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|  |  | till a considerable time after Jesus had ascended into heaven." Now it is not   
difficult to answer this argument. If there is any force in the latter part of it, it   
would affect the Qur'an as well as the Injil; for the Qur'an was not "collected"   
and put together until after Muhammad's death, as we learn from the Mishkatu'l Masabih1   
and from other Muslim authorities. But it should be explained that in reality there exists   
only one Gospel, for the word Injil, though it is now used as the name of a book, and its   
meaning is not often remembered by Muslims, really means "the Good News". "Injil" is only the Arabic form of the Greek  
ευαγγελιον, which denotes this  
(الِبشارة).   
This Good News, this Divine Message of God's love and the way of salvation through Christ,   
is one, though told in different ways, so that it may appeal to a larger number of   
people, and may be supported by the testimony not of one man only, but of four. Again we   
say there is only one Gospel. In the original Greek the title of the books shows this, for   
they are called "The Gospel according to St. Matthew", "the Gospel according to St. Mark", &c. Only for brevity   
is the shorter title "St. Matthew's Gospel", &c., employed. Each of the four   
Evangelists told the Good News in his own way, under the guidance of God's Holy Spirit;   
but the message was one and the same. The Book of the Acts of the Apostles shows   
that this Gospel was preached by the Christians immediately after the Ascension in land   
after land. But it was first of all preached by Christ Himself (Mark I. 15; xiii. 10; Luke xx. I), and therefore must have already "been sent down unto   
Jesus", for He Himself claimed that His message was from God, saying, "The   
things therefore which I speak, even as the Father hath said unto Me, so I speak"   
(John xii. 50; compare John viii. 28; xii. 49). With regard to the books which together form the 
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New Testament, it is well known to all scholars that they were not received into the Canon 
except gradually and after the most careful inquiry, lest by chance some book which was of 
no authority and devoid of inspiration should be incorporated into this collection. This 
examination occupied some considerable time, because some of the Epistles were private 
letters to individuals (I and 2 Tim., Titus, Philemon, 2 and 3 John), and the rest of them 
were in the first place addressed to individual Churches. But, from the writings of early 
Christians which have been preserved, we know that the four Gospels were known and 
recognized as authoritative between 70 and 130 A. D. A fragment of a work dating from 
about 170 A.D. contains part of a list of the New Testament books. It is called the 
Muratorian Canon, and, though torn, it mentions or implies the existence of every New 
Testament book, except the Epistle of James, the second Epistle of Peter, and the Epistle 
to the Hebrews. But the list when complete almost certainly included these also, for 
elsewhere they were all received in the second century, with the doubtful exception of 2 
Peter, which is not often mentioned in early lists. Considering that books were then very 
costly, that most of the Christians were poor (I Cor. i. 26, 27), that the whole of the 
New Testament books, if written in the large Greek letters then in use, and on rolls of 
parchment, would form not a volume, but a small library, we are surprised to find them 
all, or almost all, so early known in different lands. In the Laodicean Council of 363 
A.D., in which (as we have seen above) the twenty-two Books of the Hebrew Old Testament 
are mentioned, the Canon of the New Testament includes all our present New Testament, 
except the Revelation of St. John. Hence we see that at that time there was still some 
doubt about the latter; some Churches received it, and some had not yet decided to do so, 
though they afterwards admitted it. The Council of Carthage in 397 A.D. gives a list of 
all our present New Testament books, adding the |  |