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teaching of Jesus, which Muhammad himself witnessed was the truth. Muhammad
professed to believe that this true original teaching of Jesus had been so
corrupted that it had lost all practical resemblance to its original form, and
because of this supposed corruption he believed that Christians had wandered
out of the true path. True Christianity—the teaching of Jesus—he never
rejected.
Now, we have the right to ask Muhammadans on what ground the
prophet based his claim to distinguish between Christianity as taught by
Jesus, and Christianity as taught by the Church. What reason had he to
maintain that what Jesus taught was true, but that what the Church taught was
false? Are the arguments which he brought forward, if indeed he brought
forward any, reasonable? Are they cogent? We have the right to ask these
questions; for it is the same claim which Muhammadanism makes to-day, some
1,300 years after the death of the prophet. Muhammadans profess to regard
Jesus as a prophet of God, and the truths which he taught as a divine
Revelation; and yet they deny that the message which the Christian Church
proclaims as the message of Jesus, is in accordance with what Jesus taught.
Where, we ask our Muhammadan brethren, is the proof of this? We desire to
remind them, further, that in asking this question we are not acting on the |
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| aggressive. We are not making any attack on Muhammadanism. It is
they who, though perhaps, they do not realize it, are attacking Christianity,
while all the time professing to hold those truths which Jesus taught. To
state that Christianity as taught by Jesus is true, but that Christianity as
taught by the Christian Church is false, is to take up a position of pure
arbitrariness unless proof of the charge can be shown. To fall back on the
statement that Muhammad said so, is simply to beg the question. For before we
can accept his dictum we must have proof that he understood what it was that
he rejected, and that he had good ground for rejecting it. A man cannot really
reject what he does not understand, and we desire historical proof that
Muhammad was in a position to understand Christianity and was qualified to
judge it. A man may for himself reject in practice what he does not
comprehend, but his rejection can have no weight and no authority with others,
unless it can be shown that he was right in rejecting it. Again, therefore, we
ask what special knowledge had Muhammad of Christianity that he could
definitely state that there was a difference between Christianity as taught by
Jesus, and Christianity as taught by the Christian Church? The sources from
which he could draw his information with regard to the teachings of Jesus are
before us to-day. What |
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