In modern times we have people telling us that their God told them to kill. We think this absurd. But God told Abraham to murder Isaac. It doesn't matter what the outcome was, we have a precedent for God telling a human to murder another human and not, apparently, because the boy deserved to die, as did the suckling infants in another tale.
Is the command correct just because it is God's?
Was Abraham right in agreeing to commit murder?
Was it right for God to order Abraham to kill?
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Post #61JehovahsWitness wrote:. Do you REALLY have to be asked if it is right for God to order people to kill is right (or for people to carry out killing commands they believe have been God-ordered)?
Yes.
Of course the alternative is to employ your mind reading capacities or presume to guess, but if you want to know rather than just believe in your heart that you already know.... you will indeed need to ask.
It is arrogant to assume that one infallibly knows the mind of God. It is wicked to ignore minimum standards of civilised behaviour in the belief that one is carrying out a divine command. We are told NOT to kill; if our little voice urges us to do so, we are entitled to refuse; in fact we must refuse. It is a dangerous road to go down to believe that wickedness can be seen as otherwise when God seems to command it.
Of course there are borderline cases. Is marriage at 13 acceptable? In the case of an order to murder an innocent child there is no borderline case and any society that seeks to justify this command is wrong.JehovahsWitness wrote:
Because everybody has different standards, people have different morals,
Re: Was it right for God to order