Drsoccerball
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none of the three. I felt it necessary to expand on what that looks like. No further dialogue is necessary. It is quite clear that we would disagree, and arguing further is unnecessary at this stage.Sure that's the orthodox creed, but the propositions that I've layed out for you are extractions from the creed. Do you deny the first second or third proposition?
I watched the first couple of minutes just for curiousity sake. I can understand that Muslims disagree with the Christian God, that is expected. I think it sufficiently represents the Islamic position, which I happen to disagree with.
Trinitarians hold the following set of propositions:
1. The Father is God
2. Jesus is God
3. The Father is not Jesus
Where 'is' is used in the sense of identity, i.e. The Father is identical with God
But of course, the 3 propositions that I've layed out are self-evidently inconsistent.
I don't think so at all, the first proposition is a direct read off of your posts and are propositions you must hold in any case, you must hold that the Son is God, you must hold that the Father is God, and you must hold that they are distinct Being. For example the Son was supposedly crucified at the cross, yet the Father was not, the Son eternally emanates with the Father, yet the Father is truly a se (this is another doctrine that is incoherent).none of the three. I felt it necessary to expand on what that looks like. No further dialogue is necessary. It is quite clear that we would disagree, and arguing further is unnecessary at this stage.
"Jesus and God differ"I don't think so at all, the first proposition is a direct read off of your posts and are propositions you must hold in any case, you must hold that the Son is God, you must hold that the Father is God, and you must hold that they are distinct Being. For example the Son was supposedly crucified at the cross, yet the Father was not, the Son eternally emanates with the Father, yet the Father is truly a se (this is another doctrine that is incoherent).
I can come up with a whole host of these spelled out inconsistencies (and not rhetorical jabs like "1+1+1=1" which is imprecise) that are very difficult to see any reconciliation with. For example:
1. Jesus and God differ*
2. Jesus is God
3. Two identical things (X is Y) necessarily implies that (if X has property P => Y has property P). Essentially, "identical things don't differ"
*I am assuming you are referring to 'nature', that said the term God when used by Christians in reference to the Trinity can be very general
These 3 statements are of course logically inconsistent, if 1 is true and 2 is true, given 2 it means Jesus and God cannot differ, contrary to 1.
So how should we approach this conundrum? We obviously have to relinquish the premise that is least founded by the evidence. 1 is obvious with Biblical evidence, 2 is only due to tenuous interpretations of some of the statements of Jesus, 3 is indispensable as a principle of reason.
My question is, we agree that the existence of an Omnipotent and Necessary Being, God, Exalted is He, exists and that this is given support by reason. With other things we can deduce about God, we can rule out the truth of every other religion bar Christianity and Islam (at least on a pragmatic level). If reason led me this far, and reason seems to tell me that Christianity is false, why should I not then believe in Islam? (of course I'm not mentioning at this moment the reasons why one should believe in the Prophethood of the Blessed Prophet Muhammad, since I'm just asking what pure reason leads us to believe right now)
strawman/big generalisation just saying. some degree of truthHmm.. Well that's a tough question. Never thought about dying young...
I will probably become religious and practicing when I finish Uni, find a nice girl and get married. For now I am a young guy and so I want to have fun and party all the way till then! Being religious prevents you from doing all of that!
repostYes you're quite right, one major difference is the status of Jesus. However there are some other differences, e.g. the characteristics of God/Allah (contrast Romans 5:8 "God demonstrates his own love for us in this: while we were still sinners, Christ died for us" with Surah 2:277 "God loves not the impious and sinners")
There's one thing that I'd just like to raise to your attention: you said that in the Bible, Jesus never claimed to be God. Here's a few verses from the gospels that contradict this:
John 14:9 "Anyone who has seen me has seen the father"
John 8:58 "Very truly I tell you, before Abraham was born, I am!" ('I AM' is the name God gives himself in Exodus 3:14)
Throughout the gospels Jesus refers to himself as the Son of Man (for example, Mark 2:10, Matthew 17:22, Luke 22:48, etc), which references Daniel 7: 13-14
Luke 5:20 "Friend, your sins are forgiven" - this is equivalent to Jesus claiming to be God, because in the Jewish religious milieu that Jesus was in, only God could forgive sins (Isaiah 43:25)
As far as Jesus praying, he prays to his Father, which according to Jesus, he is equal with (in John 5:17, Jesus is breaking the Sabbath, and the Jewish leaders begin to persecute him. Jesus says "My Father is always at work to this very day, and I too am working". John 5:18 then explicitly says that Jesus makes "himself equal with God"). While Jesus does claim to be equal with the Father, there can still be communication and different roles for both Jesus and the Father. This really comes down to doctrine about the trinity.
