T
Telstar
Guest
God did not teach them to kill sinners, just for the sake of killing them. God commanded them to kill for the sake of protecting their growing society from the kind of corruption that those types of sins cause. You seem to have the notion that this was being sanctioned as an unjust act of vengeance by God. It was not. It was done in order to protect His chosen people from degenerating into far more barbaric practices that many pagan people around them were practicing at that time. Like sacrificing their own children to pagan “gods” in order to gain special favors. God was trying to protect them from those evil influences. It was meant more as a deterrent.Being in a position or not, to accept or not doesn’t mean one should be taught to kill another person for a sin. So what your saying is God could only teach people to kill each other over certain sins at that time.
You’ll notice that the Jews brought the “woman caught in adultery” to Jesus, because He was considered to be a teacher (Rabbi) who would have a certain amount of authority among them. Of course, they only did it to test Jesus. But, it was customary for someone with authority to make a judgement in such a case. They didn’t just start hurling rocks at someone without there being some sort of ‘trial’. You seem to think they just killed people at random just because they suspected they had committed some kind of sin. It wasn’t like that, at all. God made laws for His people in the same way that men make laws, today. Except, God’s laws are always just, but the same cannot be said about the laws of men.But God had taught that people should be put to death from the time of Moses, even when Jesus had folllowers they still murdered people, that is why I don’t fully believe God taught people to kill each other over sin, land or whatever humans deem belongs to them.
How do you know that God, in His mercy, didn’t allow them to be killed as a means of punishing them in this life, so they could be saved from damnation in the next? We should always remember that God’s ways are not our ways, and our ways are not God’s ways.But he wasn’t accepting people were they were in their sin, he was commanding they be killed for a number of sins.