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Christians, Muslims, and the "One God"
Catholic Answers ^ | March 25, 2013 | Todd Aglialoro

Posted on 03/26/2013 6:56:09 AM PDT by NYer

Last week, Pope Francis received a collection of world religious leaders in his first ecumenical and interreligious event. His address to them contained diplomatic niceties and specific expressions of good will aimed at Orthodox, Protestants, Jews, and Muslims.

His remarks to the latter recognized that Muslims “worship the one living and merciful God, and call upon him in prayer.” In this he echoed the 1964 dogmatic constitution Lumen Gentium, which gave a nod to “the Mohammedans, who, professing to hold the faith of Abraham, along with us adore the one and merciful God, who on the last day will judge mankind.”

Now, both Lumen Gentium 16 and Pope Francis’s words have a pastoral rather than doctrinal purpose. Their aim is to build interreligious bridges by generously acknowledging whatever can be found to be true in other faiths—not to make precise pronouncements about their theology. That said, Lumen Gentium is an exercise of the ordinary Magisterium, and even casual statements from a pope (be it this one from Francis or similar ones made by his predecessors) shouldn’t be taken lightly.

So, what does it mean to say that Muslims adore the one God along with us—to say, as can be reasonably drawn from these statements, that Muslims worship the same God as Catholics? We can consider the idea in several senses.

I think we can say with confidence that any monotheist who calls out to the Lord is heard by the Lord, whether it’s a Muslim, a pagan philosopher seeking the God of reason, or a Native American petitioning the Great Spirit. As Lumen Gentium 16 continues, God is not “far distant from those who in shadows and images seek [him].”

Likewise I think we’re on solid ground in saying that the subjective intention of Muslims is to worship the one God—moreover, the one God from the line of Abrahamic revelation. Whether or not their version of that revelation is authentic or correct, that’s what they “profess to hold” to. Furthermore, some of the attributes of the God to whom they address their worship are comparable to the Christian God’s: He is one, merciful, omnipotent, and the judge of the world.

Just as clearly, though, we cannot say that the God in whom Muslims profess to believe is theologically identical to the Christian God. For the most obvious example, their God is a “lonely God,” as Chesterton put it, whereas ours is a Trinity of persons. Beyond that difference, in the divine economy our Gods are also quite different: most pointedly in that ours took human nature to himself and dwelt among us on earth, whereas the Muslim God remains pure transcendence. To Muslims the idea of an incarnation is blasphemy.

And so perhaps we can distinguish between worship of God and belief in him, the former being more about the intent of the worshiper and the latter being more about the object of belief himself. Thus could Gerhard Müller, bishop emeritus of Regensburg and since last year the prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, assert in 2007 that Muslims and Christians “do not believe in the same God,” and yet not contradict any magisterial teaching.

Of course, Jews believe in an utterly transcendent and “lonely” God, too; the idea that Jesus was God’s son, Yahweh incarnate, was likewise blasphemous to the Jews of his day. Is their theology as deficient as Islam’s? Ought we to put them in the same category as Muslims: subjectively worshiping the one God but believing in him, as least partly, in error?

Well, at least one difference suggests itself. Muslims “profess” to hold to the faith of Abraham but really don’t; their version of Abrahamic faith is false. (Of course, they believe that our version is the false one, a corruption of the Qur’an.) Jews, on the other hand, know and believe in their God according to his authentic self-revelation—what they have received from him is true, just incomplete. To be fully true, Jewish theology just needs to be perfected by Christian revelation, whereas, although we can identify many truths in it, Islamic theology needs to be broken down, corrected, rebuilt from an authentic foundation.

Now, it can be a bad practice to judge ideas by their sources. But if, as Benedict XVI has said, faith is at root a personal encounter with God, then the authenticity of God’s personal revelation of himself is of the utmost importance. In other words, the source of God-knowledge becomes the very question. We worship and believe in God because and to the extent that we know him. And we know him, above all other reasons, according to how he revealed himself to us.

In this sense, then, I suggest that we can correctly say that Jews worship and believe in a God who is qualitatively truer, closer to the God of Christianity, than the God of Islam. Both Jews and Muslims lay claim to the same revelation, but where Jews have an accurate record of it (and thus of the God it reveals) Muslims have a fictionalized adaptation.

