by jimwalton » Sun Apr 25, 2021 1:32 pm
Excellent question. In a context of vibrant human life where free will is at play, there will always be ethical conflicts. We see it in our society in the conflict between religious freedom and sexual rights, and also in freedom of speech vs. saying hateful or dangerous things. Values and morals are eventually bound to conflict, and decisions must be made. Is there any decision that is perfect? Yes, ultimately, but in a situation where only two choices are given, the opportunity for a perfect decision is past. Now only poor choices are left.
Rather than evaluating God’s morality with a contrived dilemma designed to elicit condemnation, let’s (briefly) look at some real biblical situations.
Genesis 6: The Flood. People who don’t bother to think deeply condemn God for killing babies. “He had a moral dilemma: let the world be consumed by evil or to kill babies, so He chose to kill babies. Jerk!!” But that’s not the story. The story is that the world was corrupt beyond imagination, and evil was about to consume society. So (and here’s the difference), God raised up Noah as a preacher of righteousness, who told the people to change their ways or they would be destroyed, either by their own evil or by God in judgment (evil should be punished). The people gave God the finger and refused to change. Now, when the judgment comes, who is most responsible for the death of those babies? The people are. They could have changed, but didn’t. We see the same story at the end of Jonah 3, where because the people changed, God didn’t destroy them. It was the people who decided to call God’s bluff, but it was no bluff. So is this a “perfect” solution? “Perfect” is tough to define there.
Genesis 19: Sodom and Gomorrah. People who don’t bother to think deeply condemn God for condemning homosexuality. But look at what’s really going on here. It is a city of violent sexual abuse. They had had many opportunities to change their ways, and yet refused every one of them. Who is to blame, then, when judgment comes? God was even willing to forgive the entire city if 10 righteous people were in the whole city. Only 10. There were not. This was the people’s fault, not God’s.
The 10 plagues of Egypt and the “murder” of the firstborn. God had given them time after time, chance after chance, to repent, come clean, and do the right thing. They didn’t. So is God to blame for their own stupidity and rebellion? I don’t think so.
The book of Joshua: The Conquest of Canaan. God told Moses that each city should first be given an opportunity to surrender, and if they surrendered, they would be spared. Instead, the cities mounted war against Joshua. Is God to blame for their deaths?
See, there are always more than two choices. There are always mitigating circumstances. There are always efforts made by God to avoid “the worst scenario.” Always. That’s why these moral dilemmas are so misleading when it comes to analyzing God’s morality through them.
I would ask the courtesy that you take the time to read Jeremiah 18.1-12. It should take you only 4 minutes to read. In real life, and in relation to a real God and His real moralituy, it’s never as simple as “Are you going to kill one person or 5?”
Excellent question. In a context of vibrant human life where free will is at play, there will always be ethical conflicts. We see it in our society in the conflict between religious freedom and sexual rights, and also in freedom of speech vs. saying hateful or dangerous things. Values and morals are eventually bound to conflict, and decisions must be made. Is there any decision that is perfect? Yes, ultimately, but in a situation where only two choices are given, the opportunity for a perfect decision is past. Now only poor choices are left.
Rather than evaluating God’s morality with a contrived dilemma designed to elicit condemnation, let’s (briefly) look at some real biblical situations.
Genesis 6: The Flood. People who don’t bother to think deeply condemn God for killing babies. “He had a moral dilemma: let the world be consumed by evil or to kill babies, so He chose to kill babies. Jerk!!” But that’s not the story. The story is that the world was corrupt beyond imagination, and evil was about to consume society. So (and here’s the difference), God raised up Noah as a preacher of righteousness, who told the people to change their ways or they would be destroyed, either by their own evil or by God in judgment (evil should be punished). The people gave God the finger and refused to change. Now, when the judgment comes, who is most responsible for the death of those babies? The people are. They could have changed, but didn’t. We see the same story at the end of Jonah 3, where because the people changed, God didn’t destroy them. It was the people who decided to call God’s bluff, but it was no bluff. So is this a “perfect” solution? “Perfect” is tough to define there.
Genesis 19: Sodom and Gomorrah. People who don’t bother to think deeply condemn God for condemning homosexuality. But look at what’s really going on here. It is a city of violent sexual abuse. They had had many opportunities to change their ways, and yet refused every one of them. Who is to blame, then, when judgment comes? God was even willing to forgive the entire city if 10 righteous people were in the whole city. Only 10. There were not. This was the people’s fault, not God’s.
The 10 plagues of Egypt and the “murder” of the firstborn. God had given them time after time, chance after chance, to repent, come clean, and do the right thing. They didn’t. So is God to blame for their own stupidity and rebellion? I don’t think so.
The book of Joshua: The Conquest of Canaan. God told Moses that each city should first be given an opportunity to surrender, and if they surrendered, they would be spared. Instead, the cities mounted war against Joshua. Is God to blame for their deaths?
See, there are always more than two choices. There are always mitigating circumstances. There are always efforts made by God to avoid “the worst scenario.” Always. That’s why these moral dilemmas are so misleading when it comes to analyzing God’s morality through them.
I would ask the courtesy that you take the time to read Jeremiah 18.1-12. It should take you only 4 minutes to read. In real life, and in relation to a real God and His real moralituy, it’s never as simple as “Are you going to kill one person or 5?”