Yes, the Baha'i Faith is Abrahamic. Baha'u'llah (ie., "Glory of God") was a direct descendant of Abraham through the lineage of his third wife, Keturah, and of the Sassanian kings of Persia. It is believed that His appearance was foretold in The Bible's Daniel and Revelation as well as other OT books.
The Bahai Faith does not use any code in its scriptures, which everyone is encouraged to read for themselves. See the Bahai Reference Library for a good selection of Bahai scriptures, all for free. The Bahai community today also does not use codes, secret handshakes, etc..
The Bahá'í Faith was first established in Botswana in 1955.
Bahai faith
William McElwee Miller has written: 'Baha'ism' -- subject(s): Babism, Bahais 'The Bahai cause today' -- subject(s): Bahai Faith 'Baha'ism, its origin, history, and teachings' -- subject(s): Bahai Faith
their are only one major branch which is called the Baha'i world faith
Try Baha-u-Illah and also search on the Bahai Faith.
A Bahai is a disciple of Baha'u'llah and his son Abdu'l-Baha. Baha'u'llah was a Persian nobleman who founded the Bahai Faith, a new religion teaching world unity. He was imprisoned and banished and exiled, until he was eventually sent to Akka in the north of Israel. There's a good wikipedia page on the Bahai Faith.
The Abrahamic faiths are Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Lutheranism is a form of Christianty. Therefore Lutheranism is an Abrahamic faith. That is an example of a classical syllogism.
Abrahamic faith
Lutheranism, Shia Islam, Orthodox Christianity.
NoAnswer:Islam is the faith that recognizes the value of the other Abrahamic traditions. Islam is the faith that insists upon protecting those other traditions.They teach you that Islam is intolerant. Quite untrue.
As of 2012, no country has a Bahá'í majority.