You are dismissive of the fact they were senticed to die. They could have been struck steril or been wiped out in a natural disaster, forced to find a new home, any number of things. You yourself said that they were so corrupting that it justified their killing.
If their killing was justified because of their idolatry and child sacrifice, it would stand that if it condemned them in this role it would condemn them in the next. We have no indication that they were repentant or even believed they were doing anything wrong in oder to repent.
This, by the way, is still a side track of my argument.
My original point was that “in principle” God could be justified in commanding the “removal” of a malevolent culture in order to stop its influence from spreading to all humanity.
Perhaps there was something particularly pernicious about this culture, but that needn’t have been the case. Maybe it had more to do with its position in history. That it’s influence was upon a nascent humanity or that it threatened a very necessary and crucial subsequent event within its proximity either temporally or spatially. There is no need to assume that it was necessarily exponentially more evil, because it could be that the threat was more a matter of timing or location.
In any case, I need not show particular details to demonstrate that God’s command could “in principle” justify such a command. You don’t seem to get the idea of “in principle.”
To show “in principle” that a surgeon might be right to remove a leg from a cancerous patient does not mean I have to show that every surgeon is right to do so, nor even that this particular surgeon was right, only that it is possible for a surgeon to rightly do so under certain conditions.
That is all my argument comes to. It could “in principle” be right for the 3omni God to command the decimation of a culture if the continued existence of that culture ON EARTH could have completely devastating effects on the future of humanity. Just as it is “in principle” right for a surgeon to remove a cancerous patient’s leg if not doing so could end the life of the patient.
Rebut or accept that argument before we move to the specifics of the OT case. You haven’t shown how that argument is wrong except by harping back to specifics of the OT narrative. However, even showing that the Israelites were wrong about God’s command to them does not refute the “in principle” argument.
In the meantime, what you are doing is ambiguating the two arguments to your advantage by picking on the “unknown” aspects of the OT narratives.
Time to come clean. If you think it is in principle always wrong for the 3omni God to intervene in history by removing a bad culture to save humanity as an entire species from extinction, then you must accept that it is also in principle always wrong for a surgeon to remove a cancer patient’s leg even to save that patient’s life.
Is that what you are claiming? Never right, in principle? Why?
No more ambiguation - a moral possibility or not?