That is correct.
The worship follows from a post-resurrection realisation of who he is, as per Thomas in John 20.
He is the One God. All you've proved is that you haven't got your head around the idea of Trinity, or that Jesus is, at the same time, God incarnate, fully human, Messianic King, Israel incarnate, prophet-like-Moses, etc. You've treated some of those as either/ors when they are both/ands. An idea that is there in proto-form in the very earliest Christian texts - Paul's letters - before any of the gospels were written.
Prove trinity.If your forcing me to believe and blindly accept
1+1+1=1 sorry I cannot believe because all I have learned is 1+1+1=3
Even Christians themselves do not understand the concept of Trinity and that's the biggest reason why they turn away from Christianity.
I give you an example.As human being,we can only one relationship with that person.
Your mother can only be a wife to your father.She cannot be a mother to your father.
You can only be the son to your father,you cannot be a father nor a grandfather to your father.
So if that is the case with us,how can you say Jesus pbuh is the son of God and God himself?
You need to explain further on the subject of trinity.
And don't use the example of egg,apple,tree or family as they all can easily be disapprove.
Continuing what work?I do not see nayone continuing his work.I can obviously see people inventing and claiming it is Jesus' workI mean that I am not a Jew living in 2nd Temple Judaism, let alone Son of God in the sense that Jesus is. My calling is to continue my little bit of that post-resurrection story in my time and place, not try to reproduce a one off set of actions that were appropriate to a different time and place (and that I couldn't do anyway). We aren't called to copy Jesus, we are called to continue his work.
All people fall short. Some more than others.
Your "solution" is cultural, not the problem.
It would be inappropriate because the food laws, along with others, were about keeping Israel separate until Jesus' resurrection. With the resurrection the time for that separation is over.
Well what he pbuh did was limitation in the usage of wine.Not excessive use in wine.Scripture, all the way through, condemns drunkeness for the problems it brings but condones appropriate use of alcohol.
Jesus created wine at the wedding at Cana, Isaiah uses wine at feasts as a symbol of the world put right, Paul recommends wine to his friend Timothy, Jesus makes a drink of wine part of the means of participation in his life, death and resurrection, ...
What about beer.Is it allowed as well?
Well if your gonna bring Paul in and your claiming that you belive in what Paul said,then I have to totaly reject your statement. The whole world knows about Council of Nicaea.When you read the bible you need to understad that, unlike the Koran, it is not supposed to be a timeless set of statements, but an ongoing story with context. Paul's letters aren't timeless reflections on Christian behaviour - they are letters to particular churches struggling with particular issues in their particular time and place. A woman with her hair down in Corinth in AD50 symbolises something you don't want symbolised.
Quran was sent step by step.It takes years and was revealed according to past,present and future.That's the reason you can see in the beginning certain things like alcohol is allowed,then with limitation of usage then total forbidden.
In Islam,Alcohol is the mother of all evil.
Of course it isn't because we do not worship the prophet but we worship The Creator HimselfBecause Christianity's view of Jesus is not equivalent to your idea of Muhammad,
Of course Bible is not equivalent to Quran as Quran is the word of The Creator and it is still being preserved until today from having multiple wrong translations and man's opinion.nor Christianity's idea of the bible equivalent to your idea of the Koran.
How can he change when he himself asked to follow the prophet after him?He pbuh did came to warn you and teach you rules and to live a civilized life.Jesus didn't come to teach us some rules, he came to change the world and invite us to become part of that change.
Nice post though.Thank you.
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