Ask Experts Questions for FREE Help!
  Advanced
Register  |  Log in  
   Ask    
 Answer  
  Help  

Ask QuestionsprogressAnswer QuestionsprogressBuild ReputationprogressBecome an Expert
 
Free Answers in 3 Easy Steps

Register Now
3 Steps

At Ask Me Help Desk you can ask questions in any topic and have them answered for free by our experts. To ask questions or participate in answering them you must register for a free account. By registering you will be able to:
  • Get free answers from experts in any of our 300+ topics.
  • Accept money for answers that you provide.
  • Communicate privately with other members (PM).
  • See fewer ads.

Home > Society & Culture > Religion > Other Religion   »   Name of God

 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Question
 
 
Old Jul 12, 2005, 11:42 PM
Tim Walker
New Member
Tim Walker is offline
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 7
Tim Walker See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Name of God

What is the name of your God?

Reply With Quote
 
     

Answers
 
 
Old Sep 22, 2005, 02:22 PM   #71  
Senior Member
Morganite is offline
 
Morganite's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 867
Morganite See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Freemasons and the name of God

Quote:
Originally Posted by G4-450

The free masons believe in the one supreme being, in arabic the name ELI or ALLAH, fits the translation., and not Ala the moon God which the enemies of Abraham try to mix Islam with.
is clear to state all generations after him who fallow his covenant are basically Muslims, maybe not the same way we see them today but at-least by VERB... which means doing Gods will, and even the Koran states that Christians, Jews and Magis (free masons) wilkl not suffer at the least in this life as long as they believe in God's will and do rightious deeds.

The Freemason's god is revealed in their rites as JAH-BUL-ON ...



MORGANITE


  Reply With Quote
 
     
 
 
Old Sep 22, 2005, 03:32 PM   #72  
Junior Member
chrisl is offline
 
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 83
chrisl See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Morganite
Your argument only works if the Koran is accurate, as does Muslim acceptance of it as a perfect book. If it is not it casts doubt on everything it supports.
I hope no one gets the impression I view the Quran as having the same authority as the Bible! I do not. I hold that the Bible is God's only inspired word. But I do respect someone's right to hold their own beliefs and opinions in this matter.

I was only attempting (vainly) to reason with him based on what he believed. I hoped that if he truly respected the Quran he would respect what it said about the Bible. But events obviously proved otherwise...

I still cannot understand his position--I can find no consistency in it--but I'm not interested in arguing so I gave up.

Chris
  Reply With Quote
 
     
 
 
Old Sep 22, 2005, 07:03 PM   #73  
Senior Member
Morganite is offline
 
Morganite's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 867
Morganite See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Which way blows the wind this hour?

Chris:

There is something odd about his understanding and responses. He cuts and pastes at will and fights unseen enemies like don Quixote tilting at windmills, not undertanding what he does but serious in his purposes. He is beyond reach.





MORGANITE


  Reply With Quote
 
     
 
 
Old Sep 23, 2005, 11:16 AM   #74  
Junior Member
G4-450 is offline
 
G4-450's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 178
G4-450 See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Speaking for yourself again, your a clear hypocrite for always stirring of the subject instead of facing it.

AS well as anti semitic as usual.
  Reply With Quote
 
     
 
 
Old Sep 23, 2005, 11:24 AM   #75  
Junior Member
G4-450 is offline
 
G4-450's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 178
G4-450 See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Quote:
Originally Posted by chrisl
I hope no one gets the impression I view the Quran as having the same authority as the Bible! I do not. I hold that the Bible is God's only inspired word. But I do respect someone's right to hold their own beliefs and opinions in this matter.

I was only attempting (vainly) to reason with him based on what he believed. I hoped that if he truly respected the Quran he would respect what it said about the Bible. But events obviously proved otherwise...

I still cannot understand his position--I can find no consistency in it--but I'm not interested in arguing so I gave up.

Chris
Chris

The Koran states the laws of the Torah (10 commandments) are to be obeyed clearly, and also further more that Jesus was sent to the lost sheep of Israel (judah) with 12 helpers to replace the children of Israel from what we know as capitol take over of the rest of its brother tribes and committing genocide to all the prior Prophets which he mentioned in the Bible and who they where sent to with the same message, only Jesus was there Messiah.

