Posted on 01/26/2015 7:58:42 AM PST by SeekAndFind
Does Christianity call for human sacrifice?
When you put the question like that, the instinctive response of any given Christian would tend toward a resounding no. After all, human sacrifice is a barbaric act which no rational person could condone. We believers like to regard ourselves as rational.
Yet, a cursory examination of popular Christian doctrine suggests that human sacrifice to one degree or another stands as a central tenet of the faith. In his book Loving Life: The Morality of Self-Interest and the Facts that Support It, author Craig Biddle cites religionists including many prominent Christian theologians to demonstrate that religion calls upon man to sacrifice his own interests to an alleged God.
As a Christian, I find Biddles observations compelling. Having considered them within the broader context of Ayn Rands Objectivist philosophy for several years, I have come to question the manner in which Christian teachers present the topic of sacrifice. Increasingly, I have come under the conviction that Christendom has interpreted sacrifice incorrectly. In my view, it is because Christendom has misinterpreted sacrifice that critics like Biddle are able to present Christianity as force for evil rather than good.
With this introductory essay, I invite you to join me in an ongoing exploration of Christian doctrine and the challenges brought against it. My objective, as we proceed week after week, will be to correct what I have come to regard as a doctrinal error causing tremendous confusion within the church and posing a stumbling block for seekers and believers alike. To be clear, my claim is not that Gods Word is wrong, but that our reading of it has been. I hope to demonstrate that my altered view of sacrifice is the view actually taught within scripture.
Lets begin with the problem, as Biddle lays it out. In the first chapter of Loving Life, which Biddle titles Religion vs. Subjectivism: Why Neither Will Do, we are presented with a false dichotomy between a morality dictated by divine whim or one divined by human whim. Biddle writes:
Whatever their disagreements, both sides of this argument accept the idea that your basic moral choice is to be guided either by faith or by feelings. In other words, both sides agree that your choice is: religion or subjectivism.
Aiming to demonstrate why either choice leads to human suffering, Biddle begins with a critique of religion:
Religions basic moral tenet is: Dont place your self, your personal values, your own interests, your will, above those of Gods. Rather, you should live to glorify Him, to obey His commands, to fulfill His higher purpose. To do otherwise to act on behalf of your own selfish concerns as if your life were an end in itself is to sin. As the religious scholar John Stott declares: Gods order is that we put him first, others next, and self last. Sin is the reversal of the order.
According to religion, being moral consists not in pursuing your own interests, but in self-sacrificially serving God. Theologian and rabbi Abraham Heschel expresses this tenet as follows: The essence and greatness of man do not lie in his ability to please his ego, to satisfy his needs, but rather in his ability to stand above his ego, to ignore his own needs, to sacrifice his own interests for the sake of the holy.
It should be said at this point that, as a Christian, I harbor no interest or burden to defend religion as such. It is my specific Christian worldview, and not a general notion of any god or faith, which I aim to affirm.
Nevertheless, Heschels comment could just as easily have come from a Christian theologian as from a Jewish rabbi. Christianity and Judaism share an Abrahamic root. Biddle presents the story of how Abraham acted in obedience to Gods command to sacrifice his son Isaac as a practical example of Heschels expressed moral claim.
Was Abrahams choice moral? Should he have done it? Would you do it? What do religionists say about this? According to Saint Augustine: The obedience of Abraham is rightly regarded as magnificent precisely because the killing of his son was a command so difficult to obey
Magnificent?
As shocking as Augustines position may be, it is the only stance a dedicated religionist can take on the issue, because the only alternative is to challenge the alleged authority of God, and that is the cardinal religious no-no
Thus, if God wills that a man should kill his son, then, regardless of what the man thinks, he should do it.
In that context, I ask once more: does Christianity call for human sacrifice? Are believers called to surrender their interests and judgment to the whim of God? If God called upon you to kill your son or wipe out a village or slaughter adulterers, would you do it? Why or why not?
These are not questions which believers can ignore. They cannot be sufficiently addressed by deferring to inarticulate notions of evolving doctrine or civilized interpretation. Christians believe that the same God who commanded the Israelites to stone adulterers in the desert later told an adulteress, Neither then do I condemn you. How do we reconcile that?
