Jam: Just last night reading Numbers 31:7-18. Is this a just, merciful God? God commanded Moses to kill all the males (Midianites). I guess to reduce the Midianites to slaves and put an end to them. Moses become angry with his army officers, why?
Numbers 31:15, have you kept all the women alive? Kill every male among the little ones and only keep alive for yourselves all the young girls who have not known a man intimately.
Again, you’re trying to judge these people through the prism of what you know, not from that which God knew. Because the people God led wanted to do their own will and not God’s, the writer of Psalms 106 declared, “[The Israelites] did not destroy the nations concerning whom the Lord commanded them: but were mingled among the heathen, and learned their works. And they served their idols: which were a snare unto them. Yea, they sacrificed their sons and their daughters unto devils, and shed innocent blood, even the blood of their sons and of their daughters, whom they sacrificed unto the idols of Canaan: and the land was polluted with blood.”
We see here that God was willing to slay the wicked to preserve the righteous, and to remove wicked cultures so that he might lead an obedient one.
Now if his intention was to commit genocide it did not work, because in Judges 6:1-2 they are back again, now the Midianites oppress Israel. You tell me, is this the act of a loving God??
I don’t know whether the Lord intentionally sought to commit genocide or not, but you read the passage from Psalms, you get the idea that because Israel did not hearken to the Lord, they paid a stiff price for it down the road, because the Israelite disobeyed a divine edict. As one author put it:
The Heathen Fertility Cults in Canaan
The greatest single factor of corruption among the Canaanites was their wild, sensuous fertility cults. Dr. Geikie furnishes a glimpse into the heathen religions of this age: “The chief god of the Canaanites was Baal—the sun—who was worshiped under different names. In one part he was Moloch, in another, Chemosh, but his worship was everywhere alike, fierce and cruel. His consort, Ashtoreth, the Babylonian goddess Istar, the goddess of love, worshiped as the morning star Venus, and, perhaps, also, as the moon—the Greeks translating her name Astarte—fostered abominations in her worship, almost inconceivable in our times. Erech was her chief city, and there she had, attached to her temple, choirs of festival-girls, and troops of consecrated maidens, all recognized as harlots, whose pay went to the temple treasury; and crowds of priests—the festival makers who had devoted their manhood’ — that is, emasculated themselves—that men ‘might adore the goddess,’ and these, in their rites, ‘carried swords, and razors, and flint knives,’ who in the wild frenzy of the sacred rites desired to dedicate themselves to the goddess, by self-mutilation, or to hack themselves as done by the priests, in Elijah’s time, at Carmel.”
Even worse than their sensuous debaucheries were their sacrificial rites which often used children as the sacrificial victims. For centuries these people had indulged themselves in these practices and were therefore considered ripe for extinction by the Lord. But Israel failed in her calling and allowed herself to be conquered by the very elements she was supposed to cleanse from the land. The tragedy of these days is caught in the blistering lines from the 106th Psalm: “They did not destroy the nations concerning whom the Lord commanded them: but were mingled among the heathen, and learned their works. And they served their idols: which were a snare unto them. Yea, they sacrificed their sons and their daughters unto devils, and shed innocent blood, even the blood of their sons and of their daughters, whom they sacrificed unto the idols of Canaan: and the land was polluted with blood.”