sock puppet wrote:No parity there. If I believe in the god(s) of the Bible, I must reconcile this God killing infants with a God that commands that I shall not kill. A little bit of hypocrite there. A God who says, do as I say not as I do, essentially. The reason this is a more compelling question than the world's origin is it impacts how I will live my life, if I otherwise would want to go about my life killing people. Since I do not, I blithely ignore it, except for the humor that comes from realizing there are people that believe (a) it is "bad" to kill other people, (b) God is omnibenevolent, but (c) God kills people. It's even funnier to see these believers find refuge in the mysterious--we don't know God's reasons for doing so. God works in mysterious ways. Not so mysterious. God's a hypocrite. That's not too mysterious. Funny, but not mysterious.
Hi sock,
The point I was making has nothing to do with how compelling we might find the one issue vs. the other, sock. That's not where the parity lies. Stormy Waters suggested that the way he might sidestep a critique of his own worldview is by "simply" punting to ignorance. Demand answers from others while exempting his own view from scrutiny.
I don't think that's the best option for either myself or for him, but what's sauce for the goose, etc.
If I believe in the god(s) of the Bible, I must reconcile this God killing infants with a God that commands that I shall not kill.
Your objection appears to hinge on the assumption that God as creator has precisely the same set of moral obligations as his creatures. But, it's not clear to me how you reached that conclusion. Is it, perhaps, due to a residual Mormon intuition/belief? If God is merely an exalted man who attained Godhood by obedience to moral laws that preexisted him and constrained his actions, then I can see how your objection would make some sort of sense. But, that’s not a traditionally-Christian view of God’s relationship to the world.
Christians typically believe that God exercises (or, at least, is free to exercise) absolute rights over his creation as he sees fit. Job confessed, “The LORD gave, and the LORD has taken away; blessed be the name of the LORD" (Job 1:21, ESV). The psalmist writes, “Our God is in the heavens; he does all that he pleases” (Psa 115:3, ESV). The book of Daniel places on the lips of Nebuchadnezzar the confession, “…All the inhabitants of the earth are accounted as nothing, and he does according to his will among the host of heaven and among the inhabitants of the earth; and none can stay his hand or say to him, ‘What have you done?’” (Dan 4:35, ESV).
So, your assertion that God is a hypocrite for normatively proscribing murder of creatures by creatures and also authorizing the killing of the Amalekites, for example, suggests to me that you don’t have a firm handle on the Christian conception of God’s rights in relation to his creatures.
But, the more general concept I’m referring to—the normative injunction again killing sitting side-by-side with the authorization/command to kill certain others—is not unknown even in relatively mundane affairs.
Is Obama a hypocrite because federal law forbids
you from killing people with an M16A4—assuming, that is, that you’re not on active duty in a warzone?
But, it’s not general US policy to target innocents in our current military involvements. So, let’s consider a more comprehensive example: Was Truman a hypocrite for commanding and authorizing the deployment of the “Little Boy” and “Fat Man” weapons over the cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, respectively, because you would not have been so authorized to have done so and it would have been illegal for you to have done so without the requisite stationing and order?
But, perhaps you’re a thoroughgoing pacifist who eschews any notion of Just war theory. If so, I can respect that, and I’ll consider it going forward.
If you, on principle, object to God’s elective destruction of human life for reasons he deems sufficient, can I assume, as well, that you oppose the killing of fetuses generally, or, at least, that of viable fetuses?
That would be a silver lining.