To aChristian:
I'll respond as I'm able, as we've got lots going on today.
: You wrote: In any civilized society, when a criminal can be isolated it is he and he alone who is punished. ... Who in his right mind would say that killing the entire innocent family of a murderer along with the killer is right? I'm sure you don't. Yet you excuse exactly this kind of conduct on the part of God.
: When people kill people they have no ability to restore the lives of the ones they kill. God does and, according to the scriptures, He will. So, God has never ended anyone's life. He has only interrupted some lives.
Resurrection is irrelevant. No matter who kills someone, according to this argument God can and will resurrect the dead one. Thus murder by anyone is no big deal, because God will set everything right in the end.
Obviously the above line of reasoning is abhorrent to ethical people when it's applied to humans killing humans. How can you argue that it's fine for God to do exactly the same thing he condemns humans for doing? Why should any Christian be concerned with murder at all? Why be concerned with any kind of misconduct against people, since God will make it all right in the end? In other words, what's the point of morality?
: We should also consider the fact that when God interrupted the lives of many innocent children when He flooded the land of Noah He may well have been showing those children great mercy. For if God had ended the lives of their parents and spared the lives of all their children He would have created a lot of very sad orphans. By taking the lives of the parents and children together in Noah's flood, God was, in effect, transporting them both into the future to a time when, I believe, most all of them will live forever together in paradise.
Well then, I assume you would have no objection to U.S. forces going into Afghanistan and wiping out all the orphans there. After all, all they'd be doing is transporting them into the future to a time when, you believe, most all of them will live together forever in paradise.
: I base this belief on the fact that Jesus said, "A time is coming when ALL who are in their graves will hear his voice and come out." (John 5:28) "All" means all. Including those who have died in God's judgments such as the flood. We know this because Jesus said that the people who died when God destroyed Sodom and Gomorra will be resurrected. And I believe he indicated that most of them will be judged with mercy at that time. (Matt. 10:15; 11:23,24) It follows then that the same can be said of the many people, including children, who died in the flood.
The resurrection is a very nice idea that, when you carefully examine its mechanism, creates more problems than it solves. The basic problem is this: for a person to be resurrected, there must be continuity of physical existence from the original person to the resurrected one. If there is no physical continuity -- whether that be in our material realm, or in some postulated "spiritual" realm -- then the resurrected one can never be the original, but only a duplicate, a copy -- no matter how close to perfect. This is easy to see by a thought experiment. Suppose God decided to create two identical copies of the resurrectee. How would anyone decide which one is the original? Keep in mind that, being omipotent, God could do this. The argument that God would not ever do this is not relevant, since we're talking about principle, not practice. I.e., the copy would still be a copy.
According to what I clearly understand the Bible to say, when a person dies he is unconscious, perhaps even completely out of existence. Otherwise what would be the point of scriptures like Job 14:13? "I wish you would hide me with the dead and forget me there until your anger has passed. But mark your calendar to think of me again!" What scriptures can you find that clearly indicate a continuity of physical existence?
Interestingly, the Bahai religion actually acknowledges these problems and has come up with a sort of solution for it: that humans are somehow attached to a sort of unconscious quasi-entity that, when a person dies, is stored away in some sort of warehouse in the "spirit realm" for future resurrection. How they get that out of the Bible rather than their imagination I do not know.
: You wrote: Tell me, aChristian, if God directly told you to kill your family, would you do it? ... How about if he told you to kill a thousand of your neighbors and gave you the weapons to do it? Would you think it right for God to do so?
: Your questions sort of remind me of some others. Like the infamous one, "Are you still beating your wife?" Answering such questions with either a "Yes" or "No" is sure to get a person in trouble. Fortunately, I believe that the proper Christian answer to the questions you asked is neither "Yes or "No."
Your analogy is incorrect. The fallacy of the "are you still beating your wife" thing is that there exists a third alternative that the question does not allow for: that the one questioned has never beaten his wife. My question clearly has only two answers: yes or no. Either you obey God, or disobey. There is no in-between. Therefore, not answering yes or no is sidestepping the question, which I will point out further below.
: My answer is this: I am convinced beyond all doubt that God would never tell me to do such things.
This is the sidestep. My question was, "if God directly told you..." Obviously that means that you must know that it is God talking to you. My question is not about whether you think God would tell you to do such things, but if he did, what you would do.
This is much like asking a Jehovah's Witness, "What would you do if the Society told you to start worshiping Jesus rather than God?" The JW would use every possible maneuver to avoid answering the question. The reply that "the Society would never do such a thing" is simply a means of avoiding answering. We've seen how a formerly staunchly anti-trinitarian religion -- Armstrong's Worldwide Church of God -- can quickly do an about face and teach the trinity and all its trappings, so the question is not just theoretical.
: So, if anyone told me to do such things I would know the person speaking was not God.
How would you know? Remember that my questions was, "if God directly told you..." I deliberately phrased it so as to give you no wiggle room.
: Yes, I am aware of the fact that God once commanded Abraham to kill his son, Isaac. And I am aware of the fact that God once instructed the Israelites to entirely wipe out large communities of people in the land of Canaan. However, I believe God had a purpose in ordering such actions. And I believe that purpose was completely fulfilled thousands of years ago. And because it was, I do not believe God would ever order anyone to do anything like that again.
Why? Do you fully know God's mind? Are you certain that those ancient commands will never be repeated?
: Thus, if anyone ever ordered me to kill my family or my neighbors there is nothing the person or entity who was giving me such instructions could do to convince me they were God.
But my question is obviously about your having established for a fact that you were speaking to God, just like Abraham and other Bible characters did, and then being hit with this doozie.
: Alan, I'll address your concerns in your most recent post late tomorrow. I've gotta get some sleep. And I've got a pretty full day tomorrow. Wasn't life easier when we didn't do holidays? Nah. At least now we don't have to knock on doors.
Now I'll go back to my holiday cheer and eat and drink and be merry! Cheers and Merry Christmas!
AlanF