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the religions system of Muslims, for it consists,
as Gibbon has well said of an eternal truth and a necessary
fiction: "There is no God but God: Muhammad is
the Apostle of God." It is not too much to say
that in the minds of his followers Muhammad holds as
important a place as Jesus Christ does in those of Christians.
The influence of his example for good or ill affects
the whole Muhammadan world in even the smallest matters,
and few men have played a more momentous part in the
religious, moral, and political history of the human
race than the founder of Islam.
It was naturally impossible that, occupying the position
which he claimed for himself, Muhammad should not have
left upon the religion which he founded the distinct
impress of his own personality. A builder collects his
materials from many different quarters, yet their method
and arrangement reveal his skill. The plan of the architect
is manifested in the edifice which has been erected
as its embodiment. Just in the same way, though we have
seen that Muhammad borrowed ideas, legends, and religious
rites from many different quarters, the religion of
Islam has assumed a form of its own, which differs in
certain respects from any other faith with which it
may be compared. The beauty of the literary style of
many parts of the Qur'an has been universally admired,
and it evidences the eloquence of its author in no doubtful
manner. Its want of arrangement and harmony of |
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design may not be due to him, but the work as a whole
mirrors forth the limitations of Muhammad's intellect,
the very slight amount of real knowledge and learning
that he possessed, his unlimited credulity and want
of all critical faculty, and the moral defects of his
character. When studied in the chronological order of
its composition, the Qur'an shows traces of a gradual
change of policy which corresponds with the alteration
in Muhammad's own position and prospects in temporal
matters. Certain parts of it are, even by Muhammadan
commentators, explained by reference to important events
in his life, to which the "revelation" of
these particular verses was directly due. To demonstrate
this it will be sufficient to inquire firstly
into Muhammad's attitude in reference to the use of
the sword in the spread of Islam, and secondly
into but one incident in his matrimonial relations.
It is well known that, before he left Mecca and took
refuge in Medina in A.D. 622, Muhammad had no temporal
power. His followers in Mecca itself amounted to only
a few score ,
and therefore had on two occasions — in 615 and again
in 616 — to seek safety in flight to Abyssinia. Accordingly,
in those verses and Surahs which were composed before
the Hijrah, no mention |
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