Safekipedia

Sarah

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

An artistic illustration of Sarah and Abraham welcoming three angels, a classic religious scene.

Sarah was an important woman in the Bible. She was originally named Sarai. She is known for being wise, kind, and beautiful. Sarah was the wife of Abraham and the mother of Isaac.

Many religions, including Judaism, Christianity, and Islam, respect Sarah. These religions celebrate her in different ways. For example, some churches remember her on special days.

In the Hebrew Bible

In the stories from the Hebrew Bible, Sarah was the wife of Abraham. She was first called Sarai. God changed her name to Sarah and promised that she and Abraham would have a son. This happened even though they were very old, which made both of them laugh with surprise.

A depiction of Sarah and Abraham

Sarah and Abraham traveled to many places. At one point, they went to Egypt because there was not enough food where they lived. Abraham asked Sarah to tell people she was his sister so they would be safe. Later, they met three visitors who told Abraham that Sarah would have a son the next year. Sarah heard this and laughed quietly to herself, thinking it was impossible. But soon after, she became pregnant and had a son named Isaac when she was very old.

After this, Sarah asked Abraham to send away another son, Ishmael, and his mother Hagar. Abraham agreed, and they left. Sarah died when she was 127 years old, and Abraham bought a special place to bury her.

New Testament references

The First Epistle of Peter talks about Sarah because she listened to her husband. The Bible mentions her in a special part called the "hall of faith" with other important people from old stories. Sarah is also mentioned in other books of the New Testament, such as Romans and Galatians.

In Galatians 4, Sarah and another woman named Hagar are used to show a difference between two important agreements. The story says Abraham had two sons: one from a servant woman and one from a free woman. The son from the servant woman was born naturally, but the son from the free woman was born because of a special promise. This helps explain that some people are bound, like slaves, and others are free, like the people of the promise.

Historicity

In the early to middle 1900s, some experts believed the stories of important families in the Bible might be based on real people from a very old time called the "patriarchal age." But in the 1970s, new ideas changed these beliefs. Scholars like Thomas L. Thompson and John Van Seters studied the stories and evidence. They found the stories matched a later time, called the Iron Age, not the very old time the stories were set in. By the early 2000s, many archaeologists thought it was hard to prove these family stories as real historical facts.

William Foxwell AlbrightAlbrecht Altpatriarchal ageThomas L. ThompsonThe Historicity of the Patriarchal NarrativesJohn Van SetersAbraham in History and TraditionIron Age

Religious views

In Judaism

Abraham, Sarah and Hagar, imagined here in a Bible illustration from 1897.

Sarah is an important woman in the Jewish faith. She is first mentioned in the Book of Genesis. She was born in Ur Kaśdim, which is believed to be in modern-day Iraq. Sarah married Abraham, and they traveled together to a land called Canaan, which is now part of the Levant.

Along the way, they stopped in a place called Harran, possibly in present-day Turkey. Later, Sarah helped Abraham by giving one of her servants, Hagar, to him so they could have a child. Hagar had a son named Ishmael. Eventually, Sarah herself had a son named Isaac when she was very old.

Mausoleum of Sarah, Abraham's wife in the Mosque of Abraham

In Islam

In Islam, Sarah is also respected. The Quran tells the story of her having a son named Isaac with Abraham after many years of not being able to have children. In Islamic tradition, Sarah is Abraham’s first cousin, not his sister.

Tomb of Sarah

Mausoleum of Sarah, 1911.

Sarah is thought to be buried in the Cave of the Patriarchs, also called the Sanctuary of Abraham by Muslims. This place is in the old city of Hebron. It is very important for Jews, as it is the second holiest spot after the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Christians and Muslims also honor this site, believing it to be where three important couples from the Bible are buried: Abraham and Sarah, Isaac and Rebecca, and Jacob and Leah.

Relationship to Abraham

Main article: Wife–sister narratives in the Book of Genesis

In the stories from the Book of Genesis, Abraham sometimes calls his wife Sarah his sister. This happens three times: when Abraham and Sarah meet Pharaoh, when they meet a king named Abimelech, and when Isaac and his wife Rebecca meet another king named Abimelech. Scholars do not know which story happened first or why the Bible tells these stories.

Some people think Abraham and Isaac used the word "sister" to show a special kind of marriage. Others think it was a way to show respect for women. One writer suggests Sarah was both Abraham's wife and his half-sister, because she had a different mother than Abraham.

In popular culture

Sarah is a popular character in many books and stories. She is the main character in several novels, including Sarah by Orson Scott Card in the Women of Genesis series, Sarai: A Novel by Jill Eileen Smith, and Sarah: A Novel by Marek Halter. In the Christian fiction novel Redeeming Love by Francine Rivers, the main character, named "Angel," reveals at the end that her real name is "Sarah." Sarah also appears in a collection of stories called Sarah and After by Lynne Reid Banks. In the 1994 film Abraham, Sarah is portrayed by Barbara Hershey.

Sarah is also discussed in nonfiction books. Pastor John F. MacArthur writes about her life in Twelve Extraordinary Women, along with other important women from the Bible like Eve, Rahab, Ruth, Hannah, the Virgin Mary, Anna the Prophetess, the Samaritan woman at the well, Mary of Bethany, Martha, Mary Magdalene, and Lydia of Thyatira. She is also featured in Slightly Bad Girls of the Bible: Flawed Women Loved by a Flawless God by Liz Curtis Higgs.

Images

Illustration from the Old Testament showing Sarah being taken to Pharaoh's palace, painted by James Tissot.
An historical etching showing a scene from the story of Abraham and Hagar.
Historical engraving of Sarah, the wife of Abraham and mother of Ishmael, from religious texts.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Sarah, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Images from Wikimedia Commons. Tap any image to view credits and license.