Of course not, the practice of Judaism became unnecessary, however.
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Well then. Same Deity. Different frills and details, but all acknowledge the same God which, IMO, should be the overarching, important thing.
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What about islam?
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It claims to be the latest word from said Deity, ergo it acknowledges both Moses and Jesus as previous prophets of "Allah".
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So it denies the divinity of Jesus, or God, in the Bible.
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Jesus yes, God no. Allah [i]is[/i] God according to the Quran.
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So it excludes and denies the divinity of the Christian God.
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No, only Jesus. They see him merely as a Prophet as opposed to being a literal Son of God. God is the same.
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And Jesus is God.
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According to Christians. According to Islam, and Jews AFAIK, Jesus was merely a Prophet and not the embodiment of their common Deity. The disagreement is over the nature of Jesus, not the existance of God.
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Yes, but it means that they are different gods. The Christian God is a trinity.
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Lets put it this way - Muslims and Jews believe in The Father, but not the other two parts of the Trinity. You may have a different view of the nature of God, but the big guy Himself is consistent in all 3. To which I say - surely thats the most important thing? If He's so forgiving, I'm sure He can overlook people mumbling the wrong words, or singing the wrong songs?
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Yet all three say the others are wrong. All three contradict eachother.
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All 3 argue over their Prophets and whether their teachings are out of date or not. None deny God.