1. An English reader, unacquainted with the East and with the Muhammadan controversy, will be  
inclined, on reading this book, to think that the arguments here used on the Christian side are  
insufficient, being weakly stated and based too much upon the Qur'an. It is hoped that  
missionaries of experience will not think so. The reason why at first sight the work may seem open  
to these objections is that the Christian controversialist has to limit his choice of proofs to  
those which lie within the range of a Muhammadan's knowledge, and this is generally extremely  
limited. To appeal to the history of the Jews, of the world at large, of his own nation, to  
criticism of whatever nature, to the Bible, to the opinions of European writers, or anything of the  
kind, would for the most part be to refer to that of which a Muslim has no knowledge, or at least  
very little indeed. Should he have read the Bible (except certain extracts torn from their proper  
context and wrested to support the foregone conclusions of Muhammadan controversial writers), he  
still denies its authenticity, genuineness, and authority, except again in the case of the most  
enlightened of the Indian Muslims. It is evident, therefore, that no appeal to the Bible