A summary about the god of the Jews:

 

The idea of salvation that the Jews believe in and madly seek to realize urged them to imagine their god as a man of war in the first place.

 

Any person when faced by something unfamiliar to him will automatically compare it with what is familiar to him. A Muslim would be shocked and stunned on knowing (Yahweh) of the Torah that is completely different from Allah, the Merciful, the Gracious, the One, the Most Powerful, the Evil-Free, the Exalted, the Glorified, the Kind and the Loving of all His creatures. In contrast to this image, the Lord Yahweh is introduced in the text of the Torah as a fighter, a killer, sometimes hesitant and partial to a certain party, supporter of evil and evil-doers, prone to committing errors and never stable, capricious, quick-tempered, obsessed with the desire of vengeance and slaughter and nothing relieves his nerves but the smell of human sacrifices, etc. Here in the Torah we are not before a primitive state of consciousness reflected in legends, but before a defined and consciously planned function of this legendary structure that is called a religion. As this presents itself as a religion, it is consequently introduced as a working program legislating for daily life in all its details.

 

What is more dangerous is the existence of a group of human beings that believe in this religion and are eager to apply and implement its programs on earth. If it is said in the Torah that Allah created man in His own image, it is the Jew that created Yahweh and his avarice.” [1]


[1] Dabj,  Isma‘il,, Ta’ammulat fi al-Tawrat,  pp. 8-9, adapted.