Consider, though, how they stand up to time. In case you haven't noticed, cults don't last all that along in the grand scheme of things.
That has nothing to do with whether something is true or not, and how durable something is is often determined by accidents of history.
And let us assume Islam is right, for a moment. Let us look to what the core of the Muslim God, Allah is. Allah subhanahu wa ta’ala, the full Arabic name for God in Islam, is the Muslim expression of the Judeo-Christian God, Yahweh. Therefore, if the God of Judeo-Christian faith and Islam are the same, would it not stand to reason that if you ask the God of either for forgiveness, you are indeed making a request to the same God?
I find futile debates about whether Gods from different traditions are the "same" God or not. If Allah and the Christian God are the same, is the Jehovah's Witnesses' God, Jehovah, the same or not? J.W.s do believe in the ransom sacrifice, but reject all Trinitarian views of God, and do not consider Jesus to be God, but just his Son. They also don't believe in Hell, either. Is the Mormons' God the same, or not? They have a three-tiered system of Heaven, I think - something like that - and view God as a physical being, albeit very powerful; and also those who achieve the highest level of Heaven become Gods themselves. But they also accept many standard Christian teachings. Oh, but what about this God, or that God, ad infinitum?
Debating about whether such Gods are the "same" or not is, to me, not too far removed from the hoary old cliché of debating how many angels can dance on the head of a pin.
The belief(s) of any given person(s) does not affect veracity; what is true is true regardless of belief.
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your view is merely the construct of a being with a fallible and limited perspective.
Well, you know, kakeithewolf, this argument *could* be turned around and used against the view you are arguing here: your argument could be discredited on the grounds that it is just your view or opinion, the view of a being (yourself) with a fallible and limited perspective. As could mine, of course - but I am not even trying to present my view as an absolute, but just as a possibility - seemingly quite a reasonable one.
This could even be used against the Bible itself, if you wish to rebut what I'm saying by turning to it for support. I don't know whether anything in the Bible was ultimately inspired by God or not, and don't see how that is even knowable. Occam's Razor would tend to suggest not, unless very good arguments can be presented that it is. But, regardless of that, what is certain is that, after putatively coming from God, those ideas in the Bible have come through the intermediary of human writers around two thousand and more years ago, and the *immediate* source of those ideas is just fallible humans with limited perspectives - which completely obscures the less immediate (vaguely possible) ultimate inspiration from God. In a sense, it doesn't even matter, logically, whether God did inspire the Bible or not, because, subsequently to that, that fact has been thoroughly obscured from knowability. All we can know now is that it came in the immediate term from fallible human beings.
As a naive boy brought up nominally in the church, I was afraid of God because I felt sure I was not good enough to get to Heaven, and I felt sure I would go to Hell (I believe this enormously damaged my whole view of God, very adversely). I struggled with the idea for ages, and ultimately Christianity lost its credibility for me, despite the positive influence of my school chaplain in my teens and subsequently.
For all the fearful huffing and puffing about damnation that much religion gives, perhaps one needs to remind oneself that all this is nothing more than human opinion, and therefore not to be regarded as infallibly true, and not taken too seriously. But the fear of Hell is so horrific that it can still send a chill through one, and I believe it has done enormous damage to humanity down the centuries, in instilling a very unhealthy fear of God's awful vengeance. I would recommend the article on Hell in the Catholic Encyclopedia to anyone who would really like to get a feel for the utter horror of this horrible teaching:
https://www.newadvent.org/cathen/07207a.htm. I think it took a rather sick mind to come up with this, to be honest - a human one, of course.
And speaking of believing in crap, atheists propose that everything that exists came from an explosion that violates every single law of nature, and that life evolved from what can basically be described as magic mud.
No, no - I suggest you read books by Richard Dawkins such as "The Selfish Gene" (especially the early chapters which talk about the origin of life), "The Blind Watchmaker", and "Climbing Mount Improbable", which deals explicitly with the supposed improbability of life just happening to evolve into being. He argues it far, far better than I can - so I won't even try, as it is beyond my capability to debate it at that level. Dawkins is a very, very good writer, and astonishingly clear in the way he explains very subtle and complex ideas.
Foolish arguments, as neither hold up to scrutiny if rendered by an automated system of chaos and neither invalidate the concept of an omnidimensional being, as said being could have used both methods (though many laws would have to be very bent to do so).
Richard Dawkins would eat up this argument for an entree before breakfast! - even if it would give me slight indigestion to try to do so.
Regards, Michael.