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at least in so far as the Moslem world is concerned; for there are not wanting
intimations in the Coran that, at least in the earlier stages of his teaching,
Mahomet enjoined the continued observance of the Tourāt and the Gospel by
both Jews and Christians.
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But besides simple contradictions, there are various inconsistencies in the
Coran which the believer understands as only apparent, the deeper and real
sense being in harmony. Indeed, an under-current of spiritual truth, in
proportion as hid from ordinary perception, is held to be one of the chief
glories of the Revelation. "In such cases," says Sprenger, "the
student marvelled neither at the acuteness, nor yet at the audacity, of his
Master; he marvelled rather at the wisdom of God which could draw forth such
mysterious interpretations. Theology, in fact, had now made such happy
progress, that men looked on common sense as a mere human attribute,the
reverse being that which they expected from the Deity!"
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The Arabs were themselves unread, excepting in the rude literature of the
desert. But the victories of Islam soon brought within its pale a multitude of
Jewish and Christian tribes more or less versed in Scripture and traditional
lore. Of this, the Christian portion was dropped almost untouched. Between
Christianity and Islam there was little in common. The Coran itself contains
no doctrine peculiar to Christianity, if perhaps we except the Resurrection
from the dead, and the Life to come; and even these are travestied and cast
into the mould of rabbinical legend. Mahomet's notion of the Messiah was
largely conceived under the influence of Jewish prejudice; and the very rare
and obscure references to such subjects as the descending "Table" or
Supper of the Lord, and the Seven sleepers of Antioch, are after the same
legendary type. Thus the points of contact are apparent rather than real. The
convert from Christianity must needs cast away his old associations and all
that was peculiar to the Christian religion; his traditions and his literature
disappeared with his conversion. It was not till, in the obscurity of the
Middle Ages, Christianity became dialectic, that it showed any affinity to
Arab literature; and then only
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