all the prophets of other religions (e.g Jesus, moses) are said to be messengers of Islam
they tried to teach others about Islam but their teachings were changed
so others were sent
finally Muhammad (pbuh) suceeded
One of the Islamic faith articles is that Muslims believe in all God prophets and they believe that they all conveyed to people the same same Islam message in the sense of the Islam Arabic word meaning of submission to God; the Creator; as the one and only one God although different religions have different laws and worship rituals.
Accordingly, Muslims believe in all God prophets and messengers and in particular those who are mentioned by name in Quran, Muslims holy book, and they total 25; namely (where 5 prophets have recieved a book and written in Bold fonts):
Adam
Idris (Enoch)
Nuh (Noah)
Hud
Saleh
Ibrahim (Abraham)
Isma'il (Ishmael)
Ishaq (Isaac)
Lut (Lot)
Ya'qub (Jacob)
Yousef (Joseph)
Shu'aib
Ayyub (Job)
Musa (Moses)
Harun (Aaron)
Dhu'l-kifl (Ezekiel)
Dawud (David)
Sulaiman (Solomon)
Ilias (Elias)
Al-Yasa (Elisha)
Yunus (Jonah)
Zakariyya (Zechariah)
Yahya (John)
'Isa (Jesus)
Muhammad (S)
Well Muslims believe that the way to truly see the will of God is through Man Love Thursday. The messensgers in this truly religious Muslim ritual are the man sperm cells that travel up or around the anus transmitting Gods message through tingling and burning. Muhamed no doubt invented this important Muslim ritual.
Answer
All of the prophets sent by Allah. For instance, Adam, Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Ishmael, Lot, Joseph, Moses, David, Solomon, Elijah, Joshua, Jesus Christ (Jesus being the Messiah), and Muhammad (PBUH). And Muhammad (PBUH) tells us that, there were 124 thousand prophets....
well the last messenger is Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) Jesus (pbuh)
Moses (pbuh)
David (pbuh) John (pbuh) Solomon (pbuh) Jacob (pbuh) Abraham (pbuh) Adam (pbuh)
these are nine of the 50 messengers sent by Allah (swt)
The Islamic definition of a prophet is someone who has been chosen and favoured by Allah (God) to convey his message to the people on earth and to bring them to believe in and worship him alone. In Islam there are two types of prophets, one is the Nabi who are regular prophets sent to do as mentioned. The second type is the Rasool who are high prophets or messengers as they were sent a revelation in the form of a holy book, they are obviously higher in status. Islam has 124000 prophets. The Prophet Muhammad was the final and greatest of them. Though mostly it's the Semitic prophets of the Middle East that are mentioned in the Islamic faith. This isn't to say the Europeans, Native Americans, Africans, central Asians, Aborigines, South Pacificers, Indians, Far easterners etc weren't sent prophets as Muslims believe that Allah sent prophets to every people. As well as the Prophet Muhammad - Other renowned prophets of Islam include Adam, Nuh (Noah), Musa (Moses), Harun (Aaron), Ibrahim (Abraham), Lut (Lot), Ismail (Ishmael), Is'haq (Isaac), Yacoob (Jacob), Yousef (Joseph), Daud (David), Sulaiman (Soloman), Yahya (John the baptist - though this isn't his role in Islam) & Isa (Jesus). Others who are less known include Idris (Enoch*), Salih (Shaloh*), Hud (Eber*), Ayoub (Job), Zakariah, Shoaib (Jethro*), Dhulkifl (Eziekiel), Alias (Elijah), Alyasa (Elisha) & Yunus (Jonah) The following are mentioned in hadith or known from Oral tradition; Ishaia (Isaiah), Sheeth (Seth), Uzair (Ezra), Danyal (Daniel), Armya (Jeremiah) & Samuel. Dhul-Karnain, Joshua (Assistant to Moses), Imran (Father of Mary), Khidr & Luqman are all mentioned as great men but their prophethood hasn't been specified, so they may have just been great pious individuals favoured by Allah. Note: First; Islamic/Arabic name (Brackets; Biblical eqivalent - in some cases it isn't 100% certain if they are the same person but it is the most likely candidate; marked with asterisk*)
Abraham, Moses, David, Jesus, and Mohammed are considered the messengers of God. There are thousands of other prophets such as Ismail, Dhu Kifl, Dhul Qarnain, Imran, etc.
mohamed
Mercury
I assume that the question is: Who is the messenger of the Gods? Hermes in Greek and Mercury in Roman.
National Geographic Explorer - 1985 Messengers of the Gods 2-3 was released on: USA: 2 February 1986
I suppose that depends on what you consider a monster. He does have reign over all souls demi-gods, and beings within the Underworld. And daemons (not demons) are messengers between the Gods and mortals, as a God I am sure he can control them to some degree.
Mercury was the Roman god of Messengers and Travelers. so he probably was the gods messenger.
Iris and Hermes were both immortal messengers.
Oracles messengers from gods sometimes masonary brick layers
Allah the almighty (Glorious and Exalted is He), and all of His Messengers and Prophets (may peace be upon them)
The Spanish had weapons similar to those which the gods had. The appearance of the Europeans was similar to some descriptions of the gods. One of their gods was light-skinned with a beard who was supposed to return from the east on a boat. If they were not gods themselves, they may have been messengers from the gods.
"Gods"? As far as I know, most Iranians are muslims, and therefore monotheistic.
Of course not. Catholics consider Muslims unbelievers. All religious believers will consider themselves as true believers. However, Muslims don't consider Catholics, or Christians in general, unbelievers. Muslims consider Christians (as Jews) people of the book because Musilms believe in the holy books of the Bible and the Torah.
The Belief in Allaah, His Angels, His Books, His Messengers, the Last Day, and Al- Qadar, its good and bad.