by jimwalton » Tue Feb 21, 2017 9:48 am
> God does not give people special treatment
You misunderstand. God is not giving David preferential treatment, but he is giving him personal treatment. David gets no free passes or any benefits based on partiality. When any person does wrong, they are accountable to God for it, whether they are king or commoner, prophet or peasant. God isn't playing favorites, and that's exactly why David gets rebuked and punished for his behavior. Just because he's king doesn't mean God turns a blind eye.
It's no different with the nation. When other nations go rogue, God judges them, but when they repent and fly right (like Nineveh in Jonah 3.10). But what happened to Israel, God's chosen people, when they went rogue? God judged them just the same. But when they repented and straightened out, God blessed them. It's a very consistent and fundamental concept of retributive justice: everyone gets what is fair and right for them to get.
> There is either justice or injustice...retribution principle.
You're right in a sense, and not right in another. Bad things happen all the time that are not "God punishing me." Just because something bad happens doesn't mean that. So your default mode (save the innocent, kill the sinner) is an expression of the retribution principle, and it's not valid. Sometimes people die and it has nothing to do with sin; sometimes people are saved and it has nothing to do with innocence. We can't look at this through the lens of the RP.
What is happening here with David and the baby are not an expression of the RP. It is a one-time occurrence that is used to make a point of judgment against David. Remember, David is being judged, not the baby (as you recognize, or at least repeated to me). In this case the baby had a fatal illness, and that situation was used by God to judge David. God didn't intervene, but God rarely intervenes in many such fatal illnesses, but those are not punishments for sin. Those are nature taking its course. In this case we also have nature taking its course, but God is using the event to make a theological point with David: "You are judged for your sin. The baby will die."
So God not intervening in this case is identified as a punishment. In the 8 gazillion other cases of God's not intervening, it's not.