The God of the Muslims, the God of the Hebrew, the God of the Jew, the God of the Christian are all the God of Abraham. The one and same GOD. No matter what you call him/her/it.
Gee Ollie, you're wrong. Interesting how much it happens, eh?
No. Not all are the same "god". Why? Simple..............first off, it started with the Romans who bastardized Christianity because they wanted to appease the pagans so that they would believe in THEIR VERSION of "god". (I use lower case to denote the difference between the entity and the word that represents Him.)
And..........a couple of centuries after Christianity grew a following, the musLAMES, (whose ancestor was a dude named Ishmael), saw what was happening with the God of Abraham.
They wanted a piece of the pie.
So what did they do? Went back to the teachings of Ishmael's mother (Hagar), who happened to be an Egyptian princess.
They started a new "religion" to take over the previous ones. But......just like anything else, the world is not black and white. It has colors.
Everyone understands God in their own way. When His Holiness the Dali Lama was asked how many religions he thought should exists? He stated as many as there are people on the Earth, as we all understand God in our own way.
I mean............do you understand everyone who you meet? If so, you've got the one true religion.
If not, tell people what works for you and show them how you came to that conclusion.
I don't find you being wrong one bit interesting actually.
Scriptural: The Koran itself in several places insists that its God is the same as the God of Judaism and Christianity. The most direct statement is one in which Muslims are admonished to tell Jews and Christians "We believe in that which has been revealed to us and revealed to you; our God and your God is One, and to Him we do submit" (E.H. Palmer translation of Sura 29:46) Of course, the verse can also be rendered "our Allah and your Allah is One" (as it is in the notorious Abdullah Yusuf Ali translation)
Historical: Chronologically, Islam followed after Judaism and Christianity, but the Koran claims Islam actually preceded the other monotheisms. In Islamic doctrine (Sura 3:67), Abraham was the first Muslim. Moses and Jesus introduced mistakes into the Word of God; Muhammad brought it down perfectly. Islam views Judaism and Christianity as flawed versions of itself, correct on essentials but wrong in important details. This outlook implies that all three faiths share the God of Abraham.
Is Allah God? :: Daniel Pipes