This was before Abraham had his name changed:
Gen 12:1 The LORD said to Abram, "Leave your country, your relatives, and your father's home, and go to a land that I am going to show you.
In The Bible, God is said to have appeared to Abraham in Genesis 12, when He called Abraham to leave his homeland and go to the land that God would show him. This encounter marked the beginning of God's covenant with Abraham.
To find an answer to that you need to refer to the Bible.
God appears to Abraham in Genesis chapter 17 verses 1-4, 9-10, 15-16, 22; and Genesis chapter 18 verses 1-3, 10!
Maranatha
If what is meant is the date Abram left Haran in Genesis 12:4 to go to the Promised Land, this was about 1921BC.(Ussher)
God called Abraham righteous because of his faith and obedience. Abraham trusted in God's promises, demonstrated by his willingness to leave his homeland and obey God's commands, such as when he was prepared to sacrifice his son Isaac. This faith and obedience showed Abraham's righteousness before God.
In the story from the Bible and the Quran, God tested Abraham's faith by asking him to sacrifice his son, Isaac/Ishmael. Abraham demonstrated his faith and obedience by preparing to sacrifice his son, but at the last moment, God provided a ram as a substitute. This act is seen as a demonstration of Abraham's ultimate trust in God.
The symbol of God's covenant with Abraham is circumcision, which was the physical sign of the covenant between God and Abraham's descendants. This practice was to be continued throughout generations as a reminder of God's promises to Abraham and his descendants.
Judaism. It is referred to as the Covenant with Abraham.
Judaism teaches that God promised to bless Abraham's descendants if they worshiped the one true God. This promise is found in the Hebrew Bible, particularly in the book of Genesis.
Genesis
The Book of Genesis says that Abraham worshipped God, but nowhere does it say that he worshipped only one god. Monotheism only arrived in Judah in the eighth century BCE, long after the time of Abraham. However, a well known Jewish midrash has it that Abraham, while still a young boy, realised that his father's carved idols had no power, and perceived that there is but one God. According to the midrash, he broke the idols to prove his point. Bruce Feiler (Abraham) says that probably less than one per cent of the stories told about Abraham appear in the Bible, with an explosion of detail beginning to appear in Jewish tradition from the third century BCE onwards.
It is called the "Covenant"-- the promise Abraham made with God, and God made with Abraham.
God chose Abraham because of God saw Abraham was worthy of a blessing and he had a clean heart.
AnswerAccording to the biblical account, Noah and all Abraham's subsequent direct ancestors were still alive even when Abraham reached adulthood. In spite of the Flood and God's covenant having occurred within living memory, the Bible can find no one at the time of Abraham's birth who knew anything about God. A well known Jewish midrash has it that Abraham, while still a young boy, realised that his father's idols had no power, and perceived that there is but one God. If we give this legend any credence, we should be surprised that it was left to a young boy to reveal the truth about God, in the face of such overwhelming evidence as the Flood and the reliable, still living witnesses to that event.Bruce Feiler (Abraham) says that probably less than one per cent of the stories told about Abraham appear in the Bible, with an explosion of detail beginning to appear in Jewish tradition from the third century BCE onwards. In contrast to the midrash, the Bible itself never credits Abraham with monotheistic beliefs. Abraham did not come up with the idea of a single God.
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.
Abraham promised to god that he would only worship one god. P.S. you misspelled Abraham : )
he wasn't... he wasnt the king of anything... he was a a Patriarch.Answer:Tradition teaches that God chose Abraham after Abraham chose God. Abraham was the first person to reject idolatry and its concomitant immorality. He taught people that God is One.
It says, God spoke to Abraham and commanded him to take his son to Mount Moriah and offer him as a sacrifice to God. This was God's test of Abraham's faith. Abraham loved his son very much, but did not hesitate to follow God's words for he was a man whose faith in God was strong. As Abraham and his son reached the place where the sacrifice was to be performed, Isaac said to his father, "Father, where is the lamb that is to be sacrificed?" Abraham replied, "My son, God will provide the lamb". Because, Abraham was honest to his God, his son was also honest to his father Abraham.
He didn't - He spoke for God and to God, but not against Him. He believed in God and God counted it unto him for righteousness. The book of Genesis tells Abraham's story and the Book of Romans speaks lots of Abraham's faith in God's promise and covenant.
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"!
AnswerBased on the evidence of the Bible, Abraham should have believed in one God, because by linking the the biblical stories we can see that Noah and all Abraham's subsequent direct ancestors would have been still alive until Abraham was in his sixties. Noah should have been able to tell Abraham and everyone else in the entire world, all descended from him, about his knowledge of God and his experience with the Flood. However, Noah disappears from the biblical narrative as soon as the story of the Flood is completed. A well known Jewish midrash has it that Abraham, while still a young boy, realised that his father's idols had no power, and perceived that there is but one God. Bruce Feiler (Abraham) says that probably less than one per cent of the stories told about Abraham appear in the Bible, with an explosion of detail beginning to appear in Jewish tradition from the third century BCE onwards. In contrast to the midrash, the Bible itself never credits Abraham with monotheistic beliefs. If we rely on the Bible, there is no reason to believe that Abraham believed in only one God.