Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
I'm not aware of any non-Abrahamic religions that are currently sacrificing humans.The very good of the Abrahamic religions is this:
It is no human sacrifice. Many pegan religons sacrified humans to their gods. Judaism, christianity and islam is totaly against this
God did not want Abraham to sacrifice his son.I'm not aware of any non-Abrahamic religions that are currently sacrificing humans.
Also, didn't God tell Abraham to sacrifice his son Isaac?
I didn't say he wanted him to. I said he told him to.God did not want Abraham to sacrifice his son.
Because of this a angel of the lord said to abraham:
But the angel of the Lord called out to him from heaven, “Abraham! Abraham!”
“Here I am,” he replied.
12 “Do not lay a hand on the boy,” he said. “Do not do anything to him
I wrote many pagan religions sacfrified humans to their gods in the past. I did not say that all pagan religions did itOh, great, I love it when folks pull out the overused, oversimplified, and misunderstood human sacrifice trope. Just love it.
Excuse me, I have to go ready the altar for another human sacrifice.
I'm not aware of any non-Abrahamic religions that are currently sacrificing humans.
Also, didn't God tell Abraham to sacrifice his son Isaac?
Yes. Another account of human sacrifice in the Bible to Yahweh was Jephthah's daughter
According to the rest of that Wikipedia article, many figures have held the opinion that Jephthah’s daughter was not offered in that sense but in a different way that involved not dying nor even being injured.
Christianity is predicated on a human sacrifice. Christ was allegedly sacrificed to appease a god. That's no different from an Aztec ripping out a beating heart or dropping children into volcanoes. Worse, it's called an act of love.The very good of the Abrahamic religions is this:
It is no human sacrifice.
This is true, but the scriptures are very clear
I don’t really have anything to gain or lose, but I would wonder what word is translated as ‘burnt offering’ and how it is used elsewhere in the texts. Even if it does rightly translate as ‘burnt offering,’ I would wonder if people in that culture ever used it metaphorically.
The very good of the Abrahamic religions is this:
It is no human sacrifice. In the past many pegan religons sacrified humans to their gods. Judaism, christianity and islam is totaly against this
Christianity is predicated on a human sacrifice. Christ was allegedly sacrificed to appease a god. That's no different from an Aztec ripping out a beating heart or dropping children into volcanoes. Worse, it's called an act of love.
Nowhere in Christian scriptures does it say that people should make human sacrificesChristianity is predicated on a human sacrifice. Christ was allegedly sacrificed to appease a god. That's no different from an Aztec ripping out a beating heart or dropping children into volcanoes. Worse, it's called an act of love.
This is kind of true. We kind of do it but not for God or gods, but for living an easier life (abortion).The very good of the Abrahamic religions is this:
It is no human sacrifice. In the past many pegan religons sacrified humans to their gods. Judaism, christianity and islam is totaly against this
Or some folks take exception to the suggestion that "no human sacrifice" is somehow unique to Abrahamic religions.The only thing that appears incontrovertible is that, in a thread titled "the good of the Abrahamic religions," some folks feel compelled to disparage them, and that strikes me as more than a little sad.
It's easier to act moral with morality lit and light bright. Without it lit, what type of religions would the world be in?Or some folks take exception to the suggestion that "no human sacrifice" is somehow unique to Abrahamic religions.