Ansar Al-'Adl
Jewel of LI
- Messages
- 4,681
- Reaction score
- 922
- Gender
- Male
- Religion
- Islam

Can you show me where I am measuring the greatness of God?mule said:I think you are using the logic of man to measure the greatness of God.
I never did. I just showed that the trinity can logically not be considered monotheism.
Now its up to you if you wish to tell me that your religion is illogical, I am not making that conclusion I am simply using the logic given to me by God to analyse the truth.
And the truth is that the trinity is not monotheism.
So you are saying that God using the plural=multiple Gods? Or multiple ;persons' in a God?The Koran does not have the word "royal plural" in it either........
Let us (plural) make man in our(plural) image. So God(singular) created man in his(singular) own image, in the image of God (singular)created he him..........
Anyway, this use of 'we' according to Islam is the Royal We. You may read this fatwa for more info: http://63.175.194.25/index.php?ln=eng&ds=qa&lv=browse&QR=606&dgn=4
In arabic, it is not unusual to see a single arab say "naqool" (we say), when he is only one person. This is not evidence for trinity at all!
And why three? Why not four? Or five?
And why Christ as His son? Why not Moses? Or David? Or John the Baptist?
I need more proof than that, mule.
many prophets were called son of God.I was not asking you a question. I know what that means. I don't agree with your response. I also don't believe that all the sons of God are divine. Some are servants and others angels and yet in Jesus' case he called God his father.
Wikipedia says about the tile "Son of God":
the title belongs also to any one whose piety has placed him in a filial relation to God (see Wisdom ii. 13, 16, 18; v. 5, where "the sons of God" are identical with "the saints"; comp. Ecclus. [Sirach] iv. 10).
In Judaism, it is through such personal relations that the individual becomes conscious of God's fatherhood, and gradually in Hellenistic and rabbinical literature "sonship to God" was ascribed first to every Israelite and then to every member of the human race (Abot iii. 15, v. 20; Ber. v. 1; see Abba). In one midrash, the Torah is said to be God's "daughter" (Leviticus Rabbah xx.)"
How do we know which ones are divine and which aren't?

Looking forward to your reply,
Ansar