The Sabians (/ˈseɪbiənz/; Arabic: صابئة) of Middle Eastern tradition were a religious group mentioned three times in the Quran as a people of the Book, "the Jews, the Sabians, and the Christians". In the hadith, they were described merely as converts to Islam, but interest in the identity and history of the group increased over time. Discussions and investigations of the Sabians began to appear in later Islamic literature.
There has been much speculation as to the origins of the religious endonym from this practice. Judah Segal (1963) argued that the term Sābi'ūn derives from the Syriac root s-b-' , referring to conversion through submersion.
The Qur'an briefly mentions the Sabians in three places, with Hadith providing additional details as to who they were:
According to Muslim authors, Sabians followed the fourth book of Abrahamic tradition, the Zabur, which was given to the prophet and King David of ancient Israel, according to the Qur'an. The Zabur is identified by many modern scholars as the Psalms. Most of what is known of them comes from ibn Wahshiyya's The Nabatean Agriculture, and the translation of this by Maimonides.
This is the 'lectric
Lounge
No one's afraid to laugh
So c'mon, man,
Let me break your back
Talk 'bout the Metalin
And what's on tap,
What else you come here
What else could this be
about?
For me it's just
Waiting for the kid to come
Waiting for the kid to come
And I'm finding out what this
is about, yeah
Waiting for the kid to come
Let it be
Seventeen years
And the tradition, your dash
lost track
Everything comes back out (but you
can't hold back)
And this is like being alive (but
Falls right out of your mouth, yeah
(but you can't hold back)
Here at the 'lectric
Lounge
(outside between the
bands)
No one's afraid to laugh
And you get just what you come
to expect
You can stick a lot up your ass
cause for me it's just
Waiting for the kid to come
Waiting for the kid to come
And I'm finding out what this
is about
And I'm waiting for the kid to
come out