I appreciate your hesitancy in raising Jesus to a divine level, after all he was a man! However, the Jesus of the Bible certainly does claim to be divine, hence, if I believe that he truly did rise from the dead (as Jesus himself predicted several times, e.g. Matthew 20:19), then that is a strong indicator to me that he was telling the truth about his divinity.
I guess what you say struck you about Islam is what also strikes me about Christianity: the textual integrity of the Bible, and also my experience of life.
Maybe for you...But then again people thought Einstein was wrong...Observing a christian-muslim debate is like listening to two people arguing about whether grass is purple or orange.
I am confident from your previous posts that to comment that you are somewhat non-religious (possibly atheist/atheistic agnostic), and thus an equally valid argument would be to say whether the grass exists or not. Unfortunately God is not reducible to grass, but if in your mind he doesn't exist, it is not going to matter for you what he is like then, or his character/nature.Observing a christian-muslim debate is like listening to two people arguing about whether grass is purple or orange.
christ youre an idiotI don't think so at all, the first proposition is a direct read off of your posts and are propositions you must hold in any case, you must hold that the Son is God, you must hold that the Father is God, and you must hold that they are distinct Being. For example the Son was supposedly crucified at the cross, yet the Father was not, the Son eternally emanates with the Father, yet the Father is truly a se (this is another doctrine that is incoherent).
I can come up with a whole host of these spelled out inconsistencies (and not rhetorical jabs like "1+1+1=1" which is imprecise) that are very difficult to see any reconciliation with. For example:
1. Jesus and God differ
2. Jesus is God
3. Two identical things (X is Y) necessarily implies that (if X has property P => Y has property P). Essentially, "identical things don't differ"
These 3 statements are of course logically inconsistent, if 1 is true and 2 is true, given 2 it means Jesus and God cannot differ, contrary to 1.
So how should we approach this conundrum? We obviously have to relinquish the premise that is least founded by the evidence. 1 is obvious with Biblical evidence, 2 is only due to tenuous interpretations of some of the statements of Jesus, 3 is indispensable as a principle of reason.
My question is, we agree that the existence of an Omnipotent and Necessary Being, God, Exalted is He, exists and that this is given support by reason. With other things we can deduce about God, we can rule out the truth of every other religion bar Christianity and Islam (at least on a pragmatic level). If reason led me this far, and reason seems to tell me that Christianity is false, why should I not then believe in Islam? (of course I'm not mentioning at this moment the reasons why one should believe in the Prophethood of the Blessed Prophet Muhammad, since I'm just asking what pure reason leads us to believe right now)
Everything he said made sense ? I suppose writing that reply insinuates you couldn't reply to what he said?christ youre an idiot
Yes ..... until the EVIDENCE showed that he was indeed right.Maybe for you...But then again people thought Einstein was wrong...
dan explained the folly of what sy saidEverything he said made sense ? I suppose writing that reply insinuates you couldn't reply to what he said?
dan explained the folly of what sy said
Unlike some religions we don't accept without evidence. In fact its compulsory to learn in our religion. The Quran is an ongoing miracle due to its literary value due to scientific facts etc... We as Muslims give out a hand to the Christians but i guess we understand the scriptures differently :/ When the bible says "The father is greater than I, the father is greater than all" we interpret it as God is greater than Jesus thus Jesus cannot be God but Christians interpret it differently. When Jesus says "By myself I can do nothing; I judge only as I hear, and my judgment is just, for I seek not to please myself but him who sent me" we interpret that again as God being greater than Jesus. Just like when it says "I and my father are one" if you read the context you know it means one in purpose and not one as in the same entity. Thats my view upon the Christianity and Islam we interpret things differently...Yes ..... until the EVIDENCE showed that he was indeed right.
Is there any chance of Muslims/Christians converting the other through tangible, repeatable evidence?
Or is the debate going to continue being about assertions based on respective dogmas?
I find it very interesting that Muslims use the bible to argue that Jesus was not divine, as interesting as braintic finds muslims and christians debating (unless he doesn't find it interesting at all).Unlike some religions we don't accept without evidence. In fact its compulsory to learn in our religion. The Quran is an ongoing miracle due to its literary value due to scientific facts etc... We as Muslims give out a hand to the Christians but i guess we understand the scriptures differently :/ When the bible says "The father is greater than I, the father is greater than all" we interpret it as God is greater than Jesus thus Jesus cannot be God but Christians interpret it differently. When Jesus says "By myself I can do nothing; I judge only as I hear, and my judgment is just, for I seek not to please myself but him who sent me" we interpret that again as God being greater than Jesus. Just like when it says "I and my father are one" if you read the context you know it means one in purpose and not one as in the same entity. Thats my view upon the Christianity and Islam we interpret things differently...
Refer to the video he explains it better:
EDIT: Sylvia this also answers some of your claims about Islam since you're reading out of context and misunderstanding by looking at one verse by itself
