Purity, Prayer, and Sacred Discipline in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam
Purity, prayer, and sacred discipline are central to Jewish, Christian, and Islamic moral life. They show that Abrahamic law is not merely a system of rules, but a training of the body, heart, household, community, and imagination before God. In Judaism, purity is bound to holiness, temple memory, embodied distinction, food, family life, prayer, Sabbath, and halakhic practice. In Christianity, purity moves through Jesus’ teaching on the heart, baptism, repentance, Eucharistic life, fasting, chastity, ascetic discipline, and prayer in secret before the Father. In Islam, purification is inseparable from prayer, with wudu, ghusl, tayammum, salah, fasting, modesty, and disciplined intention forming the believer’s daily life. This article compares sacred discipline across the three traditions while preserving their real theological differences.









