Sacrifice, Offering, and Atonement in Abrahamic Traditions
Sacrifice, offering, and atonement stand near the center of Abrahamic sacred history, but they do not mean the same thing in Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. In Judaism, sacrifice is rooted in Temple worship, priestly service, Passover, Yom Kippur, covenant, purification, repentance, and the later rabbinic transformation of worship after the Temple’s destruction. In Christianity, sacrifice is reinterpreted through Jesus’ death and resurrection, Paschal theology, Eucharistic memory, forgiveness, reconciliation, and new covenant theology. In Islam, sacrifice is purified through tawhid: Ibrahim’s obedience, Isma‘il’s submission in Islamic tradition, Hajj, Eid al-Adha, qurbani or udhiyah, halal discipline, humane treatment, charity, and the Qur’anic insistence that neither meat nor blood reaches Allah, but taqwa does.









