Balder said:
I appreciate what you are saying, but it doesn't really address my concerns. I am not saying I'm shocked at what humans can do. I'm not. We can do terrible things.
My problem is with the justification of some of our worst acts in the name of God, such as the defense of genocide which is occurring on this thread.
Which shows that Fool's question was relevant, because modern day Christians are indeed using the Bible to defend these acts in principle.
Okay, I'll play stupid for you.
Your profile says you are a Buddhist. Doesn't Buddhism believe that Karma dictates what happens to a person, and whether they are reincarnated as a cocroach or a vulture if they have bad Karma and as something better if they have good Karma?
If that is the case, then the only defense your religion has against genocide is that it is bad Karma, and you might be reincarnated as something unpleasant.
Please correct me if I am misrepresenting the beliefs of your religion.
In Judeo-Christianity, the God of the Bible has the responsibility for destroying wicked nations. He has given the responsibility for destroying wicked individuals to the various governments of the earth.
As servants of the God of the Bible, we share in the responsibilities of our God, and have the obligation to destroy wicked nations with the sword (or other weapon of war) when ordered. Because our God is merciful, we can plead for the life of the wicked (as God told Ezekiel), and we can plead for the lives of the non-wicked that would be killed with the wicked (as Abram did). But, we are obligated to be prepared to carry through with the orders of God (as Abraham was prepared), or there can be worse outcomes (as when Saul refused to kill an enemy king).
I will stand for the principle that wickedness demands destruction by its very existence. Wickedness is a social disease, which infects everyone who witnesses it. This demands greater destruction than you are willing to approve of.
The Bible does not allow individuals to become vigilantes, and hunt down wicked people. That is classified as murder. The wicked individuals are to be judged against the law before they are killed. In the same manner, wicked nations are to be judged by God before they are destroyed. IF GOD determines that a wicked nation is to be destroyed completely and utterly, then the blood of the wicked nation is on God, not on His servants. Yes, this sounds a lot like the "I was only following orders" defense. That is because the only one who can correctly determine whether the killing was done in order to comply with His orders is God.
Because there can be confusion about whether God is ordering a wicked nation to be killed, a Christian should plead the case of the wicked nation in front of God in sincerity. If a Christian cannot do this, then the Christian should tell God that they have hatred for the wicked nation in their heart, and that is the reason they cannot take part in the destruction.
God does not destroy the wicked nations with glee. He does it with sadness. Great sadness. He does not do it because of a whim, He does it when He must. God, more than anyone, wants an excuse for not destroying the wicked. If there is no one to plead the cause of the wicked nation, then He will do His duty and destroy it.
God has used many different means to destroy wicked nations. He has used the flood. He has used the Red Sea. He has used fire and brimstone. The method used the most often has been War.
When God ordered the Children of Israel to kill everything that breathes in certain cities, they could have pled with Him. If they had, I believe that it would have been written. They had the examples of Moses and Abraham. Both were written in the Torah and spoken to them within a month of their attack on Jericho. The Children of Israel did not understand the mercy of God, or they did not understand the examples of Moses and Abraham. They did not plead for the lives of the wicked nations. They did have the example of the hundreds of thousands of deaths in the forty years in the desert, followed by the example of the parting of the Jordan. This was followed by three days of pain as their new circumcisions were healing, and then God orders them to do the strangest siege of a walled city in the history of mankind. When the walls fell down, they followed the orders.
The Children of Israel had been attacked needlessly by several nations on their way to the land God had promised them. They learned that they could fight against large armies. Jericho was an example to them and to the surrounding nations because it was one of the largest and best fortified cities in the promised land. After the war against Jericho, God turned against the entire nation of the Children of Israel because of the actions of Achor, a single soldier in their army. The Children of Israel were being taught by the most graphic means that the sins of an individual are counted against everyone in a nation. Corporate punishment is the rule, not the exception. This includes infants.
The examples of Jericho are meant to show that a nation cannot afford to tolerate wickedness. The Laws of Moses spell out plainly that cities are to remove the evil from within their midst through capital punishment in order to ensure that God has no just cause to destroy that city. This is a lesson that was quickly forgotten.