APPENDIX III. On the Injll 
(see v. 49, n. 757) 
 Just as the Taurat is not the Old Testament, or the Pentateuch, as now 
received by the Jews and Christians, so the Injil mentioned in the Quran is certainly 
not the New Testament, and it is not the four Gospels as now received by the 
Christian Church, but an original Gospel which was promulgated by Jesus, as the 
Taurat was promulgated by Moses and the Quran by Muhammad Mustafa. 
The New Testament as now received consists of (a) four Gospels with varying 
contents {Matthew, Mark, Luke, and John); and other miscellaneous matter; viz., 
(6) the Acts of the Apostles (probably written by Luke and purporting to describe the 
progress of the Christian Church under St. Peter and St. Paul from the supposed 
Crucifixion of Jesus to about 61 A.D.) ; (c) twenty-one Letters or Epistles (the 
majority written by St. Paul to various churches or individuals, but a few written by 
other Disciples, and of a general nature) ; and (d) the Book of Revelation or 
Apocalypse (ascribed to St. John, and containing mystic visions and prophecies, of 
which it is difficult to understand the meaning). 
 As Prof. F. C Burkitt remarks (Canon of the New Testament), it is an odd 
miscellany. "The four biographies of Jesus Christ .... are not all independent of 
each other, and neither of them was intended by its writer to form one of a quartet. 
But they are all put side by side, unharmonised, one of them being actually 
imperfect at the end, and one being only the first volume of a larger work. " All this 
body of unmethodical literature was casual in its nature. No wonder, because the 
early Christians expected the end of the world very soon. The four canonical 
Gospels were only four out of many, and some others besides the four have survived. 
Each writer just wrote down some odd sayings of the Master that he recollected. 
Among the miracles described there is only one which is described in all the four 
Gospels, and others were described and believed in in other Gospels, which are not 
mentioned in any of the four canonical Gospels. Some of the Epistles contain 
expositions of doctrine, but this has been interpreted differently by different 
Churches. There must have been hundreds of such Epistles, and not all the Epistles 
now received as canonical were always so received or intended to be so received. 
The Apocalypse also was not the only one in the field. There were others. They 
were prophecies of "things which must shortly come to pass " ; they could not have 
been meant for long preservation, " for the time is at hand. "
When were these four Gospels written ? By the end of the second century 
A.D. they were in existence, but it does not follow that they had been selected by 
that date to form a canon. They were merely pious productions comparable to Dean 
Farrar's Life of Christ. There were other Gospels besides. And further, the writers 
of two of them, Mark and Luke, were not among the Twelve Disciples "called" by 
Jesus. About the Gospel of St. John there is much controversy as to authorship, 
date, and even as to whether it was all written by one person. Clement of Rome 
(about 97 A.D.) and Polycarp (about 112 A.D.) quote sayings of Jesus in a form different from those found in the present canonical Gospels. Polycarp (Epistle, vii) 
inveighs much against men " who pervert the sayings of the Lord to their own 
lusts," and he wants to turn " to the "Word handed down to us from the beginning," 
thus referring to a Book (or a Tradition) much earlier than the four orthodox Gospels. 
An Epistle of St. Barnabas and an Apocalypse of St. Peter were recognised by 
Presbyter Clement of Alexandria (flourished about 180 A.D.). The Apocalypse of 
St. John, which is a part of the present Canon in the West, forms no part of the 
Peshitta (Syriac) version of the Eastern Christians, which was produced about 411-433 
A.D. and which was used by the Nestorian Christians. It is probable that the 
Peshitta was the version (or an Arabic form of it) used by the Christians in Arabia in 
the time of the Apostle. The final form of the New Testament canon for the West 
was fixed in the fourth century A.D. (say, about 367 A.D.) by Athanasius and the 
Nicene creed. The beautiful Codex Sinaiticus which was acquired for the British 
Museum in 1934, and is one of the earliest complete manuscripts of the Bible, may 
be dated about the fourth century. It is written in the Greek language. Fragments 
of unknown Gospels have also been discovered, which do not agree with the received 
canonical Gospels.
The lnjil (Greek, Evangel=Gospel) spoken of by the Quran is not the New 
Testament. It is not the four Gospels now received as canonical. It is the single 
Gospel which, Islam teaches, was revealed to Jesus, and which he taught. Fragments 
of it survive in the received canonical Gospels and in some others, of which traces 
survive [e.g., the Gospel of Childhood or the Nativity, the Gospel of St. Barnabas, 
etc.). Muslims are therefore right in respecting the present Bible (New Testament 
and Old Testament), though they reject the peculiar doctrines taught by orthodox 
Christianity or Judaism. They claim to be in the true tradition of Abraham, and 
therefore all that is of value in the older revelations, it is claimed, is incorporated 
in the teaching of the Last of the Prophets.
In v. 85 we are told that nearest in love to the Believers among the People of 
the Book are the Christians. I do not agree that this does not apply to modern 
Christians " because they are practically atheists or freethinkers. " I think that 
Christian thought like the world's thought) has learnt a great deal from the protest 
of Islam against priest domination, class domination, and sectarianism, and its 
insistence on making this life pure and beautiful while we. are in it. We must 
stretch a friendly hand to all who are sincere and in sympathy with our ideals. 
 Authorities: The first two mentioned for Appendix II, and in addition : Prof. F. C. Burkitt. 
on the Cannon of the New Testament, in Religion, June 1034, the Journal of Transactions of the 
Society for Promoting the Study of Religions; R. \V. Mackay, Rise and Progress of Christianity; 
G. R. S. Mead, The Gospel and the Gospels; B. \V. Bacon, Making of the New Testament, with its 
Bibliography ; Sir Frederic Kenyon, The Story of the Bible; R. Hone, The Apocryphal New Testament, 
London 1820 ; H. I Bell and T O. Skeat, Fragments of an Unknown Gospel and other Christian Papyri, 
published by the British Museum, 1935. See also chapter 15 of Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the 
Roman Empire, where the genesis of the earlv churches and sects in» the Roman Empire is briefly 
reviewed. 
S. VI. ) 
288 
| C. 76.
 
