is that some of this conversation you ask about has taken place even before the world began. And how, beyond reconciling humanity to God's self, which the Son was indeed asked to do, the Father and the Spirit had no needs that needed to be met by anyone, not even themselves.


Yup, I expected such length for such topics, its a confusing matter and even pages and pages won't be enough to explain it. Even though I found it hard to read it all in one day because of exams I am having these days so even if I got a reply I doubt it that I will post again in the next couple of weeks or we may even continue this through PMs but not now.

thanks for your reply again, even though I did notice that you went a little off topic that's why your reply was very long...but thanks anyways. I appreciate your time.

Well, good luck with your exams. May I ask what you are studying? I appreciate the manner in which you ask your questions, for it seems that you are serious in seeking to understand another's point of view without having to enter into unharmonious disputes. For your inquisitiveness I thank you. May Allah continue to guide you in all your steps and endeavors.

Peace.
 
well, what can we say about you when you believe that your god was tempted by satan, ate, slept, cried, went to washroom, humiliated and died on the cross by the hands of his creation, etc. etc. I do no think anyone want such a powerless god. However, since your are sort of advertising the idea that god can do anything: can your god lie, can he have sex with his creation, can he give birth? get my drift
I'm not advertising the idea that God can do anything. I'm saying that nothing is impossible with God. Those really are two different statments.

Since God is a "God of truth" (see Ps. 35:5 and Is. 65:16) then I find it highly improbable that he would lie. But could he? That is the same sort fo question as "Could God make a rock so big that God could not move it?" It is a question that asks God to deny himself, and God who is faithful and steadfast simply will not deny himself. So the question become irrelevant.


because god entering into creation is a pagan idea and not prophetic idea. what is the point of test if god is going to roam around in his creation?
God speaking to human kind is also a pagan idea. But that doesn't mean that it couldn't or hasn't happened.

It is a Muslim idea that the point of life is a test. It is not an idea that I believe properly reflects the character of God, nor does it deal with the problem of evil and human sin in the world. For it implies that it is possible to be good enough to pass the test. And that if one passes the test that God then has to grant you something for you have earned it with your passing grade. The reality is that not even Muslims believe that they earn heaven, it is always a gift from God, one that is a result not of their endeavors but of the heart directed toward God. So, the whole idea of life being about a test falls short of the mark of how we relate to God, not just in the Christian world, but ultimately in the Muslim world as well. God does seek our obedience, but this is not a test, this is a response of faith in the one in whom we put our trust to ultimately save us.

And so whether Christian or Muslim we offer our lives in obedience as a sort of spiritual worship, a type of sacrifice that harkens all the way back to Abraham's own obedience which God counted as a righteous act. Life is not a test as much as it is a demonstration of faith in God.

you are telling us to not limit god yet you believe he was limited by time and creation laws and boundaries. Why was your god raised up and to who? is he now inside of his creation or outside of it?
That last one is a good question. And I don't have a definitive answer for you, just my own personal opinion on the matter. But I believe that Jesus is now outside of time and space.
 
Grace Seeker, may I say, you've cast a doubt out of my mind the other day when you said that the Son has always existed but Jesus hasn't. I was always struggling with that point of theology, but you strengthened my faith by your post. So thanks.
 
The English word "heaven" is found 404 times in the translation known as the NIV. ("Heavens" is found 167 times and "heavenly" 35 times.

The word English word "hell" is found 14 times.

The exact phrase you ask about "heaven and hell" is never used.

Similar, but not identical, counts would be found in other English translations.


Of course the words which are translated as either "heaven" or "hell" in these English translations are from a number of different terms in the original languages, with connotations that vary widely from one usage with its particular context, to a different context and hence completely different meaning in another passage. Just as one should learn to read Arabic is one seeks to fully understand the Qur'an, it is also advisable to read Hebrew and Greek if one is going to have a nuanced discussion of the Bible.

So according to the bible, what is the hell for? its only mention 14 times btw...
 
I'm not advertising the idea that God can do anything. I'm saying that nothing is impossible with God. Those really are two different statments.
and when did Muslims deny the concept of nothing is impossible for God? However, we deny ideas which do not befit Him: for example, having the attributes of humans and entering into His creation

so from your preservative, where do we stop and draw the line of what your god would do or not? since you believe your god was 100 % human and 100 % god then every attribute of human should be applied to him and not only few.

