Welcome to the Islam Theism Web site. This site celebrates the Oneness of God. This is for all people - those who believe innately in single God (Theists) Creator, those who do not know who God is and those who do not believe in God - any and all thinking humans! I hope site this helps to prevent you being
cast astray on a costly journey by Godless influences.
This is an invitation to the Home of the Creator God, the God of all humanity. You will discover a Living God that is your closest companion from the
moment of birth until after death! Through your best and worst deeds and experiences, God is the other witness. This is a God that you do not have to wait for to find out about. You do not need some qualification or level of attainment to learn about Him. In your success and failure, He is with you. To provide a focus, I take two extremes. For a pure view of God, I take the Islamic perspective, where a Muslim prays formally to his Creator five times a day and God
is intimately involved in our daily affairs.
Definition, Theism:
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001. “in theology and philosophy, the belief in a personal God. It is opposed to atheism and agnosticism and is to be distinguished from pantheism and deism. Unlike pantheists, theists do not hold God to be identical to the universe. Like
deists, they believe that God created the universe and transcends it; unlike the deists, they hold that God involves himself in human affairs. For a summary of the arguments that support theism, see God.”
Belief in the existence of a divine reality; usually referring to monotheism (one God), as opposed to pantheism (all is God), polytheism (many gods),
and atheism (without God). Theistic religions such as Christianity, Islam, and Judaism all have the monotheistic belief in a God, whereas a polytheistic religion such as Hinduism holds a belief in many gods.
(Theism: Longer definition) Theism states that the existence and continuance of the universe is owed to one supreme Being, who is distinct from Creation. For this reason, theism proclaims a dualistic relation between God and the world, wherein God is a
being who controls events from outside of the human world. The main question theism raises is whether God should be seen only as transcendent, that is, beyond the limits of human experience and the material world. Could God not also be seen as immanent in them as well, having existence and effect in human consciousness and the material world? Theists generally claim that attempts to make God immanent in humanity and nature are pantheistic, and therefore, unacceptable
to theistic religion. The philosopher and theologian Paul Tillich reconciled these two views by claiming that "God is neither in another nor in the same space as the world. [God] is the creative ground of the spatial structure of the world, but he [sic] is not bound to the structure, positively or negatively. . . .God is immanent in the world as its permanent creative ground and is transcendent to the world through freedom."
“the view that all limited or finite things are dependent in some way on one supreme or ultimate reality of which one may also speak in personal terms.”