Jesus is God and was also human. As a human he suffered much like all humans do. That is why we can say God suffered in his human form. We cannot attribute human qualities to God the Father, only to God the Son who was both man and God.
Grace, it is the beauty of God.
By The statement in the Book of Genesis of God's Creation in Seven Days.
because Christians are supposed to follow god and spread the word of the gospel, to do this Christians are supposed to help these people.
Christians can show that they belong to the Kingdom of God by living according to His Word. Through their actions, love, kindness, grace and the fruits of the spirit will shine forth, emanating off of their very being. They live by the commands and principles God placed in the Bible, and their actions speak for their character. This is how christians can show that they belong to the Kingdom of God.
Christians relationship with god i to let him be your savior
True Christians prove their devotion to God by obeying God in the spirit.
Christians believe him to be God and therefore worship him as God.
No, if one understands the real definition of "god" as a Christian uses the word, there can only be one, as He is the only non-contingent Being in existent, and there cannot be more than one.That being said, Christians believe in a Trinity, which is a little difficult to explain (or understand) in that the Trinity is only ONE God, but there are three Persons who are that ONE God,
The Holy Bible is from God. God love Christians and Christians love God.
Yes, same God for also Christians and Jews.
Christians and Jews believe that there is one true God. Christians and Jews pray to the same God.
This question has been debated for years. On the one hand, you have Jesus as divine suffering and dying, and on the other you have his own words "MY God, My God, why have you forsaken me?". Christians hold that Jesus was both fully God and fully human at the same time. Therefore, in his divine nature he suffered and died, while in his human nature he suffered the ultimate separation from God that is the inevitable result of sin. (Not that Jesus sinned, but that he bore the penalty for our sins).