In
England and Wales, and Northern Ireland the
Oaths Act 1978 applies to jurors' oaths (Part II of the act also applies to Scotland). The person may opt either to swear an oath on the
New Testament—or, for Jews, the
Old Testament—or to affirm. Oaths can be "administered in any lawful manner" to persons who are neither Christian nor Jews. For example, other faiths may be sworn in on a holy book of their choice, such as the Verdas for Hindus and the Koran for Muslims. The
affirmation was first made available to
Quakers and
Moravians, who had conscientious objections to oaths, extended by the
Quakers and Moravians Act 1838, and later further extended to anybody who chooses to do so. The oath starts "I swear by almighty God/by Allah/by Waheguru/on the Gita"; for an affirmation the wording is "I solemnly, sincerely and truly declare and affirm". This is followed in both cases by "that I will faithfully try the defendant and give a true verdict according to the evidence." ==United States==