Tag Archives: differences
Differences between Sunni and Shia Muslims
There is one God in three Persons: God the Father, God the Son (Jesus) and God the Holy Spirit. Throughout his entire ministry, beginning at his baptism, Jesus demonstrated his own oneness with the Father while also introducing us to the Holy Spirit. Many of the things that the scripture says were done by God were actually done by the Lord (Jesus), including the creation of heaven and earth (John 1:3, 10). As Paul said, God created all things by Christ Jesus (Ephesians 3:9). The Holy Ghost as a member of the Godhead is also a God. The Rig-Veda, the oldest existing scripture of mankind, points out that truth is one, and men call it by various names. Men and women seem to get the syndrome in equal numbers, although some estimates skew the number toward men. As a man, I swear my allegiance to the Sun (whereas tribal creation stories say women get their power from the moon). He is the One who has been sending prophets and messengers to guide His creation to Him. When one speaks of God, it is generally and appropriately the Father who is referred to; that is, Elohim, the Supreme Governor of the universe and the Father of mankind.
But during the 1920s and 1930s, hefiercely resisted the emerging field of quantum mechanics because it clashed with his firm belief that the universe is deterministic-that is, physical actions always have predictable effects. Belief in one God, monotheism, is the core and the most fundamental concept in Islam. Human logic recognizes the fact that to get anything precisely done, the task must be led by only one person. The comic book manifestation of a floating head, MODOK must use a hover chair and an exoskeleton to support his mutated head, which is gigantic and takes up most of his person. According to the Book of Genesis in the Bible, Nimrod (the great-grandson of Noah) was “a mighty hunter”, something that Fudd definitely was not. However, in Genesis 1:26 God said, “Let us make man in our image” (emphasis mine). Some note that such a powerful entity cannot have a material existence, while others say that we humans are not able to fully comprehend God and we can only make approximate conclusions about God. This utterly transcendent God became human, so that we humans can know God and become as God ourselves.
This theological framework for understanding can be difficult to comprehend, yet not any less true. Therefore, the evangelist John can say that “God is love;” that is, he creates out of love, not in order to have something to love, but because his very existence is love. But now, in places like Italy and Germany, new European states have been forged around people with a shared language and cultural history. Throughout the history of Catholicism, there have been more than 10,000 Saints. If I have to honestly declare what I believe to be accurate for me, to exist in a state of faith: I would say the God – the giver of light – for me, is the almighty Sun. And 48% say they have experienced at least one incident of discrimination in the past 12 months. There is one God, with possible subordinate divas, gods or spiritual powers. Faith Forum: One God, many Gods or none at all? Christians believe in one God. Christians believe this One and Three God transcends all; God is a mystery. For example, there is only one driver for any vehicle.
We believe that there are three separate persons in the Godhead – the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost – each of whom is a God. This notion of an immanent God (that is, one internal to our world rather than transcendently separate from it), while not carefully worked out by Kant himself, would be developed by later German Idealists (most significantly, Hegel). I BELIEVE IN ONE GOD … The personage known as Jehovah in Old Testament times is the Son, known as Jesus Christ, and who is also a God. The law of God was first written down in the Old Testament of the Holy Bible. The Bible teaches that God is the creator. For the Jewish authors of the Bible there was little angst over the singular and plural nature of God. Although mysterious, the Jewish authors never specifically addressed the workings of the plural nature of God. Not simply a divine monad, the God who exists forever and is unchanging exists as a triad, or Trinity, in a communion of love. All that exists is God; but the Reality of Divinity is holy above all understanding. They believe that the Imam exists to provide moral and religious leadership to the world.