Not really. The first two words are Hebrew words for God. (although that first word is a spelling error that Christians will not accept correction on). The second is the Aramaic word for Jesus.
As Christianity, Islam and Judaism all worship the same Deity, it would be Yahweh. Yahweh, Jehovah, Allah - a variety of names - but at around 4,000,000,000 (four billion) worshippers, the most popular Deity of all.
Yes; both have followers who had/have faith in the deities of Yahweh and Zeus.No.Yahweh the current Semite/Hebrew/Canaanite/Christiangod.Zeus is a older Greek deity of ancient mythology.
God. The same monotheistic deity is associated with both the Christian and Jewish belief systems. His literal name is given in the Hebrew Bible as "Yahweh" but is more commonly known as "God" or "The Lord".
Yahweh is canonically omnipotent, so no.
The three good deities named Yahweh (the main god), Jesus (the god's son), and the Holy Ghost. Together, they up the 'Trinity'. The evil deity is named Satan.
Allah is "the Deity" in Arabic language and is worshiped by Muslims. Non-Muslims worship "the Deity" and name Him differently in their own languages. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Christians aren't non-muslims, they believe in the same God - but call him Jehova/Yahweh so they do believe in Allah. Jews aren't non-muslims, they believe in the same God - but call him Elohim so they do believe in Allah.
That's a relatively controversial question! Jesus Christ and the myths and legends associated with him are new (in the grand scheme of history, anyway); he's not a repackaging of an older deity. Yahweh, on the other hand, the deity to whom Jesus and his Disciples prayed, may be an older god than most realize. There is a certain amount of speculation that his name - and, by association, the deity himself - may be a corruption of Ea (or Enki), God of the ancient Babylonians; another theory links Yahweh to Ia, an ancient Assyrian God who later vanished from their pantheon.
Allah and Yahweh are two names for the same deity that is worshiped by Jews, Christians, and Muslims alike. According to Christians, Jesus is the son of this God and, in a sense, and earthly manifestation of Him. According to Muslims, Jesus is not the son of God, but is still a very important prophet, and so could be regarded as a friend of God.
These are offerings to a deity. Usually a special possession is left for the deity to "accept" or even a living animal may be killed (and often burned) for the deity to. This may be done to mark special times, as a petition for forgiveness, or to request special favors of the deity. Some examples of sacrificial rituals are: - Abraham sacrificed birds and sheep to the Jewish God, Yahweh - Aztec priests cut out the hearts of conquered warriors taken prisoner after battles - Muslim faithful slaughter a sheep for the celebration of the major feast at Eid
it is rising concern of scholars to uproot the background of a prophet to light.the only authentic information can be obtained from the prophet himself though they know that prophets recieve their calls from their deities.the most succesful deity from generation to generation is yah and so all wish to claim yahweh as their deity.Paul Mwazha has a written which contain his call and commission into the prophetic arena.thus we hardly doubt him as a prophet called by yahweh. THIS HAS JUST BEEN A HINT ON HOW TO TUCKLE THIS QEUSTION
Atheism is a lack of belief in a deity. It is not a religion. There are no tenants, dogma, rituals, books, etc. Christians believe in the deity called "Yahweh" or simply, "God," and that he walked the earth as god incarnate as "Jesus Christ." It is a religion. There are tenants that must be followed, dogma that must be believed, rituals that must be performed, books that must be read, etc.
1 (God): the Lord, the Almighty, the Creator, the Maker, the Godhead, Jehovah, Yahweh, (God) the Father, (God) the Son, the Holy Ghost/Spirit, the Holy Trinity, the Great Spirit, (humorous) the Man Upstairs, Jesus, Christ, etc. 2 (god): deity, sovereign being,