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whom also he made the worlds;' and St. Peter writes
to the believers, 'Ye were redeemed . . . with precious
blood, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot,
even the blood of Christ: who was foreknown indeed before
the foundation of the world, but was manifested at the
end of the times for your sake' (1 Pet. i. 19, 20).
It is therefore plain beyond contradiction, that whatever
may be the foundations of Islam, it does not rest either
on any particular prophecy in the gospel respecting
Muhammad and his teaching, or on any deficiency in the
Christian religion which it was required to supply.
If, in order to escape this conclusion, any Muhammadans,
unacquainted with the history of the New Testament text,
should assert that our version of the gospel is not
the original one, but has been corrupted by the Christians
after Muhammad's appearance, in order thus to suppress
one of the most important testimonies to his divine
commission, it only remains to say, in reply, that a
number of learned Muhammadans, e.g. Imam Muhammad, Isma'il
Bukhari, Shah Wali Allah, Imam Fakhru'd, Din Razi, and
others, down to the learned Syed Ahmad, our own Indian
contemporary, have already expressed their conviction
that the gospel now in circulation is still the same
as that used before the days of Muhammad; that from
the ancient manuscripts still preserved in the great
libraries of Christian |
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lands, this is so evident as to require no further
proof; and that, consequently, it is unfair of Muhammadans
still to bring forward this old assertion that the sacred
writings have been corrupted, unless they establish
the charge by positive proofs, to do which, if they
can, we would here publicly challenge them. For so long
as they fail to prove this charge, it is only just to
pass it over as baseless and unworthy of notice.
VIII
MUHAMMAD AND ISLAM, INSTEAD OF ORIGINATING
IN CHRISTENDOM, AS CHRISTIANITY HAD CAST ITS FIRST ROOTS
AMONG THE ISRAELITES, SPRANG FROM THE MIDST OF IDOLATERS
IN ARABIA
THERE can be no doubt that 'the whole earth is the
Lord's' (Psalm xxiv. 1), and that 'He can do whatsoever
He pleaseth' (Psalm cxv. 3); but it is no less incontestable,
that for all He does He has the best and wisest of reasons.
We have already recognized the divine wisdom of first
sending the Law of Moses to Israel, in preparation for
the perfect and more spiritual religion of Christ (ante
p. 9); and it must appear perfectly consistent with
the supreme wisdom of God to have introduced the Saviour
when and where He was expected, and to have laid the
first foundation of the church of the future where the
ground had been carefully prepared for it. So, likewise,
if God had willed to supersede
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