Get Think Jewish Delivered to your Home or Office
HOME | CONTACT US | DONATE LoginLOGIN Ask the RabbiASK THE RABBI
Chabad.org - Torah, Judaism and Jewish Info High Holidays
 
Chabad.org » Jewish Holidays » High Holidays » Rosh Hashanah » Study » Personalities » The Great Test: The Binding of Isaac
  Month of Elul   Rosh Hashanah   Yom Kippur
What is Rosh Hashanah?    |    Guide    |    Study    |    Stories    |    Audio/Video    |    Recipes    |    Kids    |    Greeting Cards
PrintSend this page to a friendShare this
Comment3 Comments

The Great Test: The Binding of Isaac


G-d’s strange Command

G-d put Abraham’s sincerity and obedience to the greatest possible test. Appearing to Abraham suddenly, G-d said to him, “Please take your son, your only one, whom you love, Isaac, and go away to the land of Moriah and bring him up there for a burnt offering on one of the mountains, of which I will tell you.”

Abraham did not plead with G-d for his son. He did not ask how this command could be reconciled with the promise that Isaac was to become the father of a large nation that was to bear G-d’s name. G-d commanded, and Abraham hastened to obey.

Father and Son Together

Abraham rose early in the morning, saddled his ass with his own hands and prepared wood for the fire; then he took two servants and his son Isaac and started on the trip to Moriah. Isaac, then already a fully grown man of thirty-seven, soon realized for what purpose he was being taken on this trip.

Thus father and son were firm in their decision to fulfill G-d’s command. Many an obstacle was put in their way to make it difficult for them to go through with the test. However, with firm hearts and solemn determination, Abraham and Isaac continued on their way until they reached Mount Moriah on the third day. Here G-d showed Abraham the place where he was to build the altar and bind Isaac on it. Abraham and Isaac ascended to the place G-d had designated.

The Akedah Altar

Having prepared the altar, upon which he bound his beloved son, Abraham lifted the knife to sacrifice Isaac. At that moment an angel called unto him to halt and do no harm to his son, for this was only a test and Abraham had proved his loyalty to G-d. Full of gratitude and holy inspiration, Abraham looked around and saw a ram that had been caught in a thicket by his horns. Abraham took the ram and offered it, instead of Isaac, to G-d.

Abraham’s Reward

And the angel of G-d called unto Abraham a second time out of heaven and said, “And he said, "By Myself have I sworn, says the L-rd, that because you have done this thing and you did not withhold your son, your only one, that I will surely bless you, and I will greatly multiply your seed as the stars of the heavens and as the sand that is on the seashore, and your descendants will inherit the cities of their enemies.“

Abraham and Isaac Return

Full of happiness and solemn joy at the miraculous ending of their trip, Abraham and Isaac descended from the mountain and returned to the place where they had left their servants. As fast as they could, they returned home.

PrintSend this page to a friendShare this
Comment3 Comments

From Our People by Jacob Isaacs published and copyrighted by Kehot Publication Society 1946-1948
 

Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Mar 22, 2011
If Sham was the ancestor of Noah, and that is the beginning of the Jewish history, Where does the ancestory of the Gential's ancestory begin?There is no other race of people on the earth.
Posted By Ms. janice dunn

Posted: Aug 24, 2007
Re: Sarah's Death
Some say it was the shock of happiness that her son had merited such a great degree of self-sacrifice.
Posted By Tzvi Freeman

Posted: Aug 18, 2007
Sarah's Death
Was it the shock of happiness that her son is alive that caused her death or the shock of fear what is going to happen to her son?
Posted By Tsvetozar, Mezdra, Bulgaria



 


Personalities
Adam and Eve
Abraham and Sarah
Isaac
The Great Test: The Binding of Isaac
Chana
Gedaliah
Rabbi Amnon
Find Services
Videos
Audio Classes
Holiday Songs
Kids Zone
Holiday Shopping Recipes
Free Greeting Cards
About this Book
Our People
  Our People, originally published in 1946, was the first Jewish history book for the English speaking reader. Read today, it still provides a comprehensive outline of Jewish history, and also a view of the telling of history as it evolved over the last century.

 Kehot Publication Society and Merkos Publications, the publishing divisions of the Lubavitch movement have brought Torah education to nearly every Jewish community in the world. More than 100,000,000 volumes have been disseminated to date in over 12 languages, both for newcomer as well as for those well versed in Torah knowledge.