So due to Muhammad not having knowledge of the Divine Council, it isn't documented properly in Islam; yet there are early references to it, as we find in the Bible during the Israelite time period (Psalms 82:1).My point is regardless of the breakdown all three faiths profess in One God, a single deity that is the author of all existence this is the focal point.
38:69 I had no knowledge of the Heavenly Beings when they were debating (about the creation of ’Ādam).
37:8 They cannot listen to the higher group (angels) for they are pelted from every side.
There is One source of reality (Allah), and it has used messengers to communicate with man.
42:51 And it is not for any human being that Allah should speak to him except by revelation or from behind a partition or that He sends a messenger to reveal, by His permission, what He wills. Indeed, He is Most High and Wise.
The Quran uses 'we' when speaking from Allah, which to me is the Oneness of Heaven... There are also numerous Divine Beings all representing the Oneness of the Source of reality.We know in the scriptures there was a deity a single deity that existed.
They have lots in common; yet we can't reconcile differences until we acknowledge what they say differently, and what is specified by each.You're arguing arbitrary terms that really, you using to justify that all three have nothing in common.
As someone who doesn't have a pastor, a teacher or even acknowledging scholars as being automatically factual...I think what bothers me is when people make opinions and are unfamiliar with the original language and the text but go off what their pastor tells them
Generally check the language, and have my own ideas based on first hand knowledge to begin...
Which is why I always put 'in my opinion', as have been told off by the forum moderators, that I speak as an authority without scholarly support.
In my opinion.