Franz Kafka: The Story of Abraham and Isaac
11 Feb 2009 | Posted By Dr JC. Igbodi
The implications of this story have confounded believers and nonbelievers for over two thousand years. A God who commands such a thing must be a cruel God, critics say, cruel and with a strange sense of humor. The philosopher Soren Kierkegaard sees the story as an illustration of the limitations of ethics. Franz Kafka (1883-1924) interprets the story in ways that are rather different from the traditional one. For one thing, he says, there was no need for any `leap of faith” in order for Abraham to accept the word of God
Reader Comments

