much strengthened thereby; and we may believe that Muhammad's iconoclasm owed something to the
same influence. But the impress which Talmudic 1 Judaism as it then existed in Arabia has
left on the religious system of Islam is deeper still. The Jews at that time dwelling in the country
seem to have attached much more practical importance, as they did in our Lord's day, to their own
traditions than to the teachings of Holy Scripture. Their religion was to a great extent a religion
of outward observances, of fasting and pilgrimage, of ceremonial rites. Muhammad was very naturally
led to deem these things of very great importance. The Pharisaism of the Jews thus became the parent
of that which is now manifested in Islam. Hence too sprang the idea, so deeply rooted among Muslims,
that obedience to the letter of what they hold to be GOD's law will atone for sin, and that Heaven
must be won by good works, such as fighting in order to spread Islam with the sword, performing the
pilgrimage to Mecca, and reciting the Qur'an.