Skip to main content
Grace Communion International logo
  • Login
  • Home
  • God
    • Who Is Jesus?
    • Who is the Holy Spirit?
    • Why Are Humans in the Image of God?
    • So What?
  • Media
    • Speaking of Life
    • You're Included
    • Dimensions in Ministry
    • GCI Reflections
    • GCI Together
    • A Word from our Sponsor
    • Other Videos
    • One Quick Thought
  • Publications
    • Christian Odyssey
      • Spring 2013
      • Sept-Nov 2012
      • Winter 2012/2013
      • Older issues
    • GCI Weekly Update
    • Booklets
    • Article Index
    • God, Jesus and the Holy Spirit
      • God
      • The doctrine of the Trinity
      • God, evil, and suffering
      • The Holy Spirit
      • Jesus before his birth as a human
      • The birth of Jesus
      • The life and ministry of Jesus
      • The week before Jesus' death
      • The death of Jesus and its significance
      • The resurrection of Jesus
      • The ascension and the return of Jesus
    • The Gospel
      • Articles about the gospel
      • Booklets about the gospel
      • Bible studies on what the gospel is
      • Articles about evangelism
      • The Basics: studies for new believers
      • Tri-fold pamphlets about the gospel and church
    • The Bible
      • Articles about the Bible and Bible study
      • Genesis
      • The Torah, also known as the books of Moses
      • Books of history, Joshua through 2 Kings
      • Books of poetry: Psalms, Proverbs, etc.
      • Books of prophecy: Isaiah through Malachi
      • The Four Gospels
      • Acts of the Apostles
      • Epistles of Paul
      • Hebrews, General Epistles and Revelation
    • Church and Ministry Articles
      • Children's ministry
      • Youth ministry
      • Women in ministry
      • Church history
      • Articles about Christian holidays
      • Articles about the Lord's Supper - Communion
    • Discipleship, Christian Living and Growth
      • A series of 30 articles about Christian doctrines
      • Additional articles about Christian living
      • Spiritual disciplines - a series for small groups
    • Old Testament Laws
      • The old and new covenants
      • The seventh-day Sabbath
      • The annual festivals
      • A series of 14 studies about Old Testament laws
      • Sabbath, Circumcision and Tithing: a book
    • Bible prophecy
      • The Second Coming of Jesus
      • The Book of Revelation
      • What happens after a person dies?
  • Our Story
    • GCI as a Denomination
    • The GCI Statement of Beliefs
    • GCI History
    • Transformed by Truth
    • Contact Us
  • Our Churches
    • Find a GCI Church or Pastor
    • United States
    • North, West, Central and East Africa
    • Southern Africa and Mauritius
    • Northeast Asia, the Philippines, and UAE
    • Southern Asia, New Zealand, Pacific Islands
    • Australia
    • Canada
    • Caribbean nations
    • Central and Eastern Europe, and Spain
    • Western Europe and the Middle East
    • Latin America
  • Church Development
    • Media, programs & resources
    • CAD Services Catalog
    • Church Multiplication Ministries
    • Generations Ministries
    • Pastoral Internship Program
    • Women's Ministry
    • Office of Reconciliation & Mediation
    • GCI Weekly Update
    • Equipper
    • It Looks Like This
    • The Surprising God blog
  • Education
    • Grace Communion Seminary
    • Ambassador College of Christian Ministry
    • Imperial and Ambassador transcripts
  • Participate
    • GCI Events
    • Find a GCI Church or Pastor
    • Get Free Booklets in the U.S.
    • Contact Us
  • Donate

The Founding Fathers

By John Drane, Ph.D., professor of Religious Studies at Stirling University, Scotland.

The story begins with Abraham — or, rather, with his father Terah — in the city of Ur, at the very heart of the ancient Mesopotamian civilization. For some undisclosed reason, they left their home city and the whole family moved some 560 miles/900 km northwest to the city of Haran. Both these towns had important shrines for the worship of the moon god Sin, and some Old Testament scholars have supposed that this could explain their move.

There is certainly plenty of evidence to suggest that Abraham and his family were originally pagans. In a later account of the same events, a much later leader of Israel began his story of Israel’s history with the words, "Long ago your ancestors lived on the other side of the River Euphrates and worshipped other gods" (Joshua 24.-2).

Some have discerned traces of some sort of religious argument, which involved Abraham’s family in physical danger. For in a rather obscure passage (Genesis 1-5:7; Isaiah 29:22), Abraham is said to have been "rescued" from Ur in just the same way as the escaping slaves were later "rescued" (the same Hebrew word [hotsi’]) from Egypt (Exodus 20:2; Deuteronomy 5:6).

 The Standard of Ur
The Standard of Ur, a wooden box inlaid with stones and shells, is from the Royal Cemetery at Ur, about 2500 B.C. This side shows the king celebrating at a banquet (top row), while servants bring animals and other goods as offerings (bottom two rows).
 Ziggurat at Ur
At Tel al Muqayyar, near the lower Euphrates River, the Ziggurat at Ur (above) once served as a three-story temple to the Mesopotamian gods. It was from Ur that the family of the patriarchs set out on their journey.

 

The fear and horror of men face to face with incomprehensible heathen gods and idols (below) find expression in the fixed, staring eyes of these nine statues, found in temple ruins northeast of Baghdad, Iraq.

 Idols

On the other hand, it is only in the Hebrew manuscripts of Genesis 11 that the city of Ur is mentioned at all. The Greek (Septuagint) version places Abraham’s original home "in the land of the Chaldeans," and this could have been a place much nearer to Haran in North Syria than to Ur near the Persian Gulf. Other stories certainly suggest that Abraham’s roots were much stronger in Haran than in Ur, for when he later sent for a wife for his son Isaac, he told his servant to go to "the country where I was born" (Genesis 24:4), and this turns out to be not Ur, but the area around Haran [verse 10].

Despite this close connection with the town of Haran and its surrounding countryside, Abraham did not make his permanent home there. The book of Genesis tells how he moved on to a different part of the Fertile Crescent — this time travelling another 450 miles/700 km southwest, into the land of Canaan. There he lived a wandering life, moving about from place to place to find enough grazing for his flocks and food for his family. This was the only way newcomers could settle, for the best parts of the land were already occupied by both farmers and city dwellers. This explains why Abraham moved mostly in the south of the country [Genesis 12:9], just to the north and west of the Dead Sea. This was not the best land, but it had many areas suitable for grazing, and only a small resident population. When the grass was exhausted there, nomadic tribes could move either to an oasis like Beer-sheba or into the fields adjoining towns like Shechem and Hebron. No doubt this land was farmed by the Canaanites, but they probably allowed nomads like Abraham to put their animals onto it after the crops had been gathered. But even this source of supply was uncertain, and like many other nomadic peoples of the period, Abraham was forced to move as far afield as Egypt at a time of severe famine (Genesis 12:10-20)….

To us, it seems natural to want to relate Abraham to the social world of his day. But the central interest in the book of Genesis is not in the movements of nomads and refugees in the ancient world: it is in Abraham’s experience of God. His move from Haran was not determined by political and social issues; it was the result of a challenge and a promise made to him by God: "I will make you into a great nation and I will bless you; I will make your name great, and you will be a blessing…and all peoples on earth will be blessed through you" (Genesis 12:2-3).

Nor was this an experience unique to Abraham. It was also the common experience of his successors, Isaac and Jacob — not to mention the conviction of the rest of the Old Testament, that a personal experience of God was vital for the very survival of the whole nation of Israel. One of the reasons for our difficulty in placing the patriarchs historically is just the fact that the stories told about them are of a personal nature, telling how they met God in every circumstance of life.

For them, God was not a remote, impersonal force. Nor was he someone who must be approached only through the complex paraphernalia of religious rituals carried out in especially holy places. He was with them in the problems of everyday life, helping them to find wives and to have children, as well as meeting their deepest personal and emotional needs. It is no coincidence that for these people, the most natural way to describe God was to call him "the God of my father" (Genesis 26:24; 31:5, 29, 42, 53; 32:9; 46:1, 3; 48:3.5; 49:25; 50:17). For he was as close to them as their own family. Indeed, in an important sense, he was a part of their family: he was their leader, and they were his children. Unlike those who had a more settled existence, these wandering tribes were never tempted to think of their faith in God as something that was to be locked up in a temple or some other sacred place. It was something that went with them, and affected their everyday life wherever they happened to be.

This is why many later writers came to regard Abraham as supremely "a man of faith." This was the great legacy of the patriarchal generation to the history of Israel. They were deeply committed to the belief that religion was of no value if it could do no more than produce a theology. It must be relevant and meaningful in the normal experiences of human life. In later ages, Israel was often tempted to forget this ideal, and to suppose that their God, like the gods of other nations, would be satisfied with the perfunctory performance of religious rituals.

But there were always those who were ready to call the nation back to the ideals that had been held by their ancestors, as they embarked on a new life and a new destiny with only God’s promise to guide them.


Text originally printed in An Introduction to the Bible, by John Drane, published by Lion Publishing plc, England, 1987, pp. 40-41, 46. Reproduced on this website with permission from Lion Publishing. In the United States, this text was published in Introducing the Old Testament, by John Drane, published by Harper & Row. Dr. Drane’s Introducing the New Testament is now published by Fortress Press.

Email this page

Thank you for your interest in sharing materials from Grace Communion International.

NOTE: We request your email address only so that your friend knows that you wanted them to see it, and that it is not junk mail. We do not keep these email addresses, and we will not send unsolicited materials to either you or your friend.

Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
(Your Name) has sent you a message from Grace Communion International
(Your Name) thought you would like to see the Grace Communion International web site.
‹ Abram, the Real Story up Where Did the Hittites Come From, and Does It Matter? ›
Share This Page:
Email this page

Thank you for your interest in sharing materials from Grace Communion International.

NOTE: We request your email address only so that your friend knows that you wanted them to see it, and that it is not junk mail. We do not keep these email addresses, and we will not send unsolicited materials to either you or your friend.

Enter multiple addresses on separate lines or separate them with commas.
(Your Name) has sent you a message from Grace Communion International
(Your Name) thought you would like to see the Grace Communion International web site.

Exploring the Word of God, from Genesis to Revelation

  • Exploring the Word of God: The Books of Moses
    • Crossing Your "Red Sea"
    • Exploring Genesis
    • Genesis: "In the Beginning..." From Creation to Abraham
    • Beyond the Reach of Science
    • The Faith of Abraham
    • Abraham, Isaac and Jacob: Were They Real People?
    • Abram, the Real Story
    • The Founding Fathers
    • Where Did the Hittites Come From, and Does It Matter?
    • A Mother's Love
    • Genesis: Isaac and Jacob
    • Joseph: The Hand of God
    • Exploring Exodus
    • Exodus: Birth of a Nation
    • The Name of God
    • Should Christians Keep the Law of Moses? - What About the Ten Commandments?
    • Did Moses Steal the Ten Commandments?
    • Exploring Leviticus
    • Leviticus: Living a Holy Life
    • Israelite Annual Festivals
    • Tithing in Israel
    • Exploring Numbers
    • Numbers: Life as a Pilgrimage
    • Miriam: First Lady of the Exodus
    • Exploring Deuteronomy
    • Deuteronomy: God's People Challenged
    • Bible Concepts From the Torah
    • Bible Facts From the Torah
    • Bible Trivia From the Torah
  • Exploring the Word of God: Historical Books
  • Exploring the Word of God: Books of Poetry and Wisdom
  • The Prophets
  • The Four Gospels
  • The Gospel According to Matthew
  • The Gospel According to Mark
  • Lessons from the Gospel of Mark
  • The Gospel According to Luke
  • Reflections on the Gospel of John
  • The Acts of the Apostles
  • Exploring the Word of God: The Epistles of Paul
  • Hebrews
  • General Epistles
  • The Book of Revelation
  • A Model for All Believers: A Study of 1 Thessalonians 1
  • Articles About the Bible
  • Home
  • God
  • Media
  • Publications
  • Our Story
  • Our Churches
  • Church Development
  • Education
  • Participate
  • Donate
Unless otherwise noted, © 2013 Grace Communion International. All rights reserved.   Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Accessibility