Thank you for your opinions.
For myself, I think the whole story expresses mental illness both in Abraham's willingness to murder his own son for presumably a voice in his head, and in the god who told Abraham to do such a thing and then says, "No, I was only kidding!" Either way, you have child abuse and mental cruelty to the extreme.
This set the tone for Abrahamic religionists to put their religious ideas ahead of everything else, including morality.
Hello, everyone. This is perhaps one of the most interesting topics anyone has introduced for discussion so far. Abraham "sacrificing" his son!!!
I think as 21st-century citizens, most of us are going to puke at the kind of thing Abraham decides to do in his efforts to honour God. Laying your son on an altar, killing and burning him. Alarm bells start ringing. Child abuse.
When I read this story as a child, it was in the Picture Bible, which showed Isaac as a grown-man (possibly a teenager, 17 or 18), rather than a little boy. That depiction has stayed with me, so I actually went to have a look in Genesis to see if there was anything said on Isaac's age at the time. "Child abuse" is still possible on teenagers, particularly if it started in childhood. Due to the adult-depiction of Isaac, I never really saw it as something bad.
The alarm bells are apparently still ringing, but I thought rather than state the obvious with regards to 21st-century thinking (child abuse), I'd like to describe what it might mean if we put this act in a different context.
First I think I might drop a warning. There might be a few controversial views here, but I just thought we might put things in context.
I believe the issue here is not solely about decency, dignity or morality, but also about
beliefs about decency, dignity and morality.
I think it's important to note that Abraham was not immersed in a modern, 21st-century culture. His conscience therefore, cannot be evaluated against "modern values," because modern values didn't exist at the time, and Abraham can't be accused of violating concepts upheld by modern values. Modern values didn't exist, and because Abraham could not have violated them due to their non-existence, nor did he violate the concepts that modern values uphold.
Modern values aren't "moral absolutes" but are more like "signposts" that highlight behaviours that should be encouraged and discouraged. That is where values come from -- it is an emphasis on what is to be encouraged and discouraged. "Child abuse" is a label we use to describe something we consider abhorrent because we don't want so-called "child abuse" in our society. It's a threat to the overall welfare and dignity of our 21st-century society. If this behaviour was not discouraged, it might go on unchecked. Think about what our "21st-century dream" might amount to. We'd have people building altars to God and burning their kids on them.
I don't see "modern values" as universal. Modern values simply highlight encouraged and discouraged behaviour in individuals in modern society. When a person goes against "modern values" their beliefs are seen as a "disease." They are disturbed people with defective minds. Their conscience has been extinguished.
But is it really right or reasonable to classify people who go against the "norm" in their way of thinking as "mentally diseased?" What do we say about gays, lesbians and homosexuals? Are they diseased and disturbed? People who practice "witchcraft"? Are people into religion disturbed? The track record of Abrahamic faiths hasn't been that pretty. Some would say that alignment with Abrahamic faiths is an unhealthy pursuit. But my faith isn't illegal. I am allowed to go to church. Moreover, not all of society thinks religion is a disease. Not everyone thinks I'm a diseased person just because I'm an adherent of a particular religion. Were the Chinese "diseased" because they bent and bound their women's feet into little stumps?
Modern values versus supposedly warped concepts? To me it's just ideology. It's like the Ideology of Race. The white man thought he was superior to all other cultures just because a group of people with a particular skin colour created an infrastructure/social system that developed theories of science that came to be adopted worldwide in the 21st-century. The white man has since reformed and humbled himself.
The theology extends beyond the physical. That is why I think it's understandable for people to believe sacrificing people like that is ok. It doesn't violate the innocence of a child if he/she understands the significance of it and if their soul is actually going somewhere meaningful and the act is worthwhile. Many of the Aztecs going up onto the altars to be sacrificed actually welcomed it.
I can understand how one might respond. The kid is being duped. Fooled by superstitious nonsense. There is no afterlife. The kid's innocence is being betrayed and violated because the beliefs motivating the act might not be true. If it's true it's ok, but if it's not true there is nothing we can do about it. We might be wrong in telling these people they believe in a lie. What if it's true? We just have to let those who believe what they believe to go on believing what they believe because the reality they see is important to them. I think it'd be rather arrogant to impose our perceptions of reality on someone else.
That is not to say I wouldn't discourage the behaviour. I would discourage it in a 21st-century environment, but in anything other than a 21st-century environment, I would probably accept that some cultural beliefs or world views can't be changed, or that my perception of reality is limited in scope.
That said, I wouldn't have stopped Abraham (going back in time) from doing it back then, though I would have stopped him today (him coming to the future). It was a different reality back then. And yes, I believe reality is subjective. Meaning is subjective. I don't believe people's deeds should be measured by "universal standards" and "absolute values." Deeds should be evaluated according to the reality one sees.
This kind of "child abuse," where a person sacrifices their kids on altars in an effort to honour God, is usually authorised by an
established religion. The daily sacrifice of 100 people by the Aztecs, for example, was authorised by an established religion. But Abraham wasn't a follower of an established religion. There was no church or synagogue. It wasn't something
systematically authorised by a religious establishment. We can reasonably say that someone who does this because they are systematically instructed to by a religious establishment to do so might be mentally disturbed, but what of someone who does it because it was something prompted from a personal relationship with God?
Ok, it's possible that Abraham, though not following instructions from a religious establishment, and not being systematically instructed to sacrifice his son might then have had hallucinations in which he was told to do so. But as adherents of the Abrahamic faiths, we also appreciate the possibility that there is a realm beyond the physical -- something supernatural.
Here I would like to make a distinction between superstitious beliefs and an open-minded search for God. Superstitious beliefs are systematically confined to a logical framework and an individual acting under superstitious beliefs acts as one systematically manipulated by that logic. Abraham either had an open-minded, personal relationship with God, contemplating and speculating about what He wanted, ready to listen; or he could have been someone systematically bound and manipulated by superstitious logic.
Several points here. Let's assume, from the evidence given in Genesis:
1) Abraham was acting independently (apart from being instructed by God), and was not receiving instructions from a priest. His actions were not systematically authorised by a religious establishment.
2) Abraham had a personal, open-minded relationship with God. His actions were not inspired by manipulative, superstitious logic.
Possible alternative situation(s):
1) There was a priest around that was not documented in Genesis. Abraham was not instructed by God to perform the act, but by a priest.
2) Abraham was acting under superstitions
3) Abraham invented his own religion and this was part of it
4) Abraham was mentally disturbed