God didn't promise Abraham anything. God just told him to sacrifice his son Isaac and Abraham, being obedient to God, was going to do what God told him to do. That is until God stopped him. God was seeing if Abraham would still be willing to obey God even if it meant killing his only son.
In the book of Genesis in the Bible, God promised Abraham and Sarah a son, even in their old age. Abraham was 100 and Sarah was 90 when Isaac was born. The "Child of the Promise" refers to God's promise to Abraham and Sarah.
Ishmael was not the promised son from God. Ishmael came about because Sarah gave Abraham Hagar to produce a son thinking that they would help God out with His promise of a son. A big mistake. Abraham was 86 years old when Ishmael was born.
Before Isaac's birth, the divine figure involved was God, who made a covenant with Abraham, Isaac's father. God promised Abraham that he would have a son, despite his old age and the barrenness of his wife, Sarah. This divine promise was significant as it established the lineage through which the Israelites would descend. Ultimately, Isaac was born as a fulfillment of God's promise to Abraham and Sarah.
The God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
Isaac (Genesis ch.22). God tested Abraham's obedience by seeming to request that he sacrifice Isaac. See also:More about Abraham and Isaac
No. Isaac married, had children, outlived his father Abraham, lived to an old age, died at home of natural causes, and was buried in the family cemetery by his sons, next to his wife. If you own a bible or can borrow one, you can read all the details there. God tested Abraham's faith by asking him to sacrifice Isaac (who was the promised child from God at his old age). When Abraham was ready to perform the sacrifice God intervened and provided a ram to be a substitute for Isaac.
Abraham was the founding father of the Covenant between the Jewish people and God. Judaism is the forerunner to Christianity. Abraham (a descent from Noah) is in the lineage (through Isaac) to Jesus. Also, when Abraham obeyed God by offering his son, Isaac, as a sacrifice (also mentioned in Hebrews 11:17–19), it is seen as a prophetic foreshadow of the promise of the Lamb of God (Jesus) sacrificed for us.
A:Leon R. Kass (The Beginning of Wisdom: Reading Genesis) says that in a strange way the passage about Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son speaks more about God's faith in Abraham than Abraham's faith in God. Kass also cites an insightful comment from a student he taught at his university. If you say that Abraham, when he goes up Mount Moriah, neither hopes nor believes in the slightest that Isaac will somehow be saved or restored at the end of it all - if you say that Abraham has resigned himself wholly to the loss of his son Isaac - then you must also say . . . that Abraham is here offering Isaac to a God whom Abraham believes to be a liar. For did not God promise that "it is through Isaac that offspring shall be called for you (Genesis 21:12)?
God tested Abraham's obedience by asking him to sacrifice his only son Isaac, we must remember that Abraham , got Isaac when he was 100 years old.
He took his son to the mountain because God told him to. It was a test to see if Abraham would obey God. Once there, God told Abraham to kill Isaac. As Abraham was about to kill Isaac, God said "Stop, you have proven yourself to me"!
Isaac, the son of Abraham and Sarah, is a key figure in the Abrahamic religions. He is known for being the child of promise, born when Abraham was 100 years old, following God's covenant with Abraham. Isaac's life is marked by significant events, including his near-sacrifice by Abraham, which is seen as a test of faith. He married Rebekah and became the father of Esau and Jacob, continuing the lineage of the Israelites.
God.