Abraham: Difference between revisions
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Abraham’s wife, [[Sarah]], was unable to bear children, so he took a second wife; Hagar, an Arab maidservant. [[Hagar]] bore Abraham a son, [[Ishmael]]. Thirteen years thence, Sarah bore Abraham another son, [[Isaac]]. After Abraham’s death, Sarah banished Hagar and Ishmael, and it is at this point that the [[Semitic]] race was split into [[Arab]] and [[Jew]]. | Abraham’s wife, [[Sarah]], was unable to bear children, so he took a second wife; Hagar, an Arab maidservant. [[Hagar]] bore Abraham a son, [[Ishmael]]. Thirteen years thence, Sarah bore Abraham another son, [[Isaac]]. After Abraham’s death, Sarah banished Hagar and Ishmael, and it is at this point that the [[Semitic]] race was split into [[Arab]] and [[Jew]]. | ||
Revision as of 06:57, 6 April 2014
Abraham is a figure in the Old Testament considered to be the patriarch of the world's three great Western religious traditions: Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, called the Abrahamic religions. The Judaeo-Christian religions exclude Islam. According to the Book of Genesis, God sent Abraham on a mission to heal the divisions between men. His message was that, regardless of differences in language or culture, all men where to be considered as belonging to one human family, dwelling before one God, who sustains all of Creation.
Abraham’s wife, Sarah, was unable to bear children, so he took a second wife; Hagar, an Arab maidservant. Hagar bore Abraham a son, Ishmael. Thirteen years thence, Sarah bore Abraham another son, Isaac. After Abraham’s death, Sarah banished Hagar and Ishmael, and it is at this point that the Semitic race was split into Arab and Jew.