Categories: In Print / Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks
The Revolution That Began With The Akeida
‘Take your son, your only son, the one you love – Isaac – and go to the land of Moriah. Offer him there as a burnt offering on a mountain I will show you.’ (Gen. 22:2)
Thus begins one of the most famous episodes in the Torah, but also one of the most morally problematic. The conventional reading of this passage is that Abraham was being asked to show that his love for G-d was supreme. He would show this by being willing to sacrifice the son for whom he had spent a lifetime waiting.
Why did G-d need to “test” Abraham, given that He knows the human heart better than we know it ourselves? Maimonides in Guide for the Perplexed answers that G-d did not need Abraham to prove his love for Him. Rather the test was meant to establish for all time how far the fear and love of G-d must go.
The philosopher Kierkegaard made the point that the general rules of ethics are universal while the love of G-d is particular as an I-Thou personal relationship. What Abraham underwent during the trial was, says Kierkegaard, a “suspension of the ethical,” a willingness to let the I-Thou love of G-d overrule the universal principles that bind humans to one another.
Rav Soloveitchik explained the Binding of Isaac episode in terms of his well-known characterization of the religious life as a dialectic between victory and defeat, majesty and humility, man-the-creative-master and man-the-obedient-servant. There are times when “G-d tells man to withdraw from whatever man desires the most.”[4] We must experience defeat as well as victory. Thus the Binding of Isaac was not a once-only episode but rather a paradigm for the religious life as a whole. Wherever we have passionate desire – eating, drinking, physical relationship – there the Torah places limits on the satisfaction of desire. Precisely because we pride ourselves on the power of reason, the Torah includes chukim, statutes, that are impenetrable to reason.
However, I want to argue for a different interpretation, since there are “seventy faces to the Torah.” One test of the validity of an interpretation is whether it coheres with the rest of the Torah, Tanach, and Judaism as a whole. There are four problems with the conventional reading:
- We know from Tanach and independent evidence that the willingness to offer up your child as a sacrifice was not rare in the ancient world. It was commonplace. It was a pagan practice.
- Child sacrifice is regarded with horror throughout Tanach. Micah asks rhetorically, “Shall I give my firstborn for my sin, the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul?” (Mic. 6:7), and replies, “He has shown you, O man, what is good. And what does the Lord require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and to walk humbly with your G-d.” (Mic. 6:8).
- How could Abraham serve as a role model if what he was prepared to do is what his descendants were commanded not to do? G-d says of Abraham, “For I have chosen him so that he will instruct his children and his household after him to keep the way of the L-rd by doing what is right and just.” How could he serve as a model father if he was willing to sacrifice his child? On the contrary, he should have said to G-d: “If you want me to prove to You how much I love You, then take me as a sacrifice, not my child.”
- As Jews – indeed as humans – we must reject Kierkegaard’s principle of “suspension of the ethical.” This is an idea that gives carte blanche to religious fanatics to commit crimes in the name of G-d. It is the logic of the Inquisition and the suicide bomber. It is not the logic of Judaism rightly understood. G-d does not ask us to be unethical. We may not always understand ethics from G-d’s perspective but we believe that “He is the Rock, His works are perfect; all His ways are just” (Deut. 32:4).


July 3, 2026 






