Abraham in Smiths Bible Dictionary
(father of a multitude) was the son of Terah, and founder
of the great Hebrew nation. (B.C. 1996-1822.) His family, a
branch of the descendants of Shem, was settled in Ur of the
Chaldees, beyond the Euphrates, where Abraham was born.
Terah had two other sons, Nahor and Haran. Haran died before
his father in Ur of the Chaldees, leaving a son, Lot; and
Terah, taking with him Abram, with Sarai his wife and his
grandson Lot, emigrated to Haran in Mesopotamia, where he
died. On the death of his father, Abram, then in the 75th
year of his age, with Sarai and Lot, pursued his course to
the land of Canaan, whither he was directed by divine
command, Ge 12:5 when he received the general promise that
he should become the founder of a great nation, and that all
the families of the earth should be blessed in him. He
passed through the heart of the country by the great highway
to Shechem, and pitched his tent beneath the terebinth of
Moreh. Ge 12:6 Here he received in vision from Jehovah the
further revelation that this was the land which his
descendants should inherit. Ge 12:7 The next halting-place
of the wanderer was on a mountain between Bethel and Ai, Ge
12:8 but the country was suffering from famine, and Abram
journeyed still southward to the rich cornlands of Egypt.
There, fearing that the great beauty of Sarai might tempt
the powerful monarch of Egypt and expose his own life to
peril, he arranged that Sarai should represent herself as
his sister, which her actual relationship to him, as
probably the daughter of his brother Haran, allowed her to
do with some semblance of truth. But her beauty was reported
to the king, and she was taken into the royal harem. The
deception was discovered, and Pharaoh with some indignation
dismissed Abram from the country. Ge 12:10-20 He left Egypt
with great possessions, and, accompanied by Lot, returned by
the south of Israel to his former encampment between Bethel
and Ai. The increased wealth of the two kinsmen was the
ultimate cause of their separation. Lot chose the fertile
plain of the Jordan near Sodom, while Abram pitched his tent
among the groves of Mamre, close to Hebron. Ge 13:1 ... Lot
with his family and possessions having been carried away
captive by Chedorlaomer king of Elam, who had invaded Sodom,
Abram pursued the conquerors and utterly routed them not far
from Damascus. The captives and plunder were all recovered,
and Abram was greeted on his return by the king of Sodom,
and by Melchizedek king of Salem, priest of the most high
God, who mysteriously appears upon the scene to bless the
patriarch and receive from him a tenth of the spoil...
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