by jimwalton » Tue Mar 14, 2017 9:59 am
> You have just defended killing a whole people because of the actions of their leaders, killing people because they follow a different religion, and killing people because of something their ancestors did.
I'm sorry to discover that you didn't read what I said. In these three examples, (1) no whole population was killed because of the actions of their leaders, (2) no people were killed because of something their ancestors did. I don't know where you even got these claims. What I said was that all of the Egyptians were complicit in crimes against humanity, and that the Amalekites leaders were killed because they were just as guilty as their ancestors. So both of those statements are false. As far as people being killed because they followed a different religion, yes. The lies of false religion have eternal consequences. This is not just a matter of he-said-she-said, or of the opinions of faith, but of objective truth with eternal consequences. The lies that ruin civilizations and destroy people should be stopped in their tracks. It's why the Allies went to war against Hitler, to name one.
> If you believe in an all-powerful god, then that god could have accomplished whatever it wanted without killing anybody.
You don't seem to have done your homework. First of all, most of the Conquest was defensive on the part of the Israelites, not offensive. When they entered the land they were attacked by a coalition from the south, and they defended themselves and won. Then they were attacked by a coalition from the north, and they defended themselves and won. After that, when the Israelites approached cities, they first asked the city to surrender, and if they city surrendered, that population would become part of Israel. If they wouldn't surrender, they were to be given time to vacate the city and peacefully leave the territory. It is God's repeated plan (expressed more than a dozen times), that the Canaanites be driven from the land, not that they be killed. War was only the final straw, when all efforts in other directions proved fruitless.
> And you admit that you believe that infanticide is a moral good.
I'm sorry that you're not reading me accurately. I did no such thing. Death in the Bible is not so much a judgment as a wage (Rom. 6.23a). People deserve death because of their own actions. If you've studied the problem of evil and the existence of God (which I'll have to assume you were responsible enough to do), you know that it has been solidly reasoned that God can be all-powerful and all good and that suffering, pain, and death still be realities. Death is a necessary state of affairs, and is perceived as a transition, not as an evil. God can even use suffering, pain, and death to accomplish his purposes without being personally unjust. Death is not the cessation of life (biblically, technically, there is no such thing); death is earned recompense. Death is the denial of God's created order. Sin is an imbalance that must be righted.
> You have just defended killing a whole people because of the actions of their leaders, killing people because they follow a different religion, and killing people because of something their ancestors did.
I'm sorry to discover that you didn't read what I said. In these three examples, (1) no whole population was killed because of the actions of their leaders, (2) no people were killed because of something their ancestors did. I don't know where you even got these claims. What I said was that all of the Egyptians were complicit in crimes against humanity, and that the Amalekites leaders were killed because they were just as guilty as their ancestors. So both of those statements are false. As far as people being killed because they followed a different religion, yes. The lies of false religion have eternal consequences. This is not just a matter of he-said-she-said, or of the opinions of faith, but of objective truth with eternal consequences. The lies that ruin civilizations and destroy people should be stopped in their tracks. It's why the Allies went to war against Hitler, to name one.
> If you believe in an all-powerful god, then that god could have accomplished whatever it wanted without killing anybody.
You don't seem to have done your homework. First of all, most of the Conquest was defensive on the part of the Israelites, not offensive. When they entered the land they were attacked by a coalition from the south, and they defended themselves and won. Then they were attacked by a coalition from the north, and they defended themselves and won. After that, when the Israelites approached cities, they first asked the city to surrender, and if they city surrendered, that population would become part of Israel. If they wouldn't surrender, they were to be given time to vacate the city and peacefully leave the territory. It is God's repeated plan (expressed more than a dozen times), that the Canaanites be driven from the land, not that they be killed. War was only the final straw, when all efforts in other directions proved fruitless.
> And you admit that you believe that infanticide is a moral good.
I'm sorry that you're not reading me accurately. I did no such thing. Death in the Bible is not so much a judgment as a wage (Rom. 6.23a). People deserve death because of their own actions. If you've studied the problem of evil and the existence of God (which I'll have to assume you were responsible enough to do), you know that it has been solidly reasoned that God can be all-powerful and all good and that suffering, pain, and death still be realities. Death is a necessary state of affairs, and is perceived as a transition, not as an evil. God can even use suffering, pain, and death to accomplish his purposes without being personally unjust. Death is not the cessation of life (biblically, technically, there is no such thing); death is earned recompense. Death is the denial of God's created order. Sin is an imbalance that must be righted.