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05-14-2005, 01:11 PM | #131 | |
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I presume you hope you are in the armies of heaven. (Rev 19:14) rather than the partygoers of hell. Rev. 19:15 talks about the "winepress of the fury of the Lord." What will that look like? Rev. 14:19-20 gives us a pretty vivid picture. It says that blood will flow to the height of a horses' bridle (say 6 feet very conservatively) and for a distance of about 180 Miles. Can you envision that much blood? 6 ft deep by 180 miles by unknown width. Heck, make it 40 ft width, the width of a highway, shoulder to shoulder. THAT is a lot of blood. If God came to you, in Heaven, and said, "Hey, you are part of the Army of Heaven, and I must have, to fulfill prophecy, blood this deep. Here's a sword, knock yourself out" would you go out and kill man, woman, and child to achieve God's Goal? |
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05-14-2005, 02:07 PM | #132 | |||||||
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Now when a child dies, even given God's decision that this be the case, is this to be considered brutality? Does he have that prerogative? That is my main question here. Then the next question is whether he ever involves people in carrying out his judgments. Quote:
I would then ask, do we have any instance of these Israelites thinking they knew what to do in carrying out God's orders, when in fact, they did not? Well, they did: Joshua 9:16 Three days after they made the treaty with the Gibeonites, the Israelites heard that they were neighbors, living near them. Or even more noteably, at the defeat at Ai (Josh. 7-8). And did they have any experience of God carrying out supernatural judgments resulting even in people's deaths, with a human agent involved in carrying them out? They had that, too, in the plague of hail in Egypt, and at the Red Sea. Now drowning is not painless, but I believe the hailstones were not dropped randomly, and could certainly dispatch someone instantly. So I don't think we have to draw the conclusion that an action taken was the method that was prescribed. Quote:
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Regards, Lee |
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05-14-2005, 04:57 PM | #133 | |
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I'm beginning to see your view of god. Whatever she/he/it wants to do is perfectly alright no matter how much suffering his actions may intail. And yet you worship a creature who has this quality. Surely you must see the implications of your attitude. Isn't this really a slave mentality? Remember, now, we're speaking about an all-powerful, all-benevolent god, so you can't say the suffering is all for the best, since there had to be a way for this all-powerful god to accomplish his ends without all that suffereing. Don't you sometimes wonder whether your god might not be all-malevolent? |
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05-14-2005, 05:20 PM | #134 | |
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So no quick stabs to the heart. God instructs that all these people be hacked to death. Like being hacked to death by an axe. Only todays axes are made from carbon steel and hold a sharp edge. Joshua's swords were made from bronze mostly. The swords of the rich would have been made of soft iron. None of them would have held an edge very long. So it's the same order as if God insisted that every man woman and child be hacked to death by blunt axes. If the hacking of babies to pieces with blunt instruments not your idea of brutality then may I ask what is? |
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05-14-2005, 05:45 PM | #135 | |
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As a Jew, I have to say I'm mortified - bordering on horrified - by the spin you are putting on these texts and - worse - the whole "Tyre sank but nobody noticed" concept on That Other Thread. IMO, you are making a mockery of faith and giving a backhanded slap to the face of thousands of years of Jewish study that struggles with these particular passages for the obvious reason they are, quite plainly, brutally violent instructions from G-d. |
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05-14-2005, 08:08 PM | #136 | |
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It's nice to know that people do struggle with it as opposed to ignore it like most, though. |
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05-14-2005, 08:41 PM | #137 | |
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From here: "As we saw in Chapter 1, there had always been a strong tradition of unquestioning obedience to authority in the pre-colonial kingdom of Rwanda . This tradition was of course reinforced by both the German and Belgian colonial administrations. And since independence the country had lived under a well-organised tightly-controlled state. When the highest authorities in that state told you to do something you did it, even if it included killing. There is some similarity here to the Prussian tradition of the German state and its ultimate perversion into the disciplined obedience to Nazi orders. Political scientists tell us that the state can be defined by its monopoly of legitimate organised violence. Where does the legality of the exercise of that monopoly stop? In time of war, people who refuse to carry out orders to commit violent acts can be shot. And we will see that violence and compulsion were used in the Rwandese case. This obviously constitutes no excuse, especially since, as we will also see, some people found in their religious faith or simply in their individual conscience the strength to resist the orders. But we have to realise that this is a society where two factors combine to make orders hard to resist. The first is a strong state authoritarian tradition going back to the roots of Rwandese culture. The Tutsi abami were definitely not constitutional monarchs, and killing was even an accepted sign of their political health--the difference being of course in the order of magnitude and social inscription of the killings. The second is an equally strong acceptance of group identification. In Rwanda, as elsewhere, a man is judged by his individual character, but in Rwandese culture he does not stand alone but is part of a family, a lineage and a clan, the dweller on a certain Hill. On top of this age-old feeling, the tight administrative practices (and regional discriminatory policies) of the regime had reinforced this 'collective grounding of identity'. When the authorities gave the orders to kill and most of the group around you complied, with greater or less enthusiasm, it took a brave man indeed to abandon solidarity with the crowd and refuse to go along. And such a heroic position would not be without personal danger. Sadistic killers such as the notorious Murambi bourgmestre Remy Gatete seem to have been in a small minority and heroes such as prefet Jean-Baptiste Habyarimana were even rarer. The vast majority of civil servants carried out their murderous duties with attitudes varying from careerist eagerness to sullen obediences. " |
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05-14-2005, 09:43 PM | #138 | ||||||
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Joshua 10:40 So Joshua smote all the country of the hills, and of the south, and of the vale, and of the springs, and all their kings: he left none remaining, but utterly destroyed all that breathed, as the LORD God of Israel commanded. God commanded. Joshua smote all that breath with the edge of the sword. Quote:
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DT 32:41 If I whet my glittering sword, and mine hand take hold on judgment; I will render vengeance to mine enemies, and will reward them that hate me. I will make mine arrows drunk with blood, and my sword shall devour flesh; and that with the blood of the slain and of the captives, from the beginning of revenges upon the enemy. Quote:
God has turned the Amorites over to you. He's ordered Joshua to utterly destroy them all with full knowledge that Joshua is doing that over and over with the edge of the sword. God himself has whetted his glittering sword to devour flesh. And here it is. Take it. Now how you intend to butcher and hack this baby to death without brutality or cruelty is going to be quite the miracle. Only don't look to God for that grace. It's his sword you've got there. Obviously, if you've read the story by now, God's justice and vengeance is in fact all that breath be brutally and cruelly hacked to death. Otherwise, God might have made them just disappear. God commanded this brutal genocide. It's not your place as mere human to judge God or his motivations or his justice, vengeance, or morality. God commands it, therefore he must have a good reason to command it. It's a question of faith. Do you have faith in God and the men like Moses who bring the story of God to us. That is the question. |
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05-14-2005, 10:06 PM | #139 | |||
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Brutality wasn't ordered. Please! God commanded the Israelites to move into the land as he promised Abraham. What of the people that lived there? They were wicked and worthy of utter destruction, you know just like the Israelites. God commanded the Israelites to move into the promised land and kill all that breath to satisfy God's justice and vengeance. Joshua and Moses commanded to kill all that breath with the edge of the sword, and God himself commanded Joshua to keep doing it in Joshua 10:40 Quote:
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05-15-2005, 12:37 AM | #140 | |
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