God speaking to human kind is also a pagan idea. But that doesn't mean that it couldn't or hasn't happened.
i'm sorry that is wrong...were there any pagans before Prophet Adam (peace be upon him)? The idea of revelation and Allah directly speaking to His Prophets (peace be upon them) is Prophetic idea. However, none of the Prophets (peace be upon them) preached that Allah Azza wa Jal can enter into His creation.

It is a Muslim idea that the point of life is a test. It is not an idea that I believe properly reflects the character of God, nor does it deal with the problem of evil and human sin in the world. For it implies that it is possible to be good enough to pass the test. And that if one passes the test that God then has to grant you something for you have earned it with your passing grade. The reality is that not even Muslims believe that they earn heaven, it is always a gift from God, one that is a result not of their endeavors but of the heart directed toward God. So, the whole idea of life being about a test falls short of the mark of how we relate to God, not just in the Christian world, but ultimately in the Muslim world as well. God does seek our obedience, but this is not a test, this is a response of faith in the one in whom we put our trust to ultimately save us.
Allhamdulillah, at least you admit that the idea of test is Muslims' idea and you kuffaar reject it. Your alien beliefs do not come from any Prophetic revelation so it has no value and plus it is only your opinion.
And so whether Christian or Muslim we offer our lives in obedience as a sort of spiritual worship, a type of sacrifice that harkens all the way back to Abraham's own obedience which God counted as a righteous act. Life is not a test as much as it is a demonstration of faith in God.
you are simply playing with words --- sacrifice itself alludes to the fact something has been set for you and in order to overcome or achieve it you need to sacrifice somethings. and that is called a test, checking whether you will choose and do A or B. however, because your whole idea and understanding is corrupt, you do not want to admit it and picking straws to construct your point.

So we have faith in God by lip service and holding onto blampsheous beliefs and practices? The belief in the heart is completed with affirming it with speech of the tongue and speech of the tongue is completed with actions of the limbs. All of this is compounded and faith and righteous deeds are not complete if any one of them is missing. You are only focusing on spirtual part because that's all you got in your history book but for rest of things you believe your god was so unjust that he gave you no rules and laws to live by. Hence, you make up your own laws, whatever you feel is good, or depend on humans. Ever wondered, why many of Christians are turning into secularists and liberalists?

That last one is a good question. And I don't have a definitive answer for you, just my own personal opinion on the matter. But I believe that Jesus is now outside of time and space.
I understand but crux of the matter is that you people are not certain about where is your god now! My other question was still stands: why was you god raised up? To who was he raised up? what was he gonna do up?
 
So according to the bible, what is the hell for? its only mention 14 times btw...

Yeah, thanks for tell me what I just told you about hell being mentioned by name only 14 times....I fail to see how this connects to the topic of the thread -- Christian worship of Jesus.
 
My other question was still stands: why was you god raised up? To who was he raised up? what was he gonna do up?

Jesus' resurrection serves as vindication of his life and sacrifice. Those who had him crucified thought that they had won the day, but obviously they hadn't. Even more importantly it shows that death and the devil don't win the day either. The resurrection is as strong of a proclamation as one could make that Christ is victor or all the sources and powers of evil in this world. The devil may have thought that he could lay claim to people who don't pass the test of life (I mention that because it seems to be important to you), death rather than life being the wages of sin. But Christ entered death and then like a time bomb going off in the very depths of hell itself he destroyed death. We will still experience physical death because our mortal bodies die, but we need never experience spiritual death because we have been claimed by and made alive forever in Jesus Christ.

The death and the devil no longer have any power to claim us, for Christ as already won that victory for us, one we could never win if it merely depended on our ability to pass the test of life where one slip and you die. That's the good news of the Gospel message, it no longer is one slip and you die. And that's always way the concept of the Injil that Muslims like to talk about is NOT what Jesus came for. He didn't come as much to tell us how to live, not even to be our example, he came to actually win life back for us. He didn't do that with words, but with action.
 

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