Anyone who runs with a sentence claiming that the koran states the bible is perfect has to look at all the facts with man made laws and there desires to of chosen some of the books out of over 60+ thousand other scriptures that where part of the bible, and destroyed as well.

the enemies of God are people who actually believe they are above the law, this is where i stand up for the koran, it stands for unity of mankind, against oppressors and tyrants.

Who ever uses the word terror is actualy the sinner, terror is what God ordered in the torah as well against materialistic tyrants.

this is where i stand, no one should use force against another in a un authorized way for there own personal gain.
  Reply With Quote
 
     
 
 
Old Sep 23, 2005, 07:45 PM   #76  
Senior Member
Morganite is offline
 
Morganite's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Posts: 867
Morganite See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
God commands respect

Quote:
Originally Posted by G4-450
Speaking for yourself again, your a clear hypocrite for always stirring of the subject instead of facing it.

AS well as anti semitic as usual.

You are apostate. You do not offer the respect to others that the Koran insists you do.

Read this, and learn how it applies to you:


SANAA, YEMEN - When Judge Hamoud al-Hitar announced that he and four other Islamic scholars would challenge Yemen's Al Qaeda prisoners to a theological contest, Western antiterrorism experts warned that this high-stakes gamble would end in disaster.

Nervous as he faced five captured, yet defiant, Al Qaeda members in a Sanaa prison, Judge Hitar was inclined to agree. But banishing his doubts, the youthful cleric threw down the gauntlet, in the hope of bringing peace to his troubled homeland.

"If you can convince us that your ideas are justified by the Koran, then we will join you in your struggle," Hitar told the militants. "But if we succeed in convincing you of our ideas, then you must agree to renounce violence."

The prisoners eagerly agreed.

Now, two years later, not only have those prisoners been released, but a relative peace reigns in Yemen. And the same Western experts who doubted this experiment are courting Hitar, eager to hear how his "theological dialogues" with captured Islamic militants have helped pacify this wild and mountainous country, previously seen by the US as a failed state, like Iraq and Afghanistan.

"Since December 2002, when the first round of the dialogues ended, there have been no terrorist attacks here, even though many people thought that Yemen would become terror's capital," says Hitar, eyes glinting shrewdly from beneath his emerald-green turban. "Three hundred and sixty-four young men have been released after going through the dialogues and none of these have left Yemen to fight anywhere else."

"Yemen's strategy has been unconventional certainly, but it has achieved results that we could never have hoped for," says one European diplomat, who did not want to be named. "Yemen has gone from being a potential enemy to becoming an indispensable ally in the war on terror."

To be sure, the prisoner-release program is not solely responsible for the absence of attacks in Yemen. The government has undertaken a range of measures to combat terrorism from closing down extreme madrassahs, the Islamic schools sometimes accused of breeding hate, to deporting foreign militants.

Eager to spread the news of his success, Hitar welcomes foreigners into his home, fussing over them and pouring endless cups of tea. But beyond the otherwise nondescript house, a sense of menace lurks. Two military jeeps are parked outside, and soldiers peer through the gathering dark at passing cars. The evening wind sweeps through the unpaved streets, lifting clouds of dust and whipping up men's jackets to expose belts hung with daggers, pistols, and mobile telephones.

Seated amid stacks of Korans and religious texts, Hitar explains that his system is simple. He invites militants to use the Koran to justify attacks on innocent civilians and when they cannot, he shows them numerous passages commanding Muslims not to attack civilians, to respect other religions, and fight only in self-defense.

For example, he quotes: "Whoever kills a soul, unless for a soul, or for corruption done in the land - it is as if he had slain all mankind entirely. And, whoever saves one, it is as if he had saved mankind entirely." He uses the passage to bolster his argument against bombing Western targets in Yemen - attacks he says defy the Koran. And, he says, the Koran says under no circumstances should women and children be killed.

If, after weeks of debate, the prisoners renounce violence they are released and offered vocational training courses and help to find jobs.

Hitar's belief that hardened militants trained by Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan could change their stripes was initially dismissed by US diplomats in Sanaa as dangerously naive, but the methods of the scholarly cleric have little in common with the other methods of fighting extremism. Instead of lecturing or threatening the battle-hardened militants, he listens to them.

"An important part of the dialogue is mutual respect," says Hitar. "Along with acknowledging freedom of expression, intellect and opinion, you must listen and show interest in what the other party is saying."

Only after winning the militants' trust does Hitar gradually begin to correct their beliefs. He says that most militants are ordinary people who have been led astray. Just as they were taught Al Qaeda's doctrines, he says, so too can they be taught more- moderate ideas. "If you study terrorism in the world, you will see that it has an intellectual theory behind it," says Hitar. "And any kind of intellectual idea can be defeated by intellect."

