I know that this is what you sincerely believe. But I hope you don’t expect me to just fold my cards and say: “Whoa, the Catholic Church claims that only the Catholic Church is authorized to interpret the Bible… so I must just bow down to the self-proclaimed authority of the Church!”.
Strawman fallacy. The authority of the church is not self proclaimed, it is divinely ordained and guided by the Holy Spirit, which is a member of the holy trinity that is God. This makes the church infallible on faith and morals. He’s the argument so I don’t have to type it out.
catholic.com/library/Apostolic_Succession.asp
catholic.com/library/Papal_Infallibility.asp
catholic.com/library/Scripture_and_Tradition.asp
I do find most our past repugnant, and there is nothing hypocritical about it. I am glad that nowadays such an attitude is also found repugnant. Maybe you don’t, though I doubt it. If you and your family would be on the receiving end of a marauding gang, if your loved ones were raped - then you would be upset - though, according to your words you should not be. After all “might makes right”.
The might makes right principle still triumphs today. Only in place of “physical strength” which constituted “might” in the past, we have “wealth”. Wealthy corporations, people, and countries are, for all intensive purposes, exempt from the law. Why? Well they can afford better lawyers, bribe corrupt judges, and pay people off. OJ Simpson murdered his wife and then wrote a book about how he did it. He couldn’t do that if he wasn’t famous and made minimum wage. Wealthy nations can invade other countries and do all the raping, pillaging, and killing they want. If other countries don’t have nuclear weapons, then there isn’t really anything they can do about it, since they just have empty threats. One of the biggest reasons my country has been on relatively peaceful terms with other “mighty” and powerful countries is…paradoxically…the threat of nuclear annihilation.
So then, by your own standard, you find our past repugnant and also our present, and then by some leap of logic you detest the actions of God. That’s hypocritical.
Let me simplify it for you: You can’t qualify the term “evil” or you believe it is relative. What you really mean when you say that God in the Old Testament is “evil” is that you “don’t approve of his actions”. You don’t have an objective standard for “good” and “evil”. The term “evil” for you is synonymous with “what is displeasing to me”.
You haven’t proved that genocide or mass murder is absolutely wrong, or “evil”. If a race of people collectively broke out into an deadly epidemic that would eventually spread to people of other ethnicities and wipe out the population of the planet, …would it then be wrong to commit genocide to save the human race and save yourself? You will probably say yes.
What if you were numbered one of the infected? You would probably say no, because human morality is built on the survival of the species; what enables us to survive is labeled “good” and what is detrimental to the development of the species is labeled evil. Read Nietzsche.
How I love that it “may” have a poetic significance. May have…
I’m not a Catholic Theologian; I’m a layperson who reads a lot of philosophy…so I don’t know. If you are genuinely curious, why don’t you ask someone else?
Hehe… just imagine those toddlers burning to death and they start to “fear” God.
I’m a moral consequentialist when it comes to the actions of God. If God kills someone, then they deserve to die. If they don’t deserve to die, then God acomodates them in the afterlife. You don’t accept the premise of Original Sin though, which logically entails that all human beings are wicked, evil, and deserving of death, so I understand where you are coming from.
False analogy? On the contrary. The analogy is not a simple analogy. Here it comes, spelled out: “to do something personally and to allow something, if you have the knowledge beforehand, and you have the power to prevent it - are indentical”. The guilt by commission and the guilt by omission are only different, if you don’t have the knowledge and/or don’t have the power to prevent it.
It was actually the fallacy of equivocation, not analogy. Sorry.
“If torturing someone to death is evil” …it may not be evil, depends on the context.
“then allowing them to be crushed to death is also evil” …these two statements are not logically connected, you don’t qualify the term “evil”, and it’s just a bad exercise in logic in general.
“Allowing someone to be crushed to death” is not logically equivalent to “torturing them to death”. You’ve failed to demonstrate why…at least in a logical argumentative sense…