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|  |  | sent. It cannot (Muslims say) refer to the Greeks, to whom St. Paul and the other 
Apostles of Christ went, for they were wise and learned. But this verse cannot be said to 
refer to any prophet at all. It tells how God will call the Gentiles, not the 
Greeks only, but the Arabs, the English, and all others, to become one spiritual 
brotherhood in Christ. This is the explanation of the passage given in I Pet. ii. 9, 10: 
compare Eph. ii. 11-13. As for the wisdom of the Greeks, it was not true wisdom, for they 
had no knowledge of the One True God, and the very beginning of wisdom consists in 
revering Him (Ps. cxi. 10; Prov. i. 7; ix. 10). "The wisdom of this world is 
foolishness with God" (I Cor. iii. 19). 4. Deut. xxxiii. 2. Here the words, "The LORD came from Sinai" are said to 
refer to the giving of the Law to Moses: "And rose from Seir unto them;" to the 
"descent" of the Injil: while "He shined forth from Mount Paran" is 
claimed as a prophecy of the bestowal of the Qur'an, since it is said that one of the 
hills near Mecca is called by a similar name. But the context shows that Moses is here 
making no reference either to the Injil or to the Qur'an. He is reminding the Israelites 
how widely God's glory was seen when they were encamped near Mt. Sinai. The map shows that 
Sinai, Seir, and Paran1 are three mountains quite close to one another. They 
are in the Sinaitic Peninsula, many hundreds of miles from Mecca. This is clear from the 
other places where Paran is mentioned (Gen. xiv. 6; Num. x. 12; xii. 15; xiii. 3; Deut. i. 
1: I Kings xi. 18). 5. Ps. x1v. is said to be a prophecy regarding Muhammad, since he is called "the 
Prophet with the sword", and it is thought that verses 3-5 are especially applicable 
to him. But there are two answers, either one of which alone would suffice to refute this 
theory. One is that in ver. 6 we read, "Thy throne, O God, is for ever and 
ever." Muslims never claim that 
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|  |  | Muhammad was God. The other is that in Heb. i. 8, 9, it is clearly stated that ver. 6 
is an address to Christ. The "King's daughter" of ver. 13 is the spiritual bride 
of Christ, that is, the Christian Church (compare Rev. xxi. 2), and the foes defeated are 
Satan and all his hosts and those men whom he has stirred up to oppose Christ's Gospel 
(see Rev. xix. 11-21). Other similar prophecies about Christ are found in Pss. ii, lxxii, 
cx. Probably first of all the psalm had reference to Solomon's marriage with Pharaoh's 
daughter (I Kings iii. 1), and this wedding is taken as a type of the spiritual union 
between Christ and His Church. 6. Ps. cxlix. is also claimed as a prophecy about Muhammad. The "New song" (ver. 
1) is said to be the Qur'an, and the "two-edged sword" (ver. 6) suits the 
"Prophet with the sword". ‘Ali too had such a sword, and used it in Muhammad's 
service. The "king" in ver. 2 is said to be Muhammad. But the Muslims do not use 
singing in their worship, and the Qur'an cannot be described as in any sense a 
"song". The sword is not said to be in the king's hands, but in that of the 
Israelites, and with it they were to avenge themselves upon their enemies. The 
"king" in ver. 2 is in the first part of the verse said to be the Creator, and 
in ver. 4 He is called the LORD. In no sense can it be said that Muhammad was King of 
Israel. Nor could the Israelites "rejoice" in him, as we shall see, if we 
remember how he treated the Banu Nadhir, the Banu Qainuqa', the Banu Quraizah and other 
Jewish communities. 7. Some refer chapter v. 16, of the Song of Songs, to Muhammad, simply because in the 
Hebrew the word mahamaddim, "delights," "delightfulnesses," 
occurs there, and is derived from the same root. But we find that the word in Hebrew is a 
common, and not a proper noun, as the use of the plural here shows. The same word occurs 
again as a common noun in Hosea ix. 6, 16; I Kings xx. 6; Lam. i. 10, 11; ii. 4; Joel iv. 
5; Isa. lxiv. 10; 2 Chron. xxxvi. 19; Ezek. xxiv. 
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