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When a person goes to a doctor to excise a tumor does the doctor only remove part of it?
Oh, I thought he did it. Have not read it in years. I’ll have to read it again.Perhaps you should read 1 Samuel 15 more closely. The Lord did not kill everything. The Lord commanded Saul to do so, and Saul did not do it.
Perhaps!Openmind77, again, I simply don’t understand how you can be so sure and certain of the nature of God, but you are not Christian? You have made claims such as “I’m sure . . .” and “there is absolutely no way . . . “ in describing what God can and cannot do and what God is or is not. Perhaps you have divinely infused knowledge about the nature of God that far exceeds what mortal man can comprehend? …
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Oh, so God is a moral relativist? I see.You’re ignoring the context of war vs the context of everyday life…
In light of the original question, wouldn’t it be a danger to the Israelites to kill the Amalekite prenant woman as much as one having or preforming an abortion?I think most of you guys are evading the question…
If you look at the topic at hand you have to equate the two situations just in what it relates to the innocent.
If you read Jimmy Akin’s blog too literally you could think that abortion is actually “good”, because the babies, which are innocent, would surely go to Heaven/Limbo.
The issue here is that Christians are not just worried at what happens to the child that gets aborted, but about the women that aborted, killing their own child, (and the doctors and nurses involved as well). Christians are judged if they did not warn their bretheren that what they are doing is bad for them, and that is why abortion is bad. It does commit a great injustice towards the baby that God may in His infinite mercy heal through bringing to Him the babies, but it also hurts all the people involved in a very deep sense that cannot get healed easily. Just because God is merciful doesn’t mean that we should abuse His mercy. He wants us to take part in Him… all of us.
Just my 2 cents.
God bless,
D.
In this case it would have been OK for Jesus to commit adultery, get drunk, sing loudly, and pass out in the temple. Invoking that principle that he is after all God.The Natural Law is for man, not for God. His actions do not invalidate it, not that they violate them anyway.
Harem warfare was the way of the land back then. This is the complete destruction of opposing tribes. Whole cultures had to be destroyed so as to not lead Israel astray. We see Israel fall away and return to God on numerous occasions. The neighbouring tribes with their own beliefs would have simply led Israel astray once again.
Remember that God’s covenant was not with anyone but Israel at this time. They were His people and He would protect them.
Remember Jesus’ teaching on divorce. God allowed divorce because the hearts of the Israelites were hard. In the same way, harem warfare was allowed because of the cultures and ingrained societal thinking of the time.
The same logic cannot be applied to couples having an abortion for the simple fact that there is a difference between warfare and everyday life.
By your logic, the warfare permitted by God would also make it okay for us to kill our neighbour and kill our neighbour’s cattle etc. There is a clear difference between warfare and how we live our lives and the morality involved.
Killing of an enemy in warfare is not murder, and never has been.
I don’t know, but I would prefer the story if it were metaphorical.Akin says that God could make it up to the innocent Amalekites by giving them heaven. That applies just as well to abortion. He also says that perhaps the whole thing is metaphorical, but does God need a story where he explicitly commands the wiping out of infants and children, and implicitly commands the wiping out of pregnant women, to make his point? That really confuses matters if God also wants to condemn abortion, and the Bible says that God is not the author of confusion.
This is a terribly vexing question if the asker sees God as merely a highly capable man with a big stick and bully pulpit. But if you understand God as someone outside of time and space itself able to know the past, present and future simultaneously and even able to see how intervention at particular times will affect the entire course of history, the answer becomes nearly trivial.So if you believe that God prohibits abortion, how can you reconcile that with God’s actions in the Bible? There seems to be two alternatives: either God is guilty of murder because he commanded abortion, or abortion is not always murder because it might be the will of God.
Jesus was a man, even though he was God also. BTW, what would be wrong with singing loudly?In this case it would have been OK for Jesus to commit adultery, get drunk, sing loudly, and pass out in the temple. Invoking that principle that he is after all God.
I’m not having a go at you, but honestly, this is the stock-standard “do as I say, not as I do” rhetoric that is easily dismissed and has no credibility as being a valid point.
I am not implying that God is wrong or what not, just that the argument you put forth is nonsensical in many aspects and can easily be taken apart with a few scenarios.
You mean actions and decrees and commandments are relative to their times?How can you be against your 12-year-old daughter having sex when you slept with your wife last night? Ahh, because some actions are appropriate to certain times and places and circumstances and even people, and the same actions inappropriate with respect to other times and places and circumstances and people.
That’s like me saying that my wife is a terror and will tear you a new one as soon as look at you but the mother of my children is kind, generous and loving. Can I possibly be talking about the same person?I don’t think you understand Jesus. God will do more than destroy bodies. He destroys souls. His wrath is real too. God can be merciless if he chooses to be. Jesus says those who are merciful will receive mercy.
Your contributions are great OM.I definitely don’t believe in a literal hell (with fire and brimstone etc). God does not destroy any souls either. He is never merciless - such is not the God that Jesus described. Hell is someplace that we send ourselves, God does not send us there. (However I don’t believe in eternal Hell either - but that is definitely off-topic - lets just stick to the deaths God is being accused of ordering).
The God that Jesus described and preached is infinitely loving, infinitely merciful and infinitely kind - there is absolutely no way that he ordered any massacres of anybody, least of all of women and children (we can assume the children were merciful per your requirement). These are just stories told by humans to justify their own evil acts - they claim God ordered them to commit these atrocities.when they committed them on their own. Also God is never wrathful, angry or vengeful.
Read that sentence carefully, I used commas, not full-stops. It was a progression of events.Jesus was a man, even though he was God also. BTW, what would be wrong with singing loudly?
**CFun: **Things to consider:The Natural Law is for man, not for God. His actions do not invalidate it, not that they violate them anyway. :sad_yes: - Go on …
Harem warfare was the way of the land back then. This is the complete destruction of opposing tribes. Whole cultures had to be destroyed so as to not lead Israel astray. Interesting historical data - seems to turn the focus from God to the Israelites a bit here … butopcorn:We see Israel fall away and return to God on numerous occasions. true … The neighbouring tribes with their own beliefs would have simply led Israel astray once again. Ok. God told Moses and Israel He was driving many peoples out of the land He was going to give to them. And told them not to imitate their practices - one aspect of which was babykilling - immolating children to the (false) god Molech.
Remember that God’s covenant was not with anyone but Israel at this time. They were His people and He would protect them.
Remember Jesus’ teaching on divorce. God allowed divorce because the hearts of the Israelites were hard. In the same way, harem warfare was allowed because of the cultures and ingrained societal thinking of the time. Well, and as the OP noted God was commanding this one, not just giving his approval after Israel’s prayer (which was done in other cases).
The same logic cannot be applied to couples having an abortion for the simple fact that there is a difference between warfare and everyday life. Well yes. And also that God commanded the Amalekite action (with all its consequences) – whereas the couple opting for abortion is acting destructively on their own and destroying life that belongs to - and is created by God.
By your logic, the warfare permitted by God would also make it okay for us to kill our neighbour and kill our neighbour’s cattle etc. There is a clear difference between warfare and how we live our lives and the morality involved. You make a good point - but “permitted” is wrong in this case, the critical word is “commanded” by God.
Israel obedient to God here is not willing in itself to break “Thou shalt not kill” nor even “Thou shalt not covet” as they’d have kept livestock and spoils if acting selfishly. The Amalekites were under a doom, like the people in Noah’s time. Instead of nature, God commanded obedience of His people.
HE created the Amalekites, the Israelites, the people of Noah’s time. All dead now (with most lives ending in not so nice ways) - even old age or a death so sudden one didn’t have time to say “ouch”.
Killing of an enemy in warfare is not murder, and never has been. Agreed. The additional dooming of women and children … even unto children in the womb was the OPs point though.
In addition to your best points I’d add these to address other aspects of the OPs “possible justiification for
abortions today - from God and the Bible.” < WHAT a breathtaking mission THAT is! :hypno:
That doesn’t apply to abortion even in the least. God can only “owe” something to the Amalekites (or first-born of Egypt before the Exodus) because he specifically ordered their killings. God doesn’t command the modern pregnant woman to abort. She has no indication that it is God’s will for her and her child, yet chooses it of her own volition (theoretically).Akin says that God could make it up to the innocent Amalekites by giving them heaven. That applies just as well to abortion.
Interesting point - I had a cancer removed … and the doc took out a perimeter of “good tissue” too - to make sure the cancer was completely removed. Skin cancer, not malignant BTW.When a person goes to a doctor to excise a tumor does the doctor only remove part of it?
The get-out-jail-card to end all get-out-of-jail cards. But isn’t it a little capricious that God commands others to kill on his behalf and then does the deed himself on other occasions?With the babies, their slates did not have much sin on them, none for the unborn.
They lacked baptism, etc. of course - but as the Church has remarked, some are saved
" … in ways known but to HIm …"![]()
A danger of what?In light of the original question, wouldn’t it be a danger to the Israelites to kill the Amalekite prenant woman as much as one having or preforming an abortion?
If the reasoning is that abortions damage the souls of the aborter, wouldn’t killing prenant women also carry the same damage to the souls of the Israelites?A danger of what?
How do you compare both?