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ARABIAN DOCTRINES AND PRACTICES |
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retained by the Prophet. Some denied a future life as well as a Creator, while
others admitted both.1 He then mentions a variety of tribal gods, and gives the
name and place of eleven, including Ozza of the Coreish, Hobal aloft on the
Kaaba, etc.; also angels, genii, and heavenly bodies adored by the Sabaeans. We
are then informed of a variety of local customs in vogue among the heathen
Arabs, some retained in Islam, as family restrictions in marriage, Hajj to the
Kaaba with its various practices, visiting Safa and Marwa, throwing stones in
Wady Mina, ablution, and several minor matters. Very similar is the testimony of
Ibn Ishâc, and the Sîrat al Rasûl, that notwithstanding the idolatry into which
the Arabs fell when they lost the faith of Abraham and Isaac, yet throughout it
all they never forgot the great God above all other gods. Thus at the new moon,
the Beni Kinâna and Coreish would cry aloud "Labbeik, Allah Labbeik!
Thou hast no Companion, but rulest over all"; acknowledging thus the oneness
of Him they called upon; and while joining their idols in worship with the
Highest, they yet placed them all under his hand. Then the Unity is thus
expressed in the Qur'an: Verily your Lord is God who created the heavens and the
earth in six days, then ascended the throne to rule over all things. There is no
intercession but by his permission. God is your Lord, wherefore serve him. Ah!
will ye not consider? (Surah x. 3).
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From all this we perceive that while the Arabs up to the Prophet's time
worshipped idols, they did so
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regarding them as intercessors with the great God whom they held
supreme.1 The truth was so well known in Muhammad's own
household, that his father and uncle bore the names Abd-Allah and
Obeid-Allah, "Al," as we have seen, signifying The One.
Hence we are sure that the Unity was acknowledged long before the
Prophet's mission, as well as the various Meccan customs still
in current use. Circumcision also was practised from of old, as we
learn from the Epistle of Barnabas written about two centuries after
Christ. Multitudes of idols being all around Mecca,2
certainly little inspiration was needed to shew how false the
system was, and the task was well carried out by Muhammad. While
so many of the ancient places, rites, and customs were maintained,
only one quasi-idolatrous practice has been kept up, namely,
the Kissing of the Black Stone, which was then worshipped as of
heavenly descent; the habit was so loved by the people, that it
could not be forbidden, and indeed is still observed.
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In conclusion, then, we find that the first "Source" of the Qur'an and Tradition consisted of the notions, customs, and religious
beliefs, existing around Muhammad. And we know of no other
answer as to the adoption of these, than they were assumed to
exist in the time of Abraham, and therefore were continued by
the Prophet. Now, although we are told in the Torah that the
doctrine of the Unity, as well as circumcision, were |
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