Compare this with other passages (as Arts. VII, 
    XIII., XV., &c.) which appeal to the Jews and Christians as witnesses to 
    the correspondence of the Corân with their own Scriptures.
 
LVII.SURA XIII., v. 45[43].
    
        
        سورة الرعد
        وَيَقُولُ 
        الَّذِينَ 
        كَفَرُواْ 
        لَسْتَ 
        مُرْسَلاً 
        قُلْ كَفَى 
        بِاللّهِ 
        شَهِيدًا 
        بَيْنِي 
        وَبَيْنَكُمْ 
        وَمَنْ 
        عِندَهُ 
        عِلْمُ 
        الْكِتَابِ
            
And those who disbelieve say,Thou art not sent;say,God sufficeth for a 
witness between me and between you, and also he with whom is the knowledge of 
the book.
 
    
    
    "And also he with whom is the knowledge of the Book; that is 
    from amongst the believers of the Jews and Christians," 
     
    Jelalooddeen.
    The purport is similar to that of the preceding passage. Mahomet's 
    witnesses at Mecca were, as here alleged, God himself, and certain of the 
    Jews and Christians, to whose knowledge of their own inspired Scriptures he 
    appeals for evidence in favour of the Corân.