In a nutshell, Abraham through his own reasoning concluded that the universal idolatry of his era was false and that there must be One God. He eventually arrived at all of the central tenets of Judaism.
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Abraham was descended from the prophet Noah so he may have been exposed to some of the teachings of his ancestors. According to the record in the Pentateuch, he first left Ur and moved to Harran. While there he received a revelation from God to leave Ur and go to the land of Canaan. Whether he received any other communications from God prior to that is not commented in in the Pentateuch. The religion that he passed down to his grandchildren (the Children of Israel) developed through multiple further revelations. That same religion ostensibly is the one Moses revived when he delivered the Children of Israel out of captivity in Egypt and the one the Jews claim to still be following. Strictly speaking he didn't start the Jewish religion - either the one he followed was passed down from Noah and his ancestors or might be considered to have started with Moses and passed down through the decedents of Judah (who were one of the tribes of Israel).
Fifteen.See also the Related Link.More about Abraham, Isaac and JacobHow old was Abraham's son Isaac when Abraham died
According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics, the religious affiliation of the Israeli population as of 2011 was: 75.4% Jewish, 16.9% Muslim, 2.1% Christian, and 1.7% Druze, with the remaining 4.0% not classified by religion. Accordingly, the least popular religion in Israel is Druze. However, there are other religions that have just a handful of adherents in Israel.
Abraham was the grandfather. Isaac was the son. He was seventy-five when his father died.Jacob was the grandson. He was 15 when his grandfather died.See also the Related Link.More about Abraham, Isaac and Jacob
The Old Testament authors were Jewish and the New Testament authors Christian, although some of the New Testament authors (Paul, for example) came from a Jewis background.
I think it had to do with one of Abrahams sons... He sinned so his seed would create a nation that would go against God... THus the Muslims are here..Answer:"Muslim" [or "Moslem"] isn't in the Bible. A Muslim is merely an adherent of the relatively recent [5th century] religion of "Islam."The religion of Islam, however [also not in the Bible], was the result of the literary workings of a descendant of the firstborn son of Abraham, "Ishmael"... who was born to Abraham through his wife, [Sarai] Sarah's, Egyptian handmaid, Hagar [Gen.16:1].Ishmael became the father of the Arab people."...he will be a wild man; his hand will be against every man, and every man's hand against him; and he shall dwell in the presence of all his brethren." (Gen.16;12)Many people besides Arabs have willingly adopted the religion of Islam over the succeeding centuries or had it forced upon them... but all who adhere to the religion are called "Muslims" or "Moslems."So, although, Muslim isn't in the Bible... the original people to profess and promote the religion of Islam... the original "Muslims"... were Ishmael's children -- children of Abraham [who is in the Bible].
Abraham
Abraham
The ancestor of the Jews and the founder of monotheism and the Jewish religion.
Abraham. He was born 3824 years ago.
Abraham Kuenen has written: 'The religion of Israel to the fall of the Jewish state'
The father of the Jewish people and the founder of Judaism.See: more about Abraham
Israel.
Abraham
Tradition holds that Abraham founded the Jewish religion in the land of Israel, around 2000 BCE.
Tradition holds that Abraham founded the Jewish religion some 3800 years ago.
Tradition holds that Abraham (אברהם) founded the Jewish religion in Israel, about 4000 years ago.
Abraham Sagi has written: 'Religion and morality' -- subject(s): Ethics, Religion and ethics, Religious ethics 'Kirkegor: Dat ve-eksistentsyah' 'Yahadut' -- subject(s): Jewish ethics, Religion and ethics 'The open canon' -- subject(s): History and criticism, Jewish law, Philosophy, Rabbinical literature 'Transforming identity' -- subject(s): Jewish converts, Conversion, Rabbinical literature, Judaism, Jewish law, History and criticism 'Kierkegaard, religion, and existence' -- subject(s): Existentialism, Religion