R
rossum
Guest
Your version of innocence differs from mine then. If someone has not comitted any crime then they are innocent.I didn’t mean babies who couldn’t even walk could commit crimes. Innocence goes a little deeper than that.
Does a one week old embryo have enough indoctrination to warrant killing it? Does a one week old baby have enough indoctrination to warrant killing it? At what age do you suggest that the police sieze the indoctrinated children of race-hate parents in order to execute the children? You are not making a good argument here.If Hitler had children and he was indoctrinating them with hate for everyone non-Aryan then they would be able to inflict severe evil on the world by continuing his policies. The elimination of evil should include the seeds too.
I was holding that one in reserve. Another good one is forty-two children being torn apart by bears for calling a prophet “baldy”: [2 Kings 2:23-24]. Overreaction or what. Another obvious example is Job, whom God allows to suffer at Satan’s hands despite not having done anything wrong.But, you and StA are missing the big one. The flood. Now that is mass murder. All the other stuff pales by comparison.
Irrelevant. The question in this subthread was about where God causes suffering to innocents:Some things we don’t know - now God sent His only son to unlock the gates of heaven. This is a significant event for more than one reason. We ask - well what happened to all the people before they were opened? It poses some interesting possibilities. Perhaps God removed souls from this earth that were not capable of experiencing Him fully. Perhaps what we view through our modern lens as brutal and murderous was mercy. We do not know what became of those souls. Perhaps God exhibited love and mercy to them is some way unknown to us.
Your point here is irrelevant to that question.Could you please share where it is in the Bible that God inflicts sufferring on the innocent?
rossum