This question of the theological similarities and differences between Christianity and Islam is perhaps more important than it ever has been. With religious folk of all kinds increasingly beset by secularism and moral relativism, we look across creedal lines for friends and allies—comrades-in-arms in the fight for unborn life, traditional marriage and morality, religious rights, and a continued place for believers in the cultural conversation. It can be an encouragement and a temptation, then, to look at Islam and see not warriors of jihad against Arab Christians and a decadent West, but fellow-soldiers of an “ecumenical jihad” against an anti-theist culture.

Can Islam be that reliable ally? (Shameless product plug alert.) That’s the subject of the newest book from Catholic Answers Press: Not Peace but a Sword by Robert Spencer. The evidence he presents will help us understand Islam’s God more clearly, and make us examine more shrewdly the prospects for any future alliance with followers of the Prophet.


TOPICS: Catholic; Islam; Judaism; Orthodox Christian
KEYWORDS: catholic
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To: stuartcr

I have done just what you asked.


61 posted on 03/26/2013 11:02:11 AM PDT by wideawake
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To: chesley

I don’t understand why anyone would even bother to find God, since He is inside each of us.


62 posted on 03/26/2013 11:09:25 AM PDT by stuartcr ("I have habits that are older than the people telling me they're bad for me.")
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To: wideawake

So there can be an infinite series of movers and causes?


63 posted on 03/26/2013 11:11:34 AM PDT by stuartcr ("I have habits that are older than the people telling me they're bad for me.")
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To: stuartcr
Is it movers or is it causes?

Do you mean an infinite series of movers and moved, or an infinite series of causes and effects?

In either case, there cannot be, because the infinite loop would need to be complete and consistent - a self-contained system.

This, however, is not logically possible. It would involve finite entities generating an uncountably infinite series of effects - but a finite set of entities (or described logically: rules, or sentences) cannot generate such a cloud of effects using an internally consistent algorithm.

64 posted on 03/26/2013 11:20:03 AM PDT by wideawake
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To: wideawake

Both, I combined Aquinas’ first 2 into one for the sake of brevity.

Not logical to you, but perhaps it is to God? Maybe the algorithm is God Himself? Would He have to be consistent?


65 posted on 03/26/2013 11:35:46 AM PDT by stuartcr ("I have habits that are older than the people telling me they're bad for me.")
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To: stuartcr

Is your position that: objecctive truth does not exist? ... or that one cannot know the truth of GOD’s existance? I suspect the former but don’t want to jump to any conclusions.


66 posted on 03/26/2013 12:03:46 PM PDT by Nanny7
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To: Alex Murphy; Arkansas Toothpick

Re 51 - Just be glad that they got over burning us at the stake and tearing us to pieces on the rack (among many other creative forms of torture and extermination) as they did for about a thousand years between when Emperor Constantine co-opted Christianity and around the late 17th century when European civilization had had about enough of it.

From my admittedly casual view of history, I see little practical distinction between Roman “Christianity” and Islam in terms of how they propagated the religion and treated dissidents (”Heritics” or “Infidels” respectively) for centuries. If anything, Muslims were sometimes more tolerant and humanitarian.

Thanks be to God we’ve come a long way since then; RCs may still damn us to hell, but at least they don’t violently expedite the trip like they used to - or Muslims are still wont to do whenever they get the chance.

Happy Peshach (Passover)by the way.

That was yesterday if you go by the Rabinical calender and tomorrow by the old Lunar Hebrew calender. Didn’t you celebrate it?
“Jesus” and His followers did.

Why not? it’s one of the Holy Festivals that our God actually commanded us (not just the Jews) to observe... unlike the Babylonian / Roman Pagan festivals in honor of false gods like Estrus (Easter) and “Christmas” (Saturnalia, worshiping the Sun god, whose “resurrection” was celebrated on the Winter Solstice).

Both the HRCC and “Protestantism” have retained these pagan corruptions to the original Faith ever since Constantine took it over and started slaughtering the Jews and anyone else who dared to resist or question his perversions.

Our common Ad*nai (Lord) Yeshua HaMasshiach (His original Hebrew Name and rank, BTW) was not, IIRC, a Roman; he was a Jew, as were all of his Apostles.
He was surely fluent in Latin, but probably spoke in Hebrew and Aramaic most of the time he was incarnate here on Earth.

So why isn’t the High and Holy Mass spoken in Hebrew?

Where do we get off rejecting and despising the ancient Hebraic roots of our Faith and the culture of our mutually confessed Savior, pray tell?

(Standing by for some interesting kickback on this one!)


67 posted on 03/26/2013 12:04:10 PM PDT by George Varnum (Liberty, like our Forefather's Flintlock Musket, must be kept clean, oiled, and READY!)
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To: stuartcr
I don’t understand why anyone would even bother to find God, since He is inside each of us

You can believe that, if you want. You are wrong.

68 posted on 03/26/2013 12:20:30 PM PDT by chesley (Vast deserts of political ignorance makes liberalism possible - James Lewis)
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To: Nanny7

I do not believe there is a moral absolute that applies to everyone throughout history.


69 posted on 03/26/2013 12:25:31 PM PDT by stuartcr ("I have habits that are older than the people telling me they're bad for me.")
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To: chesley

See, I knew you belonged to that group that believes they are right.


70 posted on 03/26/2013 12:28:10 PM PDT by stuartcr ("I have habits that are older than the people telling me they're bad for me.")
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To: stuartcr

Thou shalt not murder...


71 posted on 03/26/2013 12:28:20 PM PDT by MarDav
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To: chesley

Sorry wrong guy, but I’m sure you do believe you’re right. Good for you


72 posted on 03/26/2013 12:29:56 PM PDT by stuartcr ("I have habits that are older than the people telling me they're bad for me.")
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To: MarDav

Would that include all taking of life, or just certain instances?


73 posted on 03/26/2013 12:32:27 PM PDT by stuartcr ("I have habits that are older than the people telling me they're bad for me.")
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To: stuartcr

Murder is the taking of innocent life. So, for example, killing someone in self-defense is not the same.


74 posted on 03/26/2013 12:40:24 PM PDT by MarDav
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To: MarDav

The end result of murder is taking a human life, right?

Collateral damage is taking innocent lives, isn’t it? Or is it ok if a govt says so? Wars are ok? Accidental killings, ok? taking out a suspected badguy, ok?

Sounds like the moral absolute of taking a human life is relative to the reasoning behind it.


75 posted on 03/26/2013 12:51:47 PM PDT by stuartcr ("I have habits that are older than the people telling me they're bad for me.")
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To: stuartcr

I do believe that I am right. If I didn’t, I would change my opinion.

We’ll all find out some day. Good luck to you.


76 posted on 03/26/2013 1:59:15 PM PDT by chesley (Vast deserts of political ignorance makes liberalism possible - James Lewis)
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To: Alex Murphy

A “public anathema” would be an excommunication. In so far as Muslims weren’t part of the Christian or Catholic communion, there would be no excommunication or anathema of Muslims, though a Christian who espoused such views could be excommunicated or anathematized.


77 posted on 03/26/2013 2:15:37 PM PDT by x
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To: stuartcr

You stated....”God.. is inside each of us.”

Prove it.


78 posted on 03/26/2013 2:38:35 PM PDT by caww
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To: x

Yeshua (”Jesus”, if you will) was pretty much “Anathematized” by the Jewish Sanhedrin or dominant religious institution of his time, wasn’t he?

Is it a sin to be anathema to an apostate religious institution (”Church”)?

...Or is it a sacred obligation?


79 posted on 03/26/2013 2:42:26 PM PDT by George Varnum (Liberty, like our Forefather's Flintlock Musket, must be kept clean, oiled, and READY!)
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To: stuartcr
You stated...”I do not believe there is a moral absolute that applies to everyone throughout history.”

Are you then of the mind that each individual determines his own standard of morality?.... and if so, by what standard then are those morals measured?

80 posted on 03/26/2013 2:44:40 PM PDT by caww
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