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            | 92 | THE MOHAMMEDAN CONTROVERSY |  | 
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  consequently be admitted on the testimony of the Prophet of Islam. Under any
  circumstances, the assertions of such corruption cannot be regarded as
  reflecting on the prophetical claim of Mohammed (as if he had advanced an
  intellectual impossibility). And the great injustice and departure from right
  which ye commit, is this, that ye do not regard the assertion of a logical
  impossibility to be an argument against a claim to prophecy, while you here
  hold the assertion of a simple miracle to be so. That is to say, the assertion
  of the incarnation and manifestation of God, and of the equality of that which
  is produced to that which produces it (doctrines which you hold with regard to
  Jesus on the authority of the Bible), is not regarded by you as falsifying the
  claim to prophecy; and yet ye hold a statement regarding the corruption of the
  Bible, which would not amount even to a common miracle, to be a disproof of
  the prophetical rank of the blessed Prophet of Islam. Verily, this is a
  marvellous thing (pp. 438-440).
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  Pfander had referred to the evidence of the Coran itself as proving that our
  Scriptures were not altered prior to Mohammed's appearance, and to the
  evidence of ancient manuscripts that they had not been altered since; and here
  is an example of the way in which Ali Hassan avoids the conclusion:
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  According to the above interpretation of the passage,1 it might
  indeed be held that the prophecies regarding the last of the prophets
  were not corrupted until his appearance, else why were the people in
  expectation of his coming, and ready to believe upon him? My reply is, that
  even supposing this argument to be correct, all that would be proved therefrom,
  would be that only those passages containing predictions of Mohammed remained
  uncorrupted until his appearing; not by any means, that throughout the whole
  Bible no other passage had been corrupted. The Padre's deduction that the entire
  Bible remained intact, thus falls to the ground.
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    And if any one say that the
    passages which contain those predictions (asserted in the Coran to have been
    altered after Mohammed's appearing) are still identically the same with the
    corresponding places in the ancient manuscripts to which the Padre has
    referred; my reply is that the naked claim of the Padre, as to the existence
    of manuscripts thirteen or fifteen hundred years old, is not worthy of being
    listened to, especially as his stories contradictions and bigotry have
    already been fully exposed. That paper and writing should remain so many
    ages, and yet be legible, would be miraculous indeed. Some Pope, or other
    such personage, in order to cast
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