passage in the whole Corân which could, by any possible construction, cast 
the slightest suspicion upon Christians of tampering either with their Gospel or 
with their copies of the Jewish Scripture. The utmost charge brought against 
them is that they had "forgotten a part of that whereby they were 
admonished," i.e., fallen into erroneous doctrines and practices.Art. 
CXXII.
Now supposing for a moment that the Old Testament had been interpolated by 
the enemies of Mahomet, and that they had even extended their attempts to the 
New Testament, would not some of the good Jews and Christians have 
preserved and multiplied copies of the uncorrupted Scriptures? Those Scriptures 
were constantly appealed to by Mahomet; they contained, as he alleged, valuable 
testimony in favour of the Corân, his Mission, and Islâm. Even when wielding 
the sword and supported by victorious armies, the followers of Mahomet would 
hardly neglect so reasonable and so convincing a mode of gaining over the Jews 
and Christians as that of pointing out to them the evidence for Islâm recorded 
in their own uncorrupted Scriptures. The early Mahometans surely would not 
dispense with such useful proof of the claims of their Prophet. Besides, for the 
new converts from among the Jews and Christians, the preservation of the pure 
and uncorrupted text of the Old and New Testaments would be not only desirable 
but necessary. They were commanded by the Prophet to believe in, to observe, and 
to judge by those Scriptures; and in doing so, they were promised "a double 
portion of Mercy" and special "light." Surely if these had any