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Peter_Plato
Guest
But, admittedly, you are not God, nor do you know the far reaching effects of events that occurred over three thousand years ago and how those events could have changed the course of world history.I have absolutely no difficulty in saying that killing of women and children is evil without equivocation under any circumstances, I am surprised that you do.
To turn the question back on you…
If you were absolutely certain it was God giving a command directly to you and you knew this because of a series of miraculous events that left absolutely no doubt in your mind because these events were public events witnessed by thousands of people, what moral justification would you have for not carrying out what God explicitly commands?
Obviously, if it undeniably was the Creator of the universe, the One who is the omniscient, omnipotent and omnibenevolent source of all being that gave the command, under what ethical system could you claim to know better than God what YOU SHOULD do?
Your knowledge of ultimate consequences is limited. Any choices you make are “shots in the dark” when you take into consideration long term effects, so what moral principle would justify preferring your own determination to God’s, given that he has far greater moral resources (benevolence, knowledge of all relevant factors, insight into the internal states of all human beings, knowledge of the demands of justice, etc.) to make a better moral determination than you do?
Recall that the events in the OT were not mere “voices” in the heads of Jewish leaders. God, through a series of unprecedented and public miraculous wonders took the time to convince the Jewish people, on mass, concerning the reality that God himself was leading them. The record is clear here.
This wasn’t a little voice in Jon S’s head prompting him to go out and do a heinous act, it was a series of events that could only have been initiated by God that convinced the Jewish leaders that it undeniably was God who was making the demand.
At least get the history straight before putting someone into a ‘logical conundrum’ to make cheap points. Moses and Joshua were not moral idiots, the Canaanites and surrounding tribes were engaged in heinous acts that God explicitly states he had been “patient” with them concerning for over three hundred years. This very likely meant he had sent them clear messages to cease and desist - as he had done with the Assyrians (Jonah.)
Once again, if the presumption is made that God did NOT order the Israelites to carry out these acts, you have warrant for claiming the heinous nature of the acts. However, if you begin with the premise that God did order the Israelites to do so, YOU would have great difficulty showing why they ought NOT have carried out what they had been ordered to.