honorentheos wrote:I'm curious what you think about other alternative hypothesis' from the JEDP evaluation of the Abraham account? For example, that Abraham may have decided on his own to sacrifice the ram when he saw it in the thicket and the second message of the angel being added to make it appear that God brought this about rather than it being an act of disobedience on Abraham's part?
Is it your view that the most compelling evidence comes from the return of Abraham without mentioning Issac? or is there other information embedded in the accounts as they break down between authors that you feel push us in your direction?
Morley wrote:I'd be interested to hear your (and your Reb's) point of view on this, too. I always took the Abraham/Isaac/ram story to be an apocryphal narrative about the end of human sacrifice among the Israelites.
I’d be happy to opine, but I want to preface this with my total lack of qualifications on this subject, I’ve got rudimentary training in Biblical and Mishna Hebrew with a scant grasp on middot like Rabbi Ishmael’s 13 principles of interpretation. Anything I’ve learned about modern biblical criticism is self taught. This is Maklelan’s house so to speak, I just muddy up the carpet in the doorway.
I think Genesis 22 is an E story, it opens up with Abraham being addressed by Elohim directly, with Elohim being used in verses 1,3 and 9. Right before a description of Abraham killing Isaac, an angel if YHWH stops him, which to me is the fingerprints of an editor. When Elohim addresses Abraham, he doesn’t say “take” (la kach) but the text literally says “please take” which suggests to me that this request from Elohim wasn’t some outrageous demand that Abraham struggled with, but more something that was expected, not an amazing trial of faith that Nightlion reads.
The idea of sacrificing your child to God isn’t a foreign idea either. In the 2nd Kings chapter 3, the king of Moab Mesha sacrifices his son at the last moment in battle against Israel and Judah to secure victory (there is actually a stele discovered that marks the occasion). Historically, if Mesha really sacrificed his son, it probably would have been to Chemosh, but in Rashi’s commentary, he says that that the word for “on the wall” (kow’man) is missing a waw indicating that Mesha worshipped the sun.
Also, there is Jephthah sacrifices his daughter, and some scholars feel mention of “Topeth” in Isaiah and elsewhere shows Israelite activity in human sacrifice. To be fair, the idea of a ram in the thicket isn’t an anachronism, there are two Sumerian statues that depict some kind of animal tied to a bush, so take that for what it’s worth.
The Midrash I mentioned earlier comes from Ta’an 16a (and I want to say Tosafot) has this really depressing Haggadah about the question of why people put ashes on their heads during a public fast. It’s supposed to be a tribute to the ashes of Isaac, whom Abraham killed and offered up as a holocaust and those ashes provide extra merit and atonement for Israel (Isaac was later restored to life somehow)*. I know in medieval times, this story had special relevance when Jewish parents killed themselves and children to escape torture and conversion.
Sorry to prattle on like that, I almost went into my disagreements with Kierkegaard’s Fear and Trembling. I hope this was helpful.
*- when I wrote this sentence, I could just see all those arm chair theologians over at MD&D licking their collective chops at such a chance to draw wild and stupid parallels between Rabbinic commentary and their own pet ideas.