for GOD commanded him to do so." The fact that it is a moral impossibility for GOD to
sanction, much less to command, the commission of distinct breaches of the eternal Moral Law, is
quite beyond their comprehension, and the enunciation of such a theory strikes them as blasphemous,
because it contradicts, in their opinion, the doctrine of the Omnipotence of the Deity! "Two
things," says Immanuel1 Kant, "fill the mind with ever new and increasing
wonder and awe, the more frequently and perseveringly reflection. busies itself therewith,the
star-strewn Heaven above me, and the Moral Law within me." But so far are the Muslims from
feeling the importance of the testimony which the human spirit bears to the character and being of
its Creator, that neither in the Arabic itself nor in any other Muhammadan language is there a word
which properly expresses what we mean by conscience.2