The program's success surprised even Hitar. For years Yemen was synonymous with violent Islamic extremism. The ancestral homeland of Mr. bin Laden, it provided two-thirds of recruits for his Afghan camps, and was notorious for kidnappings of foreigners and the bombing of the American warship USS Cole in 2000 that killed 17 sailors. Resisting US pressure, Yemen declined to meet violence with violence.

"It's only logical to tackle these people through their brains and heart," says Faris Sanabani, a former adviser to President Abdullah Saleh and editor-in-chief of the Yemen Observer, a weekly English-language newspaper. "If you beat these people up they become more stubborn. If you hit them, they will enjoy the pain and find something good in it - it is a part of their ideology. Instead, what we must do is erase what they have been taught and explain to them that terrorism will only harm Yemenis' jobs and prospects. Once they understand this they become fighters for freedom and democracy, and fighters for the true Islam," he says.

Some freed militants were so transformed that they led the army to hidden weapons caches and offered the Yemeni security services advice on tackling Islamic militancy. A spectacular success came in 2002 when Abu Ali al Harithi, Al Qaeda's top commander in Yemen, was assassinated by a US air-strike following a tip-off from one of Hitar's reformed militants.

Yet despite the apparent success in Yemen, some US diplomats have criticized it for apparently letting Islamic militants off the hook with little guarantee that they won't revert to their old ways once released from prison.

Yemen, however, argues that holding and punishing all militants would create only further discontent, pointing out that the actual perpetrators of attacks have all been prosecuted, with the bombers of the USS Cole and the French oil tanker, the SS Limburg. All received death sentences.

"Yemeni goals are long-term political aims whereas the American agenda focuses on short-term prosecution of military or law enforcement objectives," wrote Charles Schmitz, a specialist in Yemeni affairs, in 2004 report for the Jamestown Foundation, an influential US think tank.

"These goals are not necessarily contradictory, with each government recognizing that compromises and accommodations must be made, but their ambiguities create tense moments."

Some members of the Yemeni government also hanker for a more iron-fisted approach, and Yemen remains on high alert for further attacks. Fighter planes regularly swoop low over the ancient mud-brick city of Sanaa to send a clear message to any would-be militants.

An additional cause of friction with the US is that while Yemen successfully discourages attacks within its borders on the grounds that tourism and trade will suffer, it has done little to tackle anti-Western sentiment or the corruption, poverty, and lack of opportunity that fuels Islamic militancy.

"Yemen still faces serious challenges, but despite the odd hiccup, we sometimes have to admit that Yemenis know Yemen best," says the European diplomat. "And if their system works, who are we to complain?"

As the relative success of Yemen's unusual approach becomes apparent, Hitar has been invited to speak to antiterrorism specialists at London's New Scotland Yard, as well as to French and German police, hoping to defuse growing militancy among Muslim immigrants.

US diplomats have also approached the cleric to see if his methods can be applied in Iraq, says Hitar.

"Before the dialogues began, there was only one way to fight terrorism, and that was through force," he says. "Now there is another way: dialogue."


[SIZE=4]You must abandon anti Allah terror[/SIZE].
  Reply With Quote
 
     
 
 
Old Sep 23, 2005, 09:51 PM   #77  
Senior Member
arcura is online now
 
arcura's Avatar
 
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: Montana
Posts: 816
arcura See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
But......

Whether the Koran is reliable or not has nothing to do with the reliability of the Holy Bible.
There are several excellent books and tapes that demonstrate that the Bible is reliable.
Peace and kindness,
Fred (arcura)
  Reply With Quote
 
     
 
 
Old Sep 23, 2005, 11:56 PM   #78  
Junior Member
G4-450 is offline
 
G4-450's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 178
G4-450 See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Well i wish i could agree but i am trying my best to be honest and i find the same teaching in the Koran as the Bible, a bit more clear and not man made washed up for man power or control, i came to realizing this after i learned Mohammed dies only 2 years after taking Meca., the rest is history.

