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may both be divided into faith and practice. Muhammadanism has had
from early times a definite system of practice into the details of which we
need not enter. Certain forms of worship, certain religious observances,
certain definite duties, were laid down by Muhammad as incumbent on the
believer; and the Muhammadan finds it difficult to imagine that there can be
any religion which has no hard and fast system of practice similar to his own.
To demand where one can find the definite system of practice which Jesus
taught, and to argue that because there is no such system of practice common to
the whole body of Christians, that therefore they must have departed from the
true faith of Jesus, is again to argue from a priori grounds. As a
matter of fact, investigation will show that the teaching of Jesus consisted in
the inculcation of certain general principles, and the making of certain
definite claims as to the relation in which He himself stood towards God, on
the one hand, and towards man on the other. And as it is no part of the
investigation to attempt to show that Jesus did or did not teach this or that
definite system of theological belief, so, on the other hand, it is not its
part to try to show that Jesus did or did not organize this or that form of
Church government, or prescribe this or that form of ritual or ceremonial
practice.
As a matter of fact, while inculcating principles of belief, which have
led, and will always lead, |
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those who seek to do His will, into a close and true knowledge of
God, he left his followers perfect intellectual freedom to develop these
principles to their natural conclusion, and form should they please to do so,
any system of theological doctrine which they felt was the logical result of
these principles. And in the same way, He left His followers freedom to
organize themselves under such system of Church government as seemed to them,
under the guidance of His Spirit, best calculated to forward those ends for
which they were unitedthe building up of the individual in a life of holy
faith and practice, and the maintenance of the common body of believers in the
principles of faith and love to God and man which He had taught. Thus too, He
left them absolute freedom in the practice of the Faith, not laying down any
definite ritual or ceremonial which they were to follow, but insisting that
each and all should yield himself to the guidance of His Spirit; and in their
yielding the will to Him. He claimed that the disciple would be led into a
true and full knowledge of the duties which were incumbent upon him.
Thus we see that the object of the investigation which we ask the
Muhammadan inquirer to make, must not be an attempt to show that such and such
a system was taught by Jesus, but must be an attempt to reach a true estimate
of who and what He claimed to be, and what attitude He |
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