Righteous Old Testament

Righteous Forefather Abraham

By tradition lived 175 years (Old Testament era)

Also known as Abraham the Patriarch

The biblical patriarch called by God to leave his homeland and become the father of many nations, remembered for faith and obedience.

Feast Day
October 9
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Commemorated as

The Holy and Righteous Forefather Abraham, the Patriarch

Life

Abraham, originally named Abram, was the biblical patriarch born in Ur of the Chaldees in Mesopotamia. He is venerated in the Eastern Orthodox Church as the Righteous Forefather Abraham, remembered above all for his faith and obedience to the call of God to leave his homeland and become, in the scriptural promise, the father of many nations.

His father Terah took him, together with his wife Sarai (later Sarah) and his nephew Lot, from Ur to settle in Haran, where Terah died. At the call of God, Abram departed Haran at the age of 75 with Sarai and Lot to journey to a land that God would show him, on the promise that God would make of him a great nation and that all the nations of the earth would be blessed in his seed.

Through the events of his life — the covenant of circumcision, the renaming of Abram to Abraham ('father of a multitude') and Sarai to Sarah, the long-awaited birth of Isaac, and the testing on Mount Moriah — Abraham became the scriptural exemplar of trust in God. The Church commemorates him on October 9, together with his nephew the Righteous Lot, and again on the Sunday of the Forefathers before the Nativity among the ancestors of Christ.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. At God's call (age 75) Departure from Haran After his father Terah's death in Haran, Abram departs at the age of 75 with his wife Sarai and nephew Lot for the land God would show him, on the promise of becoming a great nation.
  2. Age 86 Birth of Ishmael Sarai, being childless, gives her Egyptian handmaid Hagar to Abraham, and Hagar bears Ishmael.
  3. Age 99 Renaming and the covenant of circumcision God renames Abram as Abraham ('father of a multitude') and Sarai as Sarah, establishes the covenant of circumcision, and promises that Sarah will bear a son.
  4. Age 100 Birth of Isaac Isaac is born to Sarah in her old age; Abraham circumcises him on the eighth day.
  5. In the land of Moriah The testing of Abraham God commands Abraham to sacrifice Isaac; as he prepares to obey, an angel intervenes and a ram is provided in Isaac's place.
  6. Age 175 Death and burial Abraham dies and is buried by his sons Isaac and Ishmael in the cave of Machpelah, beside Sarah.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

From Ur to the Land of Canaan

Abraham originated in Ur of the Chaldees. His father, Terah (also rendered Thare), brought him along with his wife Sarai and his nephew Lot from Ur to Haran, where the family settled until Terah's death at the age of 205.

At God's call, Abram set out with Sarai, Lot, and his possessions into the land of Canaan. He journeyed through the land, building altars at Sichem (Shechem) and Bethel. During a famine he traveled into Egypt, where, fearing for his life, he claimed that Sarai was his sister; Pharaoh took her into his household but, on discovering the truth, returned her unharmed.

Abraham and Lot eventually separated because of conflict between their herdsmen: Abram settled near Hebron in the plain of Mamre, while Lot moved toward Sodom. When Elamite forces captured Lot, Abraham gathered his men and rescued him.

The Covenant, the Children, and the Testing

God established a covenant with Abraham, promising that his seed would be as the stars of heaven and that he would possess the land of Canaan. When Sarai remained childless, she gave her Egyptian handmaid Hagar to Abraham, and Hagar bore Ishmael when Abraham was 86.

At the age of 99, God renamed Abram as Abraham, meaning 'father of a multitude,' established the covenant of circumcision, renamed Sarai as Sarah, and promised that she herself would bear a son despite her advanced age. Abraham received a visit from three divine messengers near the oak of Mamre who foretold the birth of Isaac. Isaac was born to Sarah when Abraham was 100, and Abraham circumcised him on the eighth day. Sarah, jealous of Ishmael, had Hagar and her son sent away into the wilderness.

God tested Abraham's faith by commanding him to offer Isaac as a sacrifice in the land of Moriah. As Abraham raised his hand to carry out the command, an angel from heaven stayed him, and a ram was found caught in a thicket and offered in Isaac's place; the angel renewed the promises of Abraham's posterity. This event is read in the Orthodox Church as a foreshadowing of redemption and stands as the supreme image of Abraham's obedience.

Death and Burial

Sarah died at the age of 127 and was buried in the cave of Machpelah near Mamre. Abraham later married Keturah, by whom he had further children.

Abraham died at the age of 175 and was buried by his sons Isaac and Ishmael in the same cave of Machpelah. (Some sources record his age at death as 170; the burial at Machpelah is consistent across the accounts.)

Commemoration and Liturgical Memory

The Eastern Orthodox Church commemorates the Righteous Forefather Abraham on October 9 (October 22 on the Julian Calendar), together with his nephew the Righteous Lot, who is regarded as the progenitor of the Moabites and the Ammonites and was himself counted a righteous man living in Sodom.

Abraham is also remembered on the Sunday of the Forefathers, two Sundays before the Nativity, among the ancestors of Jesus Christ. He is invoked in Orthodox prayers for newly married couples and is named in the Divine Liturgy of Saint Basil the Great.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints