God commanded Abraham to offer his son Isaac as a burnt
offering on a mountain in Moriah. Most of us know the story very well.
And yet over the generations since the account was written down, readers continue to express outrage and
doubt, both about the character of a God who would make such a demand, and especially about the character of any man who would comply with it. Even Søren Kierkegaard had great difficulty with the passage, referring
to the act as an “ethical
rupture”. More recently, James Goodman writes, “Could there be better evidence that God is a
tyrant, Abraham a sycophant and Isaac an utterly abused child?”