This link here cross references the Bible and Koran, htey are very mush the same God and words to guide people, only one in simple arabic while the other origionaly in Aramaic (also arabic) and hebrew.
http://www.jews-for-allah.org/Jews-and-Muslims-Agree/
[SIZE=1]Jews and Muslims Agree

"Behold! Allah took the covenant of the prophets, saying: "I give you a Book and Wisdom; then comes to you a messenger, confirming what is with you; do ye believe in him and render him help." Allah said: "Do ye agree, and take this my Covenant as binding on you?" They said: "We agree." He said: "Then bear witness, and I am with you among the witnesses." Holy Koran 3:81

Scripture

The Ten Commandments in the Holy Quran

Names and Attributes of God in the Bible and Koran
Abraham to Zechariah
The Koran is a Book for Jews

Dietary

Halal is Kosher: Jewish - Muslim dietary laws compared

Why we Don't eat pork

Belief

Jewish and Muslim prayers

Jews didn't kill Jesus

Monotheists against Trinity

Monotheists against Pharaoh

Rite

Sabbath according to Islam

Women and the veil

Why men are circumcised

Jews and the Hajj Pilgrimage

Afterlife

Heaven in Judaism and Islam

Please use the link above to see the details.
Anyone who disputes with the Qur'an containing God's Commandments wether they believe its was forged or not has a Anti Semitic Problem because no one but god claims credit for it, even Mohammed was clearly told that he is just a messenger and has not authority over anyone.

[/SIZE]

And i do agree with "something" Morgatide has said, people have there own capacity to understand the bible or koran and i agree with this because they have there own deeds to live with., but he said this to claim Islam forces people to do what the torah teached them then in practice amnd not theory, i guess he has a problem with this.

Saying this i also have to mention others that i can not see where in the bible that it stated NOT to expect another prophet,
* Paul was NOT a prophet or even nearly had anything to share like prior prophets or at all or considered one,

Also, he was a repenter, a ex jew who persecuted and murdered many early ethnic christians and some say sold the ideologies of Christianity to pagan rome with the trinity tossed in there years after Jesus teachings.

I again remind people to look at some links with out prejudice;
http://www.themodernreligion.com/com...ristianity.htm
  Reply With Quote
 
     
 
 
Old Sep 24, 2005, 12:10 AM   #79  
Junior Member
G4-450 is offline
 
G4-450's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2005
Posts: 178
G4-450 See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Morganite
You are apostate.
Give up politics Morganite, they are for liars and your not a good one for sure


your a simple been anti semitic and racist, as anti semitic you claim jew haters are, you also never admitted that some who call themselves jews are also anti semitic and believe in ethnic cleansing israel brings them closer to there Goals, which are ??????

And they also twist things to avoid confrontations which exposes them as we see many on websites just like you, spending there entire time on distorting Gods words to people to create a political propaganda smokescreen in covering up there anti Semitic views to provoke hate trends between arabs (both of the jewish and muslim faiths).

OR ofcourse, trying to get there web site more hits for add money.

Whatever your case, you sold out your own soul and you have your own deeds, i again want the truth to be opened.

[SIZE=5]So stop your ANTISEMITIC JEWISH AND MUSLIM HATRED and move on Morgetide, GET A LIFE ALLREADY.[/SIZE]

By the way, Freemasons and their god baale believe in the supreme Being as well (God) but fallow Solomon's rituals but certain degrees vow to the prince of light AKA LUCIFER, and you can see by the rings they where if they are 33 degree scottish masons or not, like G W Bush or his cousin Kerry who all practice occult beliefs, and all bow like abraham but to LUCIFER .

God only accepts from righteous people no matter what kind of hoaxes they do, so there rituals mean nothing to believers, adn God allow Satan to attack disbelievers in God, for God promised Salvation only to those who keep his commandments.

here you go kid;http://www.biblebelievers.org.au/masons.htm

And this is from a jewish free mason who says they are the best in controling ameriKKKa and the foregn policy,

We used to be free masons, but we can't afford it anymore. Now were Low-Monthly-Fee Masons.

  Reply With Quote
 
     
 
 
Old Sep 24, 2005, 04:56 AM   #80  
Ultra Member
NeedKarma is offline
 
NeedKarma's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: Online
Posts: 6,221
NeedKarma See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.NeedKarma See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.NeedKarma See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.NeedKarma See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.NeedKarma See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.NeedKarma See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.NeedKarma See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.NeedKarma See this member's comment history on his/her Profile page.
See? Religious nuts are all about conflict.
  Reply With Quote
 
     


Thread Tools
Display Modes

 
Similar Sponsors




Copyright ©2003 - 2007, Ask Me Help Desk.
All times are GMT -8. The time now is 06:52 PM.