| The question of eternal salvation is one that each of | | | | Christian community that once one has accepted |
| the world's four major religions (Christianity, Islam, | | | | Jesus and invited him into their life; they have to lead a |
| Buddhism and Hinduism) offers a different take on. | | | | life which is pleasing to God if they are to have eternal |
| According to the Christian view on salvation, there is | | | | salvation. |
| agreement that you can only attain your eternal | | | | Islam's take on your salvation is somewhat more like |
| salvation after accepting Jesus Christ into your live and | | | | the protestant Christian take on the same, where it is |
| following his teachings, though different schools of | | | | your confession of the Shaada' (the confession that |
| thought in the Christian church have different takes on | | | | there is only one God, and Allah is his name, and |
| what makes the acceptance of Jesus Christ into one's | | | | Mohammed is his prophet), which gives you entry into |
| life; with the Catholics leaning more towards baptism | | | | the Muslim family destined for eternal salvation. But |
| (as the mark of birth into the Christian family destined | | | | that having made that confession, you have to live a |
| for eternal life) and protestants leaning more towards | | | | life that is pleasing to God if you are to get that |
| the prayer of confession - as the act through which | | | | salvation when you die, and in the day of Qiyama (at |
| one is born into the Christian family, which is destined | | | | the end of the world). |
| for salvation. All in all, there is agreement in the | | | | |