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Mike_from_NJ
Guest
That’s a false dichotomy. God could have done a great number of things:So, what better alternative do you see?
Those examples have little to do with the subject. Why not make a closer example - A stupidly asking some B not to kill him (and some of A’s friends) and promising to kill his daughter in B’s honour if B won’t kill him? Well, do you think B should actually allow himself to be blackmailed into killing A and his friends in such case?
Or do you understand that in this case the correct answer is not to kill A and his friends, and if A still commits murder, that’s his fault - not a fault of anyone else?
- The Spirit of the Lord had earlier came upon Jepthah, so he could have communicated with Jephthah to consider rescinding the vow.
- The Lord could have convinced the elders of Gilead to support someone other than Jephthah.
- He could have had Jephthah die in combating the Ammonites.
- He could have Jepthah injured in battle with the Ammonites, where someone else steps up to take Jepthah’s place (so that the Ammonites are defeated but are put in Jephthah’s replacement’s hands).
- He could have the Ammonites retreat.
- He could have a chicken come out to greet Jephthah on his return home.
- He could have interrupted Jephthah’s daughter being made a burnt offering like he did with Abraham and Isaac.
- He could have summoned a mighty wind to magically whisk Jephthah’s daugher away before being burnt.