[1] Is this a question that needs to be answered? Isn't it a bit
like asking if the existence of God can be proved? Why do we need
to prove it? Why do we need to know if Muslims worship the same God
as do we? What difference might that make? Having said this, let me
offer a few thoughts on why an answer might have some significance.
It has been said that if the subject isn't the same, the predicates
don't matter. In other words, if we aren't talking about the same
God, then what we have to say about God may be quite different and
it won't matter.
[2] Anyone who has read Jack Miles' Biography of God
will know that the biblical story portrays God with many different
faces. In the First Testament God is creator, warrior, jealous
lover, mother, etc. etc. Then came Jesus and as Christians we
believe He was God's Messiah and that God was in Christ and so
appears in yet another form, that of a human being, who suffers
betrayal, crucifixion, who dies and then is raised back to
life.
[3] In some ways these images of God seem contradictory. How can
God who ordered David to kill women, children and cattle, and who
accepted as praise the Psalmist's desire to "dash innocent babies
against a rock," be the same God as the Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ? Marcionites said this couldn't be; the Church finally said
it was. What Christians did at their best was to make sure Jesus
remained central to their understanding of the First Testament. In
other words, when First Testament stories and promises are taught
and studied in the Church it needs to be kept in mind always that
God in Christ is the norm for our understanding of who God is, was
and will always be and how God works to bring wholeness and healing
to a broken world.
[4] Then Muslims came and said there is no god but God, the God
of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, David, Solomon and Jesus. They believe
that the God preached by Muhammad and believed by Muslims is this
very same God. There is no god but God. "Our God and your God is
One," repeats the Qur'an. Muslims certainly intend to worship no
other God than the God worshiped by Jews and Christians. But having
said that, Muslims go on to insist we can never know who God is but
only what God wills for us to do. There is no self revelation, only
a revealing of God 's will. Likewise, they do not accept our
understanding of Incarnation or the cross. These are major
distinctions, no doubt, but does it mean they worship a different
God, by which some might infer a 'false' God?
[5] I 've often pondered the experience of Paul. Before his
conversion, he certainly knew well what we might call the will or
law of God. He was steeped in Rabbinic training. But on the road to
Damascus, he experienced something different. He saw what appeared
to be a bright light and it sent him reeling to the ground. In
response to a voice from heaven he called out: "Tell me Lord, who
you are?" The answer was simple: "I am Jesus whom you are
persecuting." That Jesus of Nazareth, whom the rulers had recently
killed and hung upon a tree, should turn out to be the Lord, the
Messiah, came as a shock to this Jewish Zealot. In response Paul
had to spend considerable time rethinking his theology and his
understanding of the way God works to redeem people. It caused a
dramatic turn about. But did this new understanding mean that Paul
began to worship a different God, or to worship God differently?
Certainly his discernment, his comprehension of God was radically
altered. He never again wielded a sword in the defense of his new
faith experience or set out to persecute and imprison others who
thought differently. Yes, he worshiped God differently, but was he
worshiping another God? We might argue, as some do, that through
his encounter with Christ, Paul moved from a worship that was false
to one that is true. In other words, the issue is one of true or
false worship. But is worshiping God 'falsely' the same as
worshiping a false God? I don't think so.
[6] Likewise for Muslims. Just because their comprehension of
who God is and how God works in history to bring about human
wholeness has different contours than our own should not mean they
thereby worship a different God. Do they worship God differently?
Yes, in some ways they surely do, as do the Jews. Do they worship a
different God? Certainly that is not their intention, and if it's
not their intention, why should we intentionally try to make it
so?
[7] Finally, we must leave it to God. As the Arabs say: God
knows. A fitting close to such a query may be Jesus' response to
the woman at the well in Samaria: "God is Spirit and those who
worship God, [in this case be they Jew, Christian or Muslim,] must
worship in spirit and truth."