Abraham
God told Abraham to kill his son and offer him up as a burnt offering. He was testing Abraham and Abraham failed miserably. He dutifully gathered up firewood and he and Isaac headed up the mountain. When Isaac asked where was the lamb, Abraham did not exactly lie, but he wasn’t telling the whole truth when he responded, “God will provide.” He laid Isaac on the unlit pyre, raised a knife to kill him and God intervened, and blessed Abraham for his obedience. [see Genesis Chapter 22]
What a failure! Abraham should have said, “No, Lord, I am not going to do this, are you going to make me burn in hell for all eternity? Evidently my moral code is more stringent than yours, because I will not kill my innocent son. What kind of god are you to ask me to do this thing?
Either way, God must have gotten the message because he later wrote in Deuteronomy 18:10,12 There shall not be found among you anyone who burns his son or his daughter as his offering,…for whoever does these things is an abomination to the Lord;
Instead of blessing Abraham, God should have blessed Isaac for not throwing his father on the pyre. I wonder what their trip down the mountain was like – do you think God thought about what his little test would do to the father-son relationship?
The moral of the story is that one doesn’t need religion to formulate a moral code.
Very true. Japheth did in fact murder his daughter with gods consent as a sacrifice to said god.
The story is worse than that! Jephthah's teenage daughter was murdered at the hands of her father because he made a promise to God that if those pesky heathen neighbors, the Ammonites, were delivered into Jepththah's hands, whatever came out of his door upon his returning from battle, would be sacrificed. One wonders what he expected to come out of his house ... his wife, his servant, his dog? Alas, his only child and daughter, so happy to see him, came bounding and dancing out of her house to greet him, or so the story goes.
But where was that laggard angel who'd stopped Abraham from sacrificing Isaac? And where was the damn goat? Where is God in all of this? Why didn't this all-knowing and all-loving God, this supposed moral and loving creator, release Jephthah from his promise? And what does this story actually teach us? That young boys are more precious to God than young girls? That God is honored by human sacrifice? These human sacrifice stories are antecedents Christianity, a faith founded entirely on the most violent of acts, and whose symbol is a Roman tool of execution.
Thanx for that. For reference, it is in Judges 11:30-40. I guess God waived the restriction on burnt sacrificing that he had issued in Deuteronomy.