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Muhammadan seekers after truth to recognize this issue and investigate it for
themselves. This issue will be seen to rest on the historical relation which
Muhammadanism bears to Christianity and the attitude which Muhammadans take
towards Christianity. And it can be settled only by an examination of the
historical facts on which that relation depends, apart from any preconceived
idea as to what these facts ought to be, and how they are to be interpreted or
explained metaphysically or theologically.
In investigating the truth or
untruth of Christianity, one must deal with Judaism and the relation which it
holds to the later religion; but that matter having once been decided, there
is no further question which can be raised by Muhammadanism which came six
hundred years later. Without Judaism there could not have been any such thing
as historical Christianity such as we know it. Judaism never felt itself to be
complete and final. It looked forward to the fulfilment of its hopes in the
Messiah, and Christianity is not the denial of Judaism, but its fulfilment.
It, however, knows itself to be final, and while the comprehension by the
Church of what it fully means and implies, may grow and increase from century
to century, any apparent development there may be, cannot be a development of
the essence of Christianity, but must be only an increasingly deeper
apprehension of |
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its intent and not any addition to its content. It is true that Christianity
looks forward to the second coming of Christ; but this is not for any expected
completion of it as a religious system which feels itself wanting at present in
any respect, but only for the deepening of the experience of union with Christ,
and the fuller outward manifestation of the Spirit which already exists in and
vivifies Christianity.
The relation, however, which Muhammadanism occupies to
Christianity cannot be in any degree analogous to that existing between
Christianity and Judaism. Indeed, it is far otherwise. For Muhammadanism is the
virtual denial of Christianity, not its fulfilment. Judaism and Christianity may
both be revelations from the same God; for the latter has its roots in the
former and is but its consummation. But Christianity and Muhammadanism cannot
both be true. The latter is the denial and rejection of the former; and it is in
this denial and rejection of Christianity by Muhammadanism, that we find the
definite and clear issue between the two systems.
Some might be inclined to argue that as Christianity from its own position,
and of itself, has nothing to say to Muhammadanism, so Muhammadanism has nothing
to say to Christianity; but this is not so, and that it is not so is, as a
matter of fact, recognized by Muhammadans. Consciously, or unconsciously, they
do so; for they do |
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