As we continue in this series, the aim will be to approach such questions informed by objective morality, which is to say those moral principles which can be rationally derived from the facts we perceive in reality. The task is not to reconcile Objectivism with Christianity an impossible task. Rather, we will note how the truths which Rand and her disciples have discerned can serve to focus the Christian worldview and help believers understand the Gospel better.
Until next time, ponder this: did God create us to die, or did God create us to live?
There's his first problem right there. Reading this, I know that there is no reason why I should grant this guy any credibility whatsoever.
Stephen Quayle is more helpful
Read the book of Hebrews, and you’ll see that Christianity’s only human sacrifice, Jesus Christ, is better.
RE: Stephen Quayle is more helpful
What specific work of his do you recommend?
RE: Read the book of Hebrews, and youll see that Christianitys only human sacrifice, Jesus Christ, is better.
That was God doing a SELF-SACRIFICE.
> RE: Read the book of Hebrews, and youll see that Christianitys only human sacrifice, Jesus Christ, is better.
>
> That was God doing a SELF-SACRIFICE.
In the person of Jesus Christ, who was/is a human, and therefore qualifies as “human sacrifice”.
some thoughts:
1) God’s response after stopping Abraham was, “Now I know that you fear me.” That would appear to be the purpose of the story, not the idea of human sacrifice that we think it is about. Fear of God is something we do not understand today.
2) I pray I am never put to that test but if so, I get the grace to what is right.
3) The story illustrates what God Him self did and completed for us.
4) Remember the procedure was to cut the throat and let the sacrifice bleed to death, a particularly gruesome process to teach us to respect life, and again illustrates the cross.
The point that gd was trying to make with Abraham was that He does not want human sacrifice. That He wouldn’t do that. That, if someone asks this of you, they are misleading you.
Abraham’s obedience was a good thing, but the larger point was that human sacrifice is not a part of gd’s thing.
“Having considered them within the broader context of Ayn Rands Objectivist philosophy for several years, I have come to question the manner in which Christian teachers...”
This is comedy not theology
He is talking about all types of sacrifice....your own personal interests, wishes, needs, desires, etc.
Another book in a similar vein: http://www.amazon.com/Dark-Passages-Bible-Engaging-Scripture/dp/0813221560
This is a good but complex question.
First, we know that God is Good in His Essence.
Second, God is categorically different from us. IOW, God is not a larger version of man. While we have no right to take innocent human life, God does have that right, since He is the Author of life.
Thirdly, in the Old Testament, God acted in different ways, such as the Author of eternal Divine Law (the Ten Commandments) but also as the Author of temporal, pastoral laws that would pass away (dietary laws, etc.)
Finally, there is the issue of private revelation. How do I know if God is really issuing a private command to me? How do I know whether I’m delusional? For Catholics, this question is simplified, since a private revelation cannot contradict Church Teaching.
The question is worthy of a book-length response.
This is a fairly twisted example.
Abraham had previously received a promise from God that through his seed would come a people innumerable as the stars in the sky. And He had received the promise that Isaac was that seed.
So, Abraham did not know how God was going to do it, when he received the command to sacrifice his beloved son Isaac - but he knew that God cannot lie (The only thing that God cannot do).
Hebrews 11
17 By faith Abraham, when he was tried, offered up Isaac: and he that had received the promises offered up his only begotten son,
18 Of whom it was said, That in Isaac shall thy seed be called:
19 Accounting that God was able to raise him up, even from the dead; from whence also he received him in a figure.
So sure, there had to be apprehension, and uncertainty, but he knew God cannot lie, and that therefore he should expect some miraculous deliverance. This was hinted at on his walk up that mountain with his son Isaac:
Genesis 22
7 And Isaac spake unto Abraham his father, and said, My father: and he said, Here am I, my son. And he said, Behold the fire and the wood: but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?
8 And Abraham said, My son, God will provide himself a lamb for a burnt offering: so they went both of them together.
And not only was there the deliverance that he fully expected, this was a telescopic view of 2000 years in the future when God would indeed provide Himself a lamb - His only Begotten Son - for a burnt offering, on that very same Mount Moriah.
The answer is the only sacrifice that God required was His own Son. The story of Abraham and Isaac just prefigured that great sacrifice, God never intended Isaac to be sacrificed.
Objectivism is simply another form of atheism.
Judging God by human standards...
so...
“you will know good and evil” of the author.
Semantic tripe.
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