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Mike_from_NJ
Guest
When we elect leaders we understand that they may do things which could affect is. If I vote for person X he may cut a program that supports the place where I work. If I instead vote for person Y he may raises my taxes, which would hurt me in other ways. It’s a give and take. Yet no one is voting to give up their lives, their very being. No call for a king deserves such disproportionate slaughter.Aah, but this is what the people wanted! They begged for a king, which means all that you’ve mentioned and more! Samuel told them, in gory detail, what it meant to have a king, and they begged to have one anyway! And, they literally and explicitly assented to David’s leadership over them! In other words, they gave David the proxy to act on their behalf! And so… his sin is their sin.
Let’s also consider who demanded that there be a king. First there was Saul (who reigned for 40 years) followed by David (who also reigned for 40 years). I don’t know where the census event comes in David’s reign, but it’s likely a vast majority of the people who call for a king before Saul reigned were dead by the time God got angry for missing out on some shekels.
I don’t think that a person who voted for a sheriff who didn’t catch a certain criminal deserves to have his kid murdered later by that same criminal. We all do things that in turn could lead to something (or more accurately something that leads to something that leads to something, etc.), but brutal and pestilent death is clearly not a reasonable (or sane) punishment for one’s leader neglecting to give God his monetary cut. God knows where I am if he wants a lesson in morals.We disagree on the “no fault of their own” part. Sadly, since this is the core of your argument, it seems we won’t reach agreement on this point.![]()