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Abraham would go about crying, "Who will buy that which will hurt and
not benefit him?" Then when God Almighty commanded him to call his people
to the Divine unity, his father refused the call, and so did his people. Thus
the matter spread abroad till it reached Nimrod, son of Cush, king over the
country . . . . who took Father Abraham, and cast him into a fierce fire; but
the fire grew cool and pleasant unto Abraham, who came out of it after some
days. And thereupon his people believed in him.
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Again, in the Arish al Majlis we read: Before this, when Abraham one
night came up out of his cave and saw the stars before the moon arose, he said:
This is my Preserver.1 And when the night overshadowed him, he saw a star, and
said, This is my Lord; and when it set, he said, I love not those that set. And
when he saw the moon rising, he said, This is my Lord; but when it set, he said,
Verily if my Lord direct me not, I shall be of those that go astray. And when he
saw the sun rising, he said, This is my Lord; this is the greatest. But when it
set, he said, O my people! Verily I am clear of that which ye associate together
with God. Verily I direct my face unto him who hath created the heavens and the
earth. I am orthodox, and not one of the idolators.
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They say that Abraham's father used to make idol images and give them to
Abraham to sell. So Abraham taking them about would cry: "These will
neither hurt nor help him that buys," so that no one bought from him. And
when it was not sold, he took an
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image to the stream, and striking its head, would say, Drink, my poor one! in
derision, for his people and the heathen around him to hear. So when his
people objected, he said, Ah! do ye dispute with me concerning God, and
verily God hath directed me . . . . And this is our argument wherewith we
furnished Abraham for his people. We raise the dignity of whom we wish, for thy
Lord is wise and knowing.1 And so in the end Abraham overcame his
people by such arguments. Then he called his father Azar to the true faith, and
said: O my father, wherefore dost thou worship that which neither hears nor
sees, nor yet doth profit thee in any way, and so on to the end of the
story.2 But his father refused that to which Abraham called
him; whereupon Abraham cried aloud to his people that he was free from what they
worshipped, and thus made known his faith to them. He said, What think ye?
That which ye worship, and your forefathers also, are mine enemies, excepting
only the Lord of the worlds.3 They said, Whom then dost
thou worship? He answered, "The Lord of all worlds."
"Dost thou mean Nimrod?" "Nay, but he that created me and
guideth me," and so on. The thing then spread abroad among the people, till
it reached the ears of the tyrant Nimrod, who sent for him, and said: "O
Abraham! Dost thou hold him to be thy god that hath sent thee; dost thou call to
his worship and speak of his power to those that worship other than him? Who is
he?" A. "My Lord, he that giveth life, and giveth death."4
N. "I give life, and cause to
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