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Reply to "Why Muslims Don't Believe in Concept of Trinity"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Oh my yourself. I'm not emotional, and, like others here, I'm getting weary of how you fabricate these personal insults. I addressed your obvious disappointment that people didn't follow your links and immediately convert to Islam because, you clearly said, allegedly we and many seminarians lack "fortitude." I explained the very rational reasons--emotion has nothing to do with it--why the trinity issue is a small part of the big picture. The big picture is this: Islam's values are inconsistent with many Christian values about women, how to treat your enemy, and much more. [/quote] How God himself is perceived is a crucial part of any religion. You can not deny that. That Christianity today makes God out to be a man is foreign and rejected by Judaism and Islam. Now we know from original manuscripts it was a man made doctrine. Christianity WAS similar to Judaism and Islam in the early era after Jesus died. But it was changed and it got off track. You say one can reject trinity yet still be typical Christian. Can they? How does a Christian reject trinity, which symbolizes that Jesus is God also, but still think he is adhering to mainstream Christianity? He is not. If he rejects trinity, it means he rejects the divinity of God too. So he is no longer a mainstream Christian but an atypical one. [/quote]
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