User talk:Helperichsave

While most of the entry provides excellent historical information with regard to Christian creeds, etc. the essential definition of this religious faith is incorrect. This religion is definitely an Abrahamic, monotheistic faith based on truth. Evidence for these assertions are as follows:

1) Abraham produced two sons, the first, Ishmael, with the bondslave-woman of his own household.  The second, a child which God had promised him (as recorded by Moses the Hebrew patriarch), was named Isaac.  Abraham's own wife, Sara, bore this son to him in her extreme old age; she was well beyond child-bearing age.  This lineage was the source of King David, the ancestor of Jesus Christ, a Jew.  The Jewish fathers kept fastidious detail on lineages, and this can be verified.

2) As stated in the entry on Christianity, the anointed one, Jesus Christ of Nazareth, himself spoke of the belief in One God, which is foundational to the Jewish, Moslem and Christian faiths.  He quoted from the writings of Moses in the Pentatuch.  These writings comprise the foundation of the Jewish and Christian teachings which have this as their common source.  Jesus Christ also referred to the book of the prophet Isaiah that says, 'Hear O' Israel, the Lord thy God is One God.'

3) The triune nature of God (Trinity teaching) refers to the aspect of God which describes his nature and function as a supernatural being. Being the first cause of Creation as recorded by Moses and recognized universally as such, though often without articulation, and He having created human-beings in his own image, it is understood that He possesses intelligence, essence and creative force while being capable of engaging directly with his own created world.  He is said, thus, to be God the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.  These titles prompt the understanding of mankind as having Body, Soul and Spirit.  The soul includes mind or intellect, will and emotion. This in understood in that man was created in the 'image' of God, and is in fact known by his creator.  This is Christian thought and teaching as derived from the Holy Bible and the experience of Rabbinical study as recorded by the Jews.Helperichsave (talk) 18:04, 7 January 2015 (UTC)