Lol, is this real?
h/t @HPluckrosepic.twitter.com/egBNqSQgCq
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Yeah, if anything can be a metaphor for anything you want, this is literally true.
Maybe choose the one that doesn't involve murdering your kid.
There's nothing intrinsic to this story that makes Abraham's behavior virtuous. You have to arbitrarily import it.
I'm sorry to hear about your story but it doesn't seem to be answering my Q: Why is killing the kid the virtuous decision in your metaphor?
And please recognize, also, that this metaphor doesn't intrinsically exist in the story. You're making it up to suit your narrative.
Its not meant to represent two competing moral choices. Obeying God is the only moral choice. This lasted right up to the modern period.
Here, in the early 15th century, Margery Kempe is showing that she'd let her husband be murdered rather than break a vow to God.pic.twitter.com/IiSZcFuGhW
Is the moral "Don't be so certain about your metaphysical beliefs."? That'd be cool.
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