Thanks all for your responses!
anewperson:
I appreciate your response and understand where you are coming from. There was a time when I agreed with you. But upon further analysis, the typical JW thinking is not accurate nor realistic.
The women were not raped but preserved alive as females servants who might or might not be taken as wives later.Yes the virgins were preserved alive, but they were also no-doubt severely traumatized seeing their entire families murdered. Then they were made slaves to serve the very ones who murdered their families and friends. I seriously doubt (as a rule--keep reading) any woman who experiences this kind of horrendous inhumanity would be agreeable to marrying the one who murdered her family. But the Midianite girls had no choice. Therefore, it was rape.
Many Midianite men and women were killed, just as also at Sodom and Gomorrah, but they can all be resurrected (Jn 3:16).Simply put, the end does not justify the means. This type of justifiable-homicide thinking is a common JW distortion, even perversion. Just because God can resurrect a person does not absolve Him of the moral reprehensibility of murder. After all, didn’t God give humans Freewill? How can God say he gave us Freewill, and then destroy (murder) us for exercising that Freewill?
Is it justifiable for me as a father to abuse my son, even injure him physically for some mistake, because I know he will heal? Of course not!
It is morally reprehensible for any sentient being to harm another sentient being except in self-defense, or to rob another’s right of Freewill. This includes God. After all, He set the standard by giving us Freewill. Since He gave us Freewill, we each have the right to live as we see fit without reprisal, so long as it does not harm another.
You made a point to call God "evil" for taking their lives and now in fairness will you call God merciful for His plan to restore their lives? Answer this question please.This is very interesting point. Have you ever heard of “Stockholm Syndrome?” Basically it is the phenomenon that occurs to some people who have been taken hostage in which they fall in love (so to speak) with their captors. There is quite a bit of info on the web about it. There are 4 conditions necessary for Stockholm Syndrome to occur (taken from http://www.hugcares.org/ph/trauma/stockhol.htm ):
1. Perceived threat to one's physical or psychological survival and the belief that the captor would carry out the threat.
2. Perceived small kindness from the captor to the captive.
(Note: letting the captive live is enough.)
3. Isolation from perspectives other than those of the captor.
4. Perceived inability to escape.
Notice any similarities? By your comment, you are praising a supernatural murderer for showing “mercy” (a “perceived kindness”). Very interesting phenomenon, especially as it relates to cults and God. (Man, I feel an article comin’ on!).
So to answer your question: No, I will not call God merciful for killing people and then resurrecting them. The end does not justify the means.
The problem with religion and the Bible is that it blinds one to reality. We must think for ourselves, and not accept some explanation just because it is popular or because we grew up believing it.
FreePeace
"The World is my country, and to do good, my religion." --Thomas Paine
TruthQuest: http://beam.to/truthquest
Who Am I? -How to Reinvent Yourself After Leaving the WTS