Abraham — Overview

Abraham in the Quran: A Central Figure

“Abraham was neither Jewish, nor Christian; he was a monotheist submitter. He never was an idol worshiper.” (3:67)

Abraham (Ibrāhīm) is presented in the Qur’an as the model of pure submission to God alone. He is not claimed by any sect or label. Instead, God commands the believers to follow the religion of Abraham: a way of life based on worshiping God alone, rejecting all idols, and upholding the religious duties God prescribed.

This page introduces:

  • Who Abraham is in the Qur’an

  • Why his example is central

  • What “religion of Abraham” means

  • How later communities deviated from his path

Who Is Abraham in the Qur’an?

A Monotheist Submitter

The Qur’an clearly defines Abraham:

  • He was a monotheist submitter

  • He was never an idol worshiper (3:67)

  • He devoted himself completely to God alone

Abraham’s identity is not tied to any human-made religious label. His only “label” is submission to God.

A Friend of God

Abraham reached a unique status with his Lord:

“…God took Abraham as a friend.” (4:125)

This honor reflects:

  • His trust in God

  • His absolute loyalty

  • His willingness to sacrifice anything for God

The Qur’an invites us to reflect: Abraham was not “religious” in a cultural sense; he was loyal to God’s truth, even when it cost him everything.

A Reasoning Servant, Not a Blind Follower

Abraham used his mind to question inherited beliefs:

He challenged his father and people about idol worship (6:74–79)

He reasoned about the sun, moon, and stars, rejecting them as lords (6:76–79)

He destroyed idols to expose their powerlessness (21:57–67)

Abraham’s path combines:

Reasoning

Revelation

Courage against tradition

Abraham’s Journey of Submission

Breaking with Inherited Religion

Abraham’s first major step was to disconnect from falsehood at home:

  • He questioned his father’s devotion to idols (19:41–48)

  • He openly rejected the religion of his people (6:74–80)

  • He chose God’s guidance over family pressure

This shows that true submission sometimes requires:

  • Leaving inherited religious structures

  • Facing criticism and hostility

Tested Through Hardships

Abraham’s life is marked by difficult tests:

Through these events, Abraham demonstrated:

  • Trust in God’s wisdom

  • Patience during trials

  • Willingness to prefer God over everything else

A Leader After Being Tested

Only after passing the tests did Abraham receive leadership:

“I am appointing you an imam (leader) for the people.” (2:124)

This shows:

  • Leadership is earned, not inherited

  • Spiritual authority is tied to righteous conduct, not lineage or title

When Abraham asks that his descendants share this honor, God replies:

“My covenant does not include the wrongdoers.” (2:124)

So even within Abraham’s line, wrongdoers are excluded from God’s covenant.

The Religion of Abraham (Millat Ibrāhīm)

A Clear Qur’anic Command

The Qur’an directly instructs:

“Then we inspired you to follow the religion of Abraham, monotheism…” (16:123)
“…the religion of your father Abraham.” (22:78)

Key elements:

  • Monotheism (worshiping God alone)

  • No idol worship

  • No human intermediaries between the individual and God

  • Direct accountability to God

Religious Duties Associated with Abraham

The Qur’an connects Abraham with concrete religious duties, not just “inner spirituality”:

  • Contact Prayers (Salat):
    Abraham prayed to be among those who observe the prayers, and for his descendants to do the same (14:40).

  • Obligatory Charity (Zakat):
    God describes Abrahamic leaders as those who were inspired to observe the prayers and give the obligatory charity (21:72–73).

  • Pilgrimage (Hajj):
    God commanded Abraham to build the First House (the Ka‘bah) and proclaim the pilgrimage to all people (22:26–27).

  • Sacrifice:
    The Qur’an links sacrifice to righteousness, not ritual blood (22:36–37), in the context of Abrahamic practice.

Fasting is also mentioned as a duty decreed for those before us (2:183), indicating that core religious duties existed before Muhammad and are rooted in the same Abrahamic system.

Abraham and the Ka‘bah

Abraham and Ishmael were commanded:

  • To purify the House for those who will circle it, stay in it, bow, and prostrate (2:125)

  • To raise the foundations of the House and pray for God to accept their work (2:127)

This means:

  • The Ka‘bah is tied to Abraham’s monotheism, not to later sectarian rituals

  • The House is for worship of God alone, with all forms of idol worship excluded

Abraham and Later Distortions

Not Jewish or Christian

The Qur’an corrects claims over Abraham:

“Abraham was neither Jewish, nor Christian; he was a monotheist submitter. He never was an idol worshiper.” (3:67)

This verse:

  • Rejects exclusive claims over Abraham by later communities

  • Establishes Abraham as a model before sectarian systems

  • Reminds us that titles and labels do not define truth

Traditional Distortions

After Abraham, many groups:

  • Added religious laws not authorized by God

  • Elevated scholars, rabbis, and priests as authorities over God’s scripture (9:31)

  • Turned religion into identity, tribe, and culture

These deviations conflict with Abraham’s simple, pure submission.

Modern Re-Definitions (Qur’an Re-Engineering)

In modern times, some claim to follow the Qur’an alone but:

  • Redefine Salat as merely “connection”

  • Redefine Hajj as “conference” or “journey of the soul”

  • Empty the religious duties of their outward form

Such approaches often:

  • Reject what the Qur’an itself affirms about Abraham’s duties

  • Replace clear Arabic terms with invented meanings

  • Create a new “system” not actually rooted in the Qur’an

Both traditional fabrications and modern re-engineering move away from millat Ibrāhīm, the straightforward religion of Abraham described by God.

Why the Qur’an Commands Us to Follow Abraham

A Universal Example

Abraham is:

  • Not restricted to any ethnicity

  • Not bound to any post-Qur’anic school

  • A universal model for anyone who seeks God alone

Bridge Between Past and Final Scripture

Abraham’s example:

  • Connects earlier communities and the final message

  • Shows that the Qur’an is not a new religion, but a confirmation and completion of the same monotheistic path

By following Abraham’s religion today, we:

  • Worship God alone

  • Reject all partners

  • Uphold the duties God prescribed

  • Avoid the extremes of blind tradition and arrogant reinventing

Key Takeaways from Abraham’s Example

  • Abraham used his mind and refused inherited falsehood.

  • He accepted tests and sacrifices for God’s sake.

  • He was given leadership only after proving his faithfulness.

  • His religion combines inner devotion with outward duties.

  • God directly commands us to follow his religion, not man-made sects.