Abrahamic Traditions

Abrahamic Traditions examines the scriptural, theological, legal, and historical worlds associated with Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, with attention to revelation, covenant, prophecy, salvation, law, and community. In the history of ideas, these traditions have contributed profoundly to conceptions of divine authority, moral obligation, sacred history, universal truth, and the relationship between God, humanity, and political order.

This category explores foundational texts such as the Hebrew Bible / Tanakh, the New Testament, and the Qur’an, along with the interpretive traditions, legal systems, doctrinal developments, and communal practices that grew around them. It considers how Abrahamic religions have understood creation, justice, sin, redemption, prophecy, worship, and the formation of collective identity through scripture, commentary, ritual, and institutional life.

Abrahamic traditions play an important role in comparative inquiry because they have shaped vast religious civilizations and influenced law, empire, philosophy, ethics, and global history in enduring ways. By engaging these traditions seriously, this category deepens understanding of monotheism, sacred authority, historical memory, and the moral and political imaginations that continue to influence the modern world.

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Jewish Followers of Jesus Before Nicene Orthodoxy

Incarnation, redemption, and resurrection form the doctrinal center of Christian sacred history. The doctrine of incarnation claims that the eternal Word becomes flesh without ceasing to be divine. Redemption interprets Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection as the work through which sin, death, alienation, bondage, violence, and estrangement are answered by God. Resurrection proclaims that the crucified Jesus has been raised and that new creation has begun. This article examines these doctrines through New Testament witness, Nicene and Chalcedonian Christology, patristic theology, atonement traditions, baptism, Eucharist, resurrection hope, and the distinctiveness of Christian doctrine within Abrahamic study.

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Jesus, Gospel, and the Apostolic World

Jesus, Gospel, and the apostolic world stand at the center of Christian sacred history. Jesus of Nazareth emerged within the Jewish world of Second Temple scripture, synagogue, Temple, Torah, Roman occupation, apocalyptic expectation, and prophetic hope. The Gospel is not merely a literary genre; it is proclamation: the announcement that God’s reign has drawn near and that Jesus’ life, teaching, death, and resurrection disclose the decisive meaning of salvation. The apostolic world carried this proclamation from Galilee and Jerusalem into the wider Mediterranean through preaching, baptism, letters, worship, conflict, persecution, and mission. This article examines Jesus, early Christological diversity, Gospel witness, apostolic communities, Paul, Acts, and the formation of Christian sacred memory.

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The Christian Bible: Old Testament, New Testament, Canon, and Sacred History

The Christian Bible is not a single undifferentiated book but a canon of sacred writings through which Christianity remembers creation, covenant, prophecy, gospel, apostolic witness, church formation, judgment, redemption, and hope. It includes the Old Testament, received from Jewish scripture and interpreted within Christian tradition, and the New Testament, centered on Jesus Christ, the Gospels, apostolic proclamation, letters, and apocalyptic hope. To understand the Christian Bible responsibly, one must preserve two truths at once: the Old Testament is Christian scripture, and the Tanakh is Jewish scripture in its own right.

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Bikkur Cholim, Pikuach Nefesh, and Jewish Ethics of Care

Jewish ethics of care begins from the conviction that suffering is not to be witnessed passively. Illness, pain, dying, grief, loneliness, disability, vulnerability, and communal need summon practical response: visiting the sick, preserving life, relieving suffering, praying for healing, honoring dignity, supporting families, accompanying mourners, giving charity, practicing loving-kindness, and repairing what can be repaired in the world. Bikkur cholim turns presence into sacred obligation. Pikuach nefesh gives life-saving care extraordinary halakhic priority. Mi Shebeirach gathers the sick into communal prayer, while chesed, tzedakah, kavod ha-chayim, and kavod ha-met extend care across the living, dying, and dead.

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Halakhah, Prayer, and Jewish Continuity

Halakhah and prayer are among the central structures through which Jewish continuity has endured across time, geography, catastrophe, and renewal. Halakhah is often translated as “Jewish law,” but its meaning is broader: a disciplined way of walking, ordering daily life through commandment, interpretation, custom, ethics, memory, and communal practice. Prayer likewise is not merely private devotion. It is structured remembrance, liturgical discipline, sacred speech, and communal formation. Together, halakhah and prayer carry Torah into the rhythms of ordinary life: Sabbath and festival, food and blessing, study and household, mourning and celebration, synagogue and diaspora, legal reasoning and spiritual endurance.

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Mishnah, Talmud, and Rabbinic Civilization

Mishnah, Talmud, and rabbinic civilization mark one of the decisive transformations in Jewish sacred history: the movement from biblical canon and Temple-centered life into a vast culture of interpretation, legal reasoning, study, prayer, memory, and communal continuity. The Mishnah gathers earlier oral traditions into a structured rabbinic order of law and practice. The Talmuds expand that order through debate, commentary, story, argument, ethics, and scriptural interpretation. Together, they form not merely books but a civilization of learning, in which Torah becomes a lived discipline across generations, geographies, institutions, households, courts, schools, and communities.

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Prophecy, Exile, and Sacred Memory

Prophecy in the Tanakh is not simply prediction. It is sacred interpretation: the word of God addressed to history, power, worship, injustice, exile, grief, and hope. The Prophets preserve a literature in which political events are judged through covenantal responsibility and communal memory is formed through warning, lament, symbolic action, and promise. Exile becomes more than displacement; it becomes a theological crisis in which land, temple, monarchy, identity, and divine presence must be reinterpreted. This article examines prophecy, exile, and sacred memory through the authority of the Nevi’im and related prophetic literature, attending to the Former Prophets, Latter Prophets, textual transmission, historical setting, literary form, rabbinic interpretation, and later reception.

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Torah, Covenant, and Commandment

Torah is often translated as “law,” but its scriptural meaning is broader: instruction, teaching, covenantal guidance, and the ordering of life before God. In Jewish tradition, the Torah is not merely a legal code or ancient narrative cycle. It is the foundational sacred teaching through which creation, promise, liberation, holiness, justice, worship, memory, and commandment are brought into a single scriptural world. This article examines Torah through its own authority: Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and Deuteronomy as narrative, law, covenant, ritual, ethics, and communal formation. It explores covenant as sacred relationship and obligation, and commandment as disciplined participation in moral responsibility, sacred order, and remembered relationship with God.

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Tanakh: Torah, Prophets, Writings, and Jewish Sacred Memory

The Tanakh is the foundational scripture of Judaism and one of the central sacred canons of the Abrahamic world. Composed of Torah, Nevi’im, and Ketuvim, it gathers law, prophecy, wisdom, prayer, covenant, exile, return, judgment, mercy, and sacred memory into a single scriptural architecture. This article examines the Tanakh through its own Jewish authority first: as canon, liturgy, textual tradition, theological witness, and interpretive inheritance. It then considers its wider reception in Christian and Islamic traditions without reducing it to later readings. Through attention to Torah, Prophets, Writings, the Masoretic Text, Dead Sea Scrolls, Septuagint, rabbinic interpretation, and modern scholarship, the Tanakh emerges as a living sacred library of extraordinary historical, literary, and theological depth.

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