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been felt. They are the followers of Abdol Wahab, who commenced his career in the region where, during the life-time of the prophet, Moseilama had threatened a considerable division among his followers. Wahab was an ambitious fanatic, who aimed, nevertheless, at reforming the national religion. He was aided by powerful princes of the province of Nejed; and within a short time, the tenets he maintained spread throughout the peninsula. His fundamental principle, like that of Mahomet, was the unity of the Deity. The Koran he regarded as divine, rejecting all the glosses which ignorance and infatuation had put upon it, and holding in utter contempt all the traditions and tales concerning its author, which the devout of every generation had eagerly received. The reverence, approaching to adoration, which Arabs were wont to pay to the name of Mahomet, all visits to his tomb, and all regard to the tombs and relics of Arab saints he denounced; the costly ornaments with which a mistaken piety had enriched these sacred spots, he thought might be appropriated to common purposes. Wahab would not suffer the common oath by Mahomet or Ali to be used among his followers; on the very rational ground that an oath is an appeal to a witness of our secret thoughts, and who can know these but God? The title of Lord, generally given to the prophet by his followers, Wahab rejected as impious. He was commonly mentioned by this zealous reformer and his adherents, by his simple name, without the addition of our Lord, the prophet of God." All who deviated in any degree from the plain sense of the Koran, either in their belief or practice, were infidels in their esteem,

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upon whom, therefore, according to its dictates, war might be made. Thus was the martial spirit of the early Saracens called again into exercise, and with the ardour that characterized the days of the immediate successors of the prophet, they were prepared at once to assail the consciences and the property of men not exactly of their own faith.

At the call of their leader, they assembled, first in the plain of Draaiya, some 400 miles east of Medina, armed and provided at their own expense for war; Bagdad and Mecca in vain attempted to extinguish them; the seraglio itself was filled with their formidable war-cry; the sultan trembled on his throne, and the caravans from Syria suspended their usual journeys. The imperial city suffered from their ravages in its usual supplies of coffee, and the terror of their name was greatly spreading among devout Mahometans of every country, for they had violated the shrines of saints, and levelled to the ground the chapels at Mecca, which devotion had consecrated to the memory of the prophet and his family. At the commencement of the present century, however, Mecca was recaptured from them by the Turkish arms, and a plague, with the small-pox breaking out just at this time among the followers of Wahab, probably saved the mighty fabric of Islamism. These reverses did not quench the ardour of the Wahabees; their leader had been assassinated, but his son, already distinguished for his prudence and valour, succeeded him in the command. Medina fell beneath his power, and from thence to the Persian gulph he seemed likely to reign lord paramount. In 1805, he was able to impose a heavy tax on the caravan of pilgrims from Damascus to

the holy city, and declared that thenceforth it should consist of pilgrims alone, without the pride and pomp of a religious procession. Soon afterwards they again entered Mecca, and immediately threatened with destruction every sacred relic, but they did not put their threats into execution. Various conflicts between them and the orthodox Mahometans have since ensued, the general result of which has been to break the martial and fanatical spirit of the Wahabees, and to re-establish the power of the grand sultan in cities and districts where it had been placed in jeopardy. They are still, indeed, dreaded as plunderers, but no great national convulsion has resulted from their efforts.

Some writers regret the suppression of this once powerful class of Mahometans, believing that if continued they would have been mainly instrumental in overthrowing the Moslem faith, and making way for a purer religion; for ourselves, we see little occasion for these regrets. The Wahabees must not be supposed more favourable to a pure faith than are those by whom they have been overthrown. If they must be regarded as reformers, they only attempted to improve a few absurd and scandalous practices,-the impious and abominable dogmas of the Koran they left untouched; or if they touched them, it was only to enforce their observance with greater rigour. Their creed was even more sanguinary and intolerant than that of the ancient Mahometans, and probably the continuance of their power would have been nothing more than the continuance of injustice, cruelty, and persecution. We do not look for the overthrow of Mahometanism by such means. One system of error may sometimes destroy another,

but the pure faith, which blesses a miserable world, and directs men in the path of safety, knowledge, and happiness, will extend only as the sacred volume is diffused, and as that holy influence from God accompanies it, by which the understanding is illuminated, and the heart is renewed. Fanaticism is no auxiliary of the religion of the bible, it neither prepares its way, nor accelerates its progress. Violence and war are utterly rejected by this divine system, as alien from its spirit and character. "My kingdom," says its founder, "is not of this world: if my kingdom were of this world, then would my servants fight, but now is my kingdom not from hence."

APPENDIX.

NO. I. THE FULFILMENT OF SCRIPTURE PROPHECY IN THE RISE AND PROGRESS OF MAHOMETANISM.

A FEW observations tracing the fulfilment of prophecy in the rise and progress of Mahometanism have been reserved for an Appendix to the preceding chapters, Faber's Calendar of Prophecy, Foster's Mahometanism Unveiled, Fry's Second advent of Christ, with one or two other works of a similar kind, have been made to contribute the materials of the following pages, which it is hoped may render some assistance in exhibiting one very important part of the evidences of revealed religion. The prophecy and the fulfilment will be placed together for the convenience of compa

rison.

PROPHECY.-Dan. vii. 8—26.

(THE VISION.)

8. The he-goat waxed very great: and when he was strong, the great horn was broken; and for it came up four nota9. ble ones toward the four winds of heaven. And out of one of them came forth a little horn, which waxed exceeding great toward the south and toward the east, and toward the pleasant land. And it waxed great even to the host of heaven; and it cast down some of the host and of the stars to the ground, and stamped upon them. Yea, he magnified himself even to the Prince of the host, and by him was the daily sacrifice taken away, and the place

10.

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