Abraham the Star-Child Breaks Nimrod's Idols

Curated by The Jewish Mythology Team ·

Abraham was dangerous before he could speak.

That is how Landa's 1919 public-domain retelling frames the old Nimrod legend. On the night Abraham is born, the astrologers see a star swallow four smaller stars. They run to Nimrod and warn him that Terah's child will grow into a threat. Nimrod orders the baby killed. Terah hides his son in a cave and sends another child in his place.

Abraham grows up watching the sky. First he wonders whether the sun should be worshiped. Then the moon. Then the stars. But each one rises and sets. Each one obeys something higher. The child sees what the adults refuse to see: anything that can disappear cannot be the Master of the world.

When Abraham is set to work in the idol shop, the joke becomes judgment. An old man wants a stronger god because his last one broke. Abraham smashes one idol to show him how fragile such gods are. A woman brings food as an offering. Abraham places the offering before the idols, breaks them one by one when they do not eat, and leaves the stick in the hand of the largest statue.

Dragged before Nimrod, Abraham refuses every substitute. Fire is quenched by water. Water is carried by clouds. Clouds are driven by wind. Wind is endured by human beings. Nimrod casts him into the furnace, but Abraham walks out alive. The fire that was supposed to prove Nimrod's power becomes the first public witness that power is not God.

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