Forum:Judeo-Christian God: how to title the article

As there is specific reference to the Jewish/Christian/Islamic God in Byzantium!, we need an article on this specific concept of God. Thing is, though, we can't do the dictionary trick of making god about the general concept and God about the specific deity. Anybody got any good guesses of how we'd title an article about God? Would it be God (Judeo-Christian)? Or do we move the current god to gods] and leave god for God? 18:18:30 Fri 15 Jul 2011

Without reading 'Byzantium' I would check the name of the religious group in the referred work and see if any of the traditional named like 'Yahweh' are used. If none spring to mind, try calling the article something like "God" Byzantium. There should be a connection to the general god article with a counter-reference. Good luck in not stepping on toes.Boblipton 23:11, July 15, 2011 (UTC)
 * I don't think God (Byzantium!) would work, because it's not like he's a character in the novel. It's a concept.  And there's not Yahweh or other such alternate names used, because the concept is sometimes talked about by Jewish characters, sometimes by Roman, and sometimes by Christians.  But they all say "God".  It's a real conundrum.  The concept does exist in the DWU; it's jut a matter of figuring out how to refer to it.  Maybe a rewrite of the god article would be better, now that I think about it . . .  15:17:22 Sat 16 Jul 2011


 * How about calling the article monotheism? Ausir(talk) 15:25, July 16, 2011 (UTC)
 * Well, monotheism probably does exist somewhere in the DWU, but that word is certainly not in Byzantium! (even if the concept obliquely is).   And the thing is, the characters aren't referring to the idea of worshipping one god. (Well, okay, there's one sentence where a couple of Romans do, but generally, they aren't talking philosophy.)  They're talking about a very specific God.  Roman characters in the book, for instance, refer to "the Hebrew God".  The book goes on to give very specific details about the nature of God.  The article therefore wouldn't be about the concept of philosophy of monotheism, but rather a specific conception of God, in the same way that we have articles about Janus and Minerva.   17:45:27 Sat 16 Jul 2011
 * Why not use "Hebrew God" then? Ausir(talk) 17:47, July 16, 2011 (UTC)
 * Because Jews and Christians don't call him "the Hebrew God". That's very much a Roman epithet.  01:12:03 Sun 17 Jul 2011

You are correct, Czechout, and I appreciate the delicacy of matter. However, I think the way to deal with this in the article is to ignore the real-life implications and maddened hordes of Born-Agains ravening at your door. If the name of this particular God is never mentioned in the book, then the only name we have available is "Hebrew God" or "God(Hebrew)" with a text body that discusses these issues. Otherwise you are using out of universe references. Otr you could decide to ignore the entire matter. (memo to self: check for "Allah") Boblipton 01:24, July 17, 2011 (UTC)