I am not sure what you are asking, so I will try to explain somethings that you may find helpful. Judaism believes in one god called YHVH. In Judaism there are not really spirits. Judaism has angels which are seen as messengers of God. Judaism also does not traditionally have a devil. Satan in Judaism is an angel of God. Satan is the angel that tests man and calls into question man's sins when a person dies. Satan has a bad job, but Satan is not bad. Jews see the idea of an evil Satan as impossible because an angel cannot disobey God. A Jew might also view the Christian view of Satan as dualistic, a belief in two gods. In Christianity there is God, who is good, and Satan, who is evil. God and Satan are opponents, they fight each-other, this means that Satan is on equal playing field as God. Islam also believes in one God. In Islam Satan is a spirit who is not equal to God. Satan, just like humans, has free will. Satan is not on the same realm as God, he simply exists in God's universe doing what he chooses, Satan just happens to choose to do things that are evil. All religions have different interpretations, though, so you may be thinking of a unique cultural form of Judaism that might have a story of a spirit. I can say for certain, though, that there is only one god in Judaism. Christians, Muslims, and Jews all worship the same God.
Israel has three different religions, jewish, christianity, and islam. The Islam worship their god Allah. The Christians worship God. And the Jews worship the messiah.
The Jewish Bible/Old Testament as scriptureBelief that their god is the god of the Jewish Bible/Old TestamentBelief that god did/does miraclesholy book, holy place, holy guy
The Jewish tradition does not deny that God's spirit moves men, but Jews do not accept the idea of a trinitarian God with a separate "person" that is the Holy Spirit. The Jewish tradition views God as an indivisible unity, although it admits that there is no way for people to grasp the totality of that unity, and that we frequently view God in projection, God as giver of knowledge, God as King, God as Wisdom, etc. The primary problem with trinitarianism is not the Holy Spirit -- that can be seen as such a projection. The problem is the doctrine of the incarnation. Belief in a god incarnate is seen, in Jewish thought, as being just as idolatrous as belief that some chunk of wood, clay or metal is a god.
Judaism, Islam and Christianity all worship the same, SINGULAR God. The writings of the Jewish Torah and the Christian Old Testament are revered in Islam.
God; the Creator; created the holy spirit. The holy spirit is the Angel Gabriel (or Jibril) per Islam faith.Catholic AnswerThe Holy Spirit is God, one of the three persons of the Trinity. As God, He is uncreated, He is eternal: no beginning, no end. He proceeds from the Father and the Son, He is not created.
No. Muhammad is the name of the founding prophet of Islam. The Founding Prophet in Judaism is Moses.
Jesus, God, and the Holy Spirit are always one person- the trinity
God cant be popular god is a spirit and i gusse you probably ment which god is prayed to most i think it is the (muslim, jewish and christian god) <<they all believe in the saaame god
The similiaries are on the basis of a monothiestic foundation i.e. # Islam; One God (Allah in Arabic) # Judaism; One God, Yahweh # Christianity; One God who is a Trinity of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit # Zoroastrianism; One God, Ahura Mazda, but a dualistic worldview in which an evil spirit, Angra Mainyu, is almost as powerful.
In Islam, the messenger sent to reveal God's will is Muhammad. He received revelations from God over a period of 23 years, which were compiled into the Quran, the holy book of Islam. Muhammad is considered the final prophet in Islam.
yep
Jesus is Muslim. He is Jewish who called the Jews to worship God as the one and only one God with no partner, no companion, no associate, and no equivalence. Accordingly, he called for Islam as Islam is an Arabic word that means full submission and surrender to God. In this sense all prophets since Adam are Muslims; including the prophets Noah, Abraham, Moses, Jesus, and Muhammad (Peace Be Upon Them). However, foolowers of Islam per Torah are called Jewish, followers of Islam per the Bible are called Christians, and followers of Islam per Quran are called Muslims. So, the answer is that Jesus (peace be upon him) is Muslim Refer to question below. Another perspective - Jesus was born to Jewish parents so he was Jewish. At the Last Supper he was celebrating the Jewish festival of Passover. Neither Islam nor Christianity were around at the time of Jesus however he is obviously a core figure in both religions.