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Review: Abraham and his Son

Tackling the most disturbing divine command

October 29, 2015 12:47
Sacrificio di Isacco (Binding of Isaac) by 17th-century artist Filippo Abbiati

BySimon Rocker, Simon Rocker

1 min read

By James Goodman
Sandstone Press, £16.99

The Binding of Isaac, Abraham's near-sacrifice of his son, is one of the Bible's most iconic episodes. It is read from the Torah over the High Holy Days and even in the daily morning liturgy in some prayer books. Traditionally, the Akedah, as it is called in Hebrew, stands as an emblem of heroic devotion, of selfless obedience to the call of God.

But nagging doubts remain. Why would God want to test the patriarch to the point of asking him to yield up his son? Why did Abraham, who boldly challenged God over the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah, remain mute in the face of such a monstrous request?

Into the fertile territory between religious idealism and human misgiving steps American creative writing professor James Goodman. He delves into the treatment of the story down the ages - how it was explained and referenced in the Talmud and apocrypha, by Christian commentators and Muslim exegetes, in medieval mystery plays and baroque paintings, through to the philosopher Soren Kierkegaard, the novelist A B Yehoshua and even Bob Dylan.