%0 Journal Article
%T The Religion of Abraham during the “Days of Ignorance” (Al-Jahiliyyah)
%A Howard Barry Schatz
%J Open Journal of Philosophy
%P 493-508
%@ 2163-9442
%D 2025
%I Scientific Research Publishing
%R 10.4236/ojpp.2025.152029
%X The Islamic concept of Al-Jahiliyyah (“Days of Ignorance”) refers to the perceived paganism of pre-Islamic Arabia before the revelation of the Quran to Muhammad. During this period of “spiritual darkness,” God instructs Muhammad to follow the religion of Abraham: “Then we revealed to you (O Muhammad), to follow the religion of Abraham, inclining toward the truth...”. The Quran uses the Arabic term ḥanīf (literally: revert), which is often translated as “inclining toward the truth.” Traditionally, this term refers to those who return to the tenets of the Abrahamic religion. The term ḥanīfiyyah refers to the “true religion of Abraham”. The Quran references the “Scrolls of Abraham” as among the religious scriptures of Islam, but they are believed to have been either lost or destroyed. Within the rabbinical community, there is one extant text attributed to the patriarch Abraham known as the Sefer Yetzirah: The Book of Creation. This text defines the origins of Jewish mysticism, better known as Kabbalah, which is said to embody the esoteric meaning of the Hebrew Bible. The Book of Creation is “the first document of Jewish speculative mysticism vital to ‘Kabbalah’” (Churton, 2021: p. 94). “According to a reliable tradition, it was Rabbi Akiba who actually wrote the Sefer Yetzirah, even though its teachings are attributed to Abraham” (Kaplan, 1979: p. 185), or to the person that history has come to know as Abraham. Within the Hebrew Bible, Abraham knew God as אלוהים (transliteration: Elohim), Moses knew God as יהוה (transliteration: YHVH, Yahweh, or Jehovah), and within the Quran, Muhammad knew God as الله (transliteration: Allah). The Book of Creation is the only text that definitively explains the deep and hidden meaning of these “Words of God”. Proof that this is an Abrahamic text at its core rather than an exclusively Jewish text, is embodied by the concept of Ṭawḥīd (“Oneness of God”) as the essence of Islam. Another core Islamic concept is Ṭawāf (“Circumambulation of the Ka’bah seven times”) (Ṭ
%K awḥ
%K ī
%K d
%K Ṭ
%K awā
%K f
%K Allah
%K Yahweh
%K Elohim
%K Tardemah
%U http://www.scirp.org/journal/PaperInformation.aspx?PaperID=142720