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                                    Muhammad in the Bible David Benjamin KeldaniEdited & Annotated by: Prof. Dawud M. R. Alhanbali & Prof, Dr. Kaseb A. Albadran ( 32 )and worship in their houses and temples. In those olden times of ignorance, the idols were of the kind of “identity card” or of the nature of a passport. Is it not remarkable to find that Rachel (Rahīl), the wife of Jacob and the daughter of Laban,should stealthe “traphim” of herfather? (Gen. xxxi.). Yet Laban as well as her husband were Muslims, and on the same day raised the stone “Mispha” and dedicated it to God!The Jews in the wilderness, inebriate with the wonders and miracles worked day and night — their camp shadowed by a miraculous cloud at daytime and illuminated by a pillar of fire at night, themselves fed with the “manna” and “Salwai”- as soon as the Prophet Moses(pbuh) disappeared for a few days on the misty top of Mount Sinai, made a golden calf and worshipped it. The history of that stubborn people from the death of Joshua to the anointment of King Saul, covering a period of more than four centuries, is full of a series of scandalous relapses into idolatry. It was only after the close of the revelation and the Canon of their Holy Scriptures in the third century before Christ that the Jews ceased to worship idols, and have since remained monotheists. However, their belief in the Unity of God, though it makes them Unitarians, does not entitle them to the qualification of being called “Muslims,” because they have stubbornly rejected both the persons and the revelations of Jesus and Muhammad (pbuh). It is only through submission to the will of God that a man can attain peace and become Muslim, otherwise the faith without obedience and submission is similar to that of the devils who believe in the existence of Allah and tremble.As we have no records concerning the other peoples who were favoured with Divine revelations and with the Prophets and Imam sent to them by God, we shall only content ourselves with the declaration thatthe religion of Islam existed among Israel and other Arab peoples of old,sometimes more luminous, but mostly like a flickering wick or
                                
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