This is an important fundamental question for each faith.
The basic answer is: no, we do not worship the same god. But we need to understand why we confidently say they
are not the same god. Here’s why they are not the same:
The Muslim god is Allah. Islam
teaches that the doctrine of the Trinity (God the Father, Son & Holy
Spirit) is sacrilegious. In addition, Muslims claim Allah has no son. That
means they reject the trinity (God in three persons), & Jesus Christ as the
Son of God.
It is very clear the Christians and Muslims do not worship the same god. There is only one God and He is not Allah.
It's also important to know when the Bible and the Qur'an were completed. The Bible was completed in 95 AD and the Qur'an was completed in 631 AD. God gave His last word of the Bible in 95 AD and included a warning with His final words. The warning was to not add any more words to it. This means anything written after 95 AD were not God's words. Here's God's warning from Revelation 22:18: And I solemnly declare to everyone who hears the words of prophecy written in this book: If anyone adds anything to what is written here, God will add to that person the plagues described in this book.
It is very clear the Christians and Muslims do not worship the same god. There is only one God and He is not Allah.
It's also important to know when the Bible and the Qur'an were completed. The Bible was completed in 95 AD and the Qur'an was completed in 631 AD. God gave His last word of the Bible in 95 AD and included a warning with His final words. The warning was to not add any more words to it. This means anything written after 95 AD were not God's words. Here's God's warning from Revelation 22:18: And I solemnly declare to everyone who hears the words of prophecy written in this book: If anyone adds anything to what is written here, God will add to that person the plagues described in this book.
I also wanted to share a Billy Graham article to help us understand. Here’s the link:
http://billygraham.org/decision-magazine/december-2013/do-christians-and-muslims-worship-the-same-god/
Praying this helps you,
Carol
Do Christians and Muslims Worship the Same God?
By Albert Mohler • December 1, 2013
Does God care what we call Him? Do Muslims and Christians
worship the same god? These are questions many Christians are asking these
days, and for good reason.
For some time now, feminist theologians and a host of others
have suggested that Christians should adopt new names for God. One denomination
went so far as to affirm names like “Giver, Gift and Giving” in place of the
“Father, Son and Holy Spirit” to be used in worship. Feminist theologians have
demanded that masculine pronouns and names for God be replaced with female or
gender-neutral terms. But to change the name of God is to redefine the God we
reference. Changing the name of God is no small matter.
As a matter of fact, God takes His name very seriously, and the
Ten Commandments include the command that we must not take the name of the Lord
in vain. We are to use the names God has given for Himself, and we are to
recognize that God takes His name seriously because He desires to be rightly
known by His human creatures. We cannot truly know Him if we do not even know
His name.
Moses understood this. When he encountered the call of God that
came from the burning bush, Moses asked God, “If I come to the people of Israel
and say to them, ‘The God of your fathers has sent me to you,’ and they ask me,
‘What is his name?’ what shall I say to them?” (Exodus 3:13). God answered
Moses, “I Am who I Am” (Exodus 3:14). God told Moses, “Say this to the people
of Israel, ‘The Lord, the God of your fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of
Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has sent me to you.’ This is my name forever, and
thus I am to be remembered throughout all generations” (Exodus 3:15).
As these verses make clear, we are not to tamper with God’s
name. We are to use the names whereby God has named Himself, and we are to
recognize that any confusion about the name of God will lead to confusion about
the nature of God, if not to idolatry.
Christians must keep this central principle from the Bible
constantly in mind as we consider some of the most urgent questions we face in
the world today. We must certainly have this principle in mind when we think
about Islam.
Several years ago, a bishop in the Netherlands attracted
controversy when he argued that Christians should call God “Allah” in order to
lower theological tensions. He also argued that calling God “Allah” would be
commonplace in Christian churches within a century and that this would lead to
a synthesis of Islam and Christianity.
More recently, an Islamic court in Malaysia ruled that only
Muslims can use the name “Allah” in print publications. “The usage of the word
will cause confusion in the community,” the chief judge ruled. Oddly enough,
Christians may well agree with this Islamic judge. To call God “Allah” is to
invite confusion.
In the Bible, God reveals Himself to us in many names. These
names are His personal property. We did not invent these names for God. To the
contrary, God revealed these names as His own.
We have no right to modify or to revise these names—much less to
reject them. Jesus Christ made this abundantly clear. In the simplest way
imaginable, Jesus teaches us to know God as Father, and to use this name in
prayer. The Lord’s Prayer begins with the words, “Our Father, who is in
heaven.” By the grace that God has shown us in Christ, we can truly know Him as
Father.
Muslims do not speak of God as their heavenly Father. In the
Islamic faith, Allah is not only a different name for god; the deity it
designates is far more impersonal than the God of the Bible. Father—the very
name that Jesus gave us as the designated name for use in prayer—is a name that
simply does not fit Allah as depicted in the Quran.
Furthermore, Muslims claim that Allah has no son. This represents
a head-on collision between the God of the Bible and Allah. For, as the Bible
makes clear, the one and only true God is most perfectly revealed as the Father
of the Son, Jesus Christ. In the Gospel of John, Jesus repeatedly teaches that
no one has truly known the Father, except by the Son. In one of the most
clarifying verses in the New Testament, Jesus declared Himself to be “the way,
and the truth, and the life,” adding, “No one comes to the Father except
through me” (John 14:6).
Because Muslims deny that God has a son, they explicitly reject
any Trinitarian language. From the very starting point, Islam denies what
Christianity takes as its central truth claim: the fact that Jesus Christ is
the only begotten of the Father. If Allah has no son, then Allah is not the God
who reveals Himself through the Son. How then can calling God “Allah” not lead
to anything but confusion—and worse?
Islam teaches that the doctrine of the Trinity is blasphemous.
But the Christian faith is essentially and irreducibly Trinitarian. The Bible
reveals that the Father is God, that the Son is God, and that the Holy Spirit
is God. Jesus is not merely a prophet, as acknowledged by Muslims, He is God in
human flesh. This is precisely what Islam rejects.
The Trinitarian language is the language of the Bible, and it is
essential to Christianity. Indeed, the Christian faith points to Christ and
announces that we can only know the Father through the Son. Confusing the God
of the Bible with Allah of the Quran is not only a mistake, it is a dangerous
distortion of the Gospel of Christ.
The Trinitarian nature of God is embedded within the Great
Commission. Jesus tells His disciples to go into the world and make disciples
of all nations and to baptize them “in the name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Spirit” (Matthew 28:19). Christians are those who bear the
names of God even in our baptism, and those names are Father, Son and Holy
Spirit.
This has become a matter of significant controversy in recent
years as some Christians, including some serving with mission agencies, have
argued that Christians can use the name “Allah” in talking about God. In some
languages, especially those based on an Arabic source, there is no generic word
for god. In such a situation, it might be necessary to
begin a conversation by using this word, but the Christian cannot continue to
call God “Allah.” It is hard to imagine that anyone can hear the name “Allah”
without thinking of him as claimed in the Quran (see following article).
Indeed, Muslims who speak languages other than Arabic use “Allah” as the name
of god. But as soon as the Christian begins to explain that the true living God
is the Father of Jesus Christ the Son, the Christian is making clear that the
true living God is not Allah, but our Heavenly Father.
Continuing to use the name “Allah” to refer to the God of the
Bible in such situations invites deep confusion. Some now argue that Muslims
who come to faith in Christ can even remain within the mosque and continue to
worship God as Allah. It is hard to see how that is anything other than a
theological disaster.
We can now see that the name of God is no small matter. The
deity we name is the God we believe in. Christians believe in only one God, and
He is the Father who sent the Son to save us from our sins. Allah has no son,
and, thus, Christians cannot know God as Allah. In this light, Muslims and
Christians do not only use different names for God; in reality, these different
names refer to different gods.
God takes His name with great seriousness, and so must we.
Thankfully, we are not left in the dark, groping for adequate language. God has
revealed His names to us, so that we can rightly know Him. We are not called to
be clever or creative in referring to God, only faithful and accurate.
We are living in challenging days. One of the most pressing
challenges of our times is the task of speaking rightly about God. This is
particularly challenging when Christians encounter Muslims, but it is also a
challenge when Christians encounter secular people in Western cultures. But
this really isn’t a new challenge. It was the same challenge faced by the
children of Israel as they encountered the Canaanites, and the same challenge
faced by the Apostle Paul at Mars Hill.
Our challenge is to speak truthfully about God, and the only way
we can do that is to use the names God gave Himself. The God of the Bible is
not Allah, and Allah is not the God of the Bible. Any confusion about that
undermines the very Gospel we preach.
©2013 R. Albert Mohler, Jr.
Scripture
quotations are taken from the Holy Bible, English Standard Version.
R.
Albert Mohler, Jr., is president of The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary,
in Louisville, KY.
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