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for the conclusion to which they come, and that reason must not be the simple
statement 'Muhammad said so'.
And similarly with the second main ground on
which the average Muhammadan claims that Muhammadanism is superior to
Christianity. The fact that Muhammadan theologians claim that the Qur'an is
the eternal word of God, cannot be validly used as an argument in favour of
Muhammadanism in the settlement of the historical issue which we have seen
arises between it and Christianity. Independently of any belief as to the
nature of the Qur'an the question must be settled. To say so is not to say at
the outset that the Qur'an is not of God. That may be the conclusion to which
we are led finally; but we are not begging the question by taking this for
granted at the outset. We simply demand that this special claim on behalf of
the Qur'an is one which cannot be allowed to influence the course of the
investigation which concerns a simple matter of history, and which must be
settled on historical and critical grounds.
Without doubt, it is no light thing to ask a man to reconsider his
religious position, and see where in the light of historical fact and human
reason he stands; and it is just this demand that we make on our Muhammadan
brethren. We do not come to them to try to prove that their theological dogmas
are wrong, and that ours are |
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better; that their religious practices are tainted with the formalism against
which Jesus threatened his most grievous woes. We come not to destroy, but
simply to ask the educated Muhammadan to tell us what ground he has for
passing by a religious faith which Muhammad himself declared to be the truth.
For we maintain that what we hold, and try in spite of all the failings
inherent in poor human nature to practise, is simply Christianity as Jesus
taught itin fact the true Islam, which Muhammad and the Qur'an both witnessed
to as being the Religion of God.
In making this demand, we desire to
emphasize even to weariness the fact that we are bringing forward no new
teaching, that we are not asking the Muhammadan to give up his belief in God,
that we are not attempting to persuade him to act contrary to the revealed
will of God. We are simply asking him to reconsider whether what he has
received, perhaps unquestioningly, as the revelation of God, can truthfully
claim to be from Him, in the light which criticism and historical research
have shed on the reliability of the Gospel record. We claim to be presenting
to him for his consideration that body of teaching which Muhammad himself
acknowledged as the truth of God. We point out to him that Muhammad had no
special means of knowing what the teaching of Jesus was, though from what he
knew of it he had no hesitation in acknowledging that |
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