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Abrohom.com


Abraham (hebräisch אַבְרָהָם Avraham „Vater der vielen [Völker]“,
aramäisch ܐܒܪܗܡ Abrohom !!!
altjiddisch Awroham, arabisch إبرَاهِيم Ibrāhīm) ist als Stammvater Israels eine zentrale Figur des Tanachs bzw. des Alten Testaments. Genauso gilt er als Stammvater der Araber; von seinem Sohn Ismael soll der Prophet des Islam, Mohammed, abstammen. Abrahams Geschichte wird im biblischen Buch Genesis bzw. Bereschit (Gen 12–25 EU) erzählt. Danach gehört er zusammen mit seinem Sohn Isaak und seinem Enkel Jakob zu den Erzvätern, aus denen laut biblischer Überlieferung die Zwölf Stämme des Volkes Israel hervorgingen.

Da sich sowohl Judentum, Christentum als auch Islam auf Abraham als ihren Stammvater beziehen, bezeichnet man sie auch als die drei abrahamitischen (Welt-)Religionen.

I don't believe in god so here this is for you !!!

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Abraham


This article is about the biblical Abraham. For Islam, see Abraham in Islam. For the given name, see Abraham (given name). For other uses, see Abraham (disambiguation).
"Avram" redirects here. For other uses, see Avram (disambiguation).
"Avraham" redirects here. For people with the given name, see Avraham (given name). For people with the surname, see Avraham (surname).
Abraham

Abraham with the Three Angels by Dutch artist, Rembrandt
Personal
Born
Abram
Ur Kaśdim
Died Hebron
Resting place Cave of Machpelah
17px-WMA_button2b.png
31.524744°N 35.110726°E
Spouse Sarah (half-sister)
Hagar (concubine)
Keturah
Children Ishmael
Isaac
Zimran
Jokshan
Medan
Midian
Ishbak
Shuah
Parents Terah (father)
Relatives Haran (brother)
Nahor (brother)
Lot (nephew)
Lot's wife (niece)
Influenced Abrahamic religions
Abraham (Hebrew: אַבְרָהָם‬, Modern ʾAvraham Tiberian ʾAḇrāhām, Arabic: إبراهيم Ibrahim), originally Avram or Abram, is the common patriarch of the three Abrahamic religions.[1] In Judaism he is the founding father of the Covenant, the special relationship between the Jewish people and God; in Christianity, he is the prototype of all believers, Jewish or Gentile; and in Islam he is seen as a link in the chain of prophets that begins with Adam and culminates in Muhammad.[2]

The narrative in Genesis revolves around the themes of posterity and land. Abraham is called by God to leave the house of his father Terah and settle in the land originally given to Canaan, but which God now promises to Abraham and his progeny. Various candidates are put forward who might inherit the land after Abraham, and while promises are made to Ishmael about founding a great nation, Isaac, his son by his half-sister Sarah, inherits the promises to Abraham. Abraham purchases a tomb (the Cave of the Patriarchs) at Hebron to be Sarah's grave, thus establishing his right to the land, and in the second generation his heir Isaac is married to a woman from his own kin, thus ruling the Canaanites out of any inheritance. Abraham later marries Keturah and has six more sons, but on his death, when he is buried beside Sarah, it is Isaac who receives "all Abraham's goods", while the other sons receive only "gifts" (Genesis 25:5–8).[3]

The Abraham story cannot be definitively related to any specific time, and it is widely agreed that the patriarchal age, along with the exodus and the period of the judges, is a late literary construct that does not relate to any period in actual history.[4] A common hypothesis among scholars is that it was composed in the early Persian period (late 6th century BCE) as a result of tensions between Jewish landowners who had stayed in Judah during the Babylonian captivity and traced their right to the land through their "father Abraham", and the returning exiles who based their counter-claim on Moses and the Exodus tradition.[5]
 
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Desinformant.com

Desinformant
  1. "Gewerkschaftsführer wurden abgehört und heimlich gefilmt, Tonbandaufzeichnungen sinnentstellend zusammengeschnitten und über Rundfunk verbreitet, Untergrundzeitungen der Solidarität gefälscht", schrieb später ein ehemaliger "Desinformant" der Stasi.
  2. ( Quelle: Berliner Zeitung 1995)
 
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Mehujael.com
Methushael.com


from : Noah ( Family Tree )

Family tree
Adam Eve
Cain Abel Seth
Enoch Enos
Irad Kenan
Mehujael Mahalalel
Methushael Jared
Adah Lamech Zillah Enoch
Jabal Jubal Tubal-Cain Naamah Methuselah
Lamech
Shem Ham Japheth

Source : https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noah


This article is about the biblical Noah. For other uses, see Noah (disambiguation).
Noah

Noah's Sacrifice by Daniel Maclise
Venerated in Judaism
Christianity
Islam
Mandaeism
Baha'i Faith
In the Abrahamic religions, Noah[a] (/ˈnoʊ.ə/)[1] was the tenth and last of the pre-Flood Patriarchs. The story of Noah's Ark is told in the Bible's Genesis flood narrative. The biblical account is followed by the story of the Curse of Canaan.

In addition to the Book of Genesis, Noah is mentioned in the Old Testament in the First Book of Chronicles, and the books of Tobit, Wisdom, Sirach, Isaiah, Ezekiel, 2 Esdras, 4 Maccabees; in the New Testament, he is mentioned in the gospels of Matthew, and Luke, the Epistle to the Hebrews, 1st Peter and 2nd Peter. Noah was the subject of much elaboration in the literature of later Abrahamic religions, including the Quran (Surahs 71, 7, 1, and 21).

Biblical account[edit]

12th-century Venetian mosaicdepiction of Noah sending the dove
The primary account of Noah in the Bible is in the Book of Genesis.

Noah was the tenth of the pre-flood (antediluvian) Patriarchs. His father was Lamech and his mother is unknown.[2] When Noah was five hundred years old, he became the father of Shem, Ham and Japheth (Genesis 5:32).

Genesis flood narrative[edit]
Main article: Genesis flood narrative
The Genesis flood narrative makes up chapters 6–9 in the Book of Genesis, in the Bible.[3] The narrative, one of many flood myths found in human cultures, indicates that God intended to return the Earth to its pre-Creation state of watery chaos by flooding the Earth because of humanity's misdeeds and then remake it using the microcosm of Noah's ark. Thus, the flood was no ordinary overflow but a reversal of creation.[4] The narrative discusses the evil of mankind that moved God to destroy the world by the way of the flood, the preparation of the ark for certain animals, Noah, and his family, and God's guarantee (the Noahic Covenant) for the continued existence of life under the promise that he would never send another flood.[5]

After the flood[edit]
Main article: Covenant (biblical) § Noahic covenant
After the flood, Noah offered burnt offerings to God, who said: "I will not again curse the ground any more for man's sake; for the imagination of man's heart [is] evil from his youth; neither will I again smite any more every thing living, as I have done." (8:20–21)

"And God blessed Noah and his sons, and said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and replenish the earth." (9:1) They were also told that all fowls, land animals, and fishes would be afraid of them. Furthermore, as well as green plants, every moving thing would be their food with the exception that the blood was not to be eaten. Man's life blood would be required from the beasts and from man. "Whoso sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed: for in the image of God made he man." (9:6) A rainbow, called "my bow", was given as the sign of a covenant "between me and you and every living creature that [is] with you, for perpetual generations", (9:2–17) called the Noahic covenant or the rainbow covenant.

Noah died 350 years after the flood, at the age of 950,[6] the last of the extremely long-lived antediluvian Patriarchs. The maximum human lifespan, as depicted by the Bible, diminishes rapidly thereafter, from almost 1,000 years to the 120 years of Moses.[7]

Noah's drunkenness[edit]

Noah's drunkenness, Ham mocks Noah, Noah is covered, Canaan is cursed. Egerton Genesis
After the flood, the bible says that Noah became a husbandman and he planted a vineyard. He drank wine made from this vinyard, and got drunk; and lay "uncovered" within his tent. Noah's son Ham, the father of Canaan, saw his father naked and told his brothers, which led to Ham's son Canaan being cursed by Noah.[8] As early as the Classical era, commentators on Genesis 9:20–21 have excused Noah's excessive drinking because he was considered to be the first wine drinker; the first person to discover the soothing, consoling, and enlivening[tone] effects of wine.[9] John Chrysostom, Archbishop of Constantinople, and a Church Father, wrote in the 4th Century that Noah's behaviour is defensible: as the first human to taste wine, he would not know its effects: "Through ignorance and inexperience of the proper amount to drink, fell into a drunken stupor".[10]

Philo, a Hellenistic Jewish philosopher, also excused Noah by noting that one can drink in two different manners: (1) to drink wine in excess, a peculiar sin to the vicious evil man or (2) to partake of wine as the wise man, Noah being the latter.[11]

In Jewish tradition and rabbinic literature on Noah, rabbis blame Satan for the intoxicating properties of the wine.[12][13]

Curse of Ham[edit]
Main article: Curse of Ham

Noah curses Ham by Gustave Dore
In the field of psychological biblical criticism, J. H. Ellens and W. G. Rollins address the narrative of Genesis 9:18–27 that narrates the unconventional behavior that occurs between Noah and Ham. Because of its brevity and textual inconsistencies, it has been suggested that this narrative is a "splinter from a more substantial tale".[14][15] A fuller account would explain what exactly Ham had done to his father, or why Noah directed a curse at Canaan for Ham's misdeed, or how Noah came to know what occurred. The narrator relates two facts: (1) Noah became drunken and "he was uncovered within his tent", and (2) Ham "saw the nakedness of his father, and told his two brethren without". Thus, these passages revolve around sexuality and the exposure of genitalia as compared with other Hebrew Bible texts, such as Habakkuk 2:15 and Lamentations 4:21.[16]

Table of nations[edit]

The dispersion of the descendants of Shem, Ham, and Japheth (map from the 1854 Historical Textbook and Atlas of Biblical Geography)
See also: Sons of Noah
Genesis 10 sets forth the descendants of Shem, Ham, and Japheth, from whom the nations branched out over the earth after the flood. Among Japheth’s descendants were the maritime nations. (10:2–5) Ham’s son Cush had a son named Nimrod, who became the first man of might on earth, a mighty hunter, king in Babylon and the land of Shinar. (10:6–10) From there Asshur went and built Nineveh. (10:11–12) Canaan’s descendants – Sidon, Heth, the Jebusites, the Amorites, the Girgashites, the Hivites, the Arkites, the Sinites, the Arvadites, the Zemarites, and the Hamathites – spread out from Sidon as far as Gerar, near Gaza, and as far as Sodom and Gomorrah. (10:15–19) Among Shem’s descendants was Eber. (10:21)

These genealogies differ structurally from those set out in Genesis 5 and 11. It has a segmented or treelike structure, going from one father to many offspring. It is strange that the table, which assumes that the population is distributed about the Earth, precedes the account of the Tower of Babel, which says that all the population is in one place before it is dispersed.[17]
 
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I am from Germany and never heard of „Desinformant“ :-o
 
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I am from Germany and never heard of „Desinformant“ :-o

maybe you should update yourself

Desinformant
  1. "Gewerkschaftsführer wurden abgehört und heimlich gefilmt, Tonbandaufzeichnungen sinnentstellend zusammengeschnitten und über Rundfunk verbreitet, Untergrundzeitungen der Solidarität gefälscht", schrieb später ein ehemaliger "Desinformant" der Stasi. ( Quelle: Berliner Zeitung 1995)
    Unknown.jpg
 
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Zweifelhafte Ehre für Facebook-Gründer Mark Zuckerberg | Aktuelle ...
finanzschau.com/zweifelhafte-ehre-fuer-facebook-gruender-mark-z... - Translate this page
Desinformant des Jahres – Diesen Titel trägt ab sofort Mark Zuckerberg. Verliehen wurde ihm die wenig ruhmreiche Auszeichnung von der Organisation „ Media Matters. » Original Nachricht ... MENLO PARK (dpa-AFX) – Facebook - Gründer Mark Zuckerberg hat sich für den als geschmacklos kritisier… Mark Zuckerberg: ...

Source German Zweifelhafte Ehre für Facebook-Gründer Mark Zuckerberg | Aktuelle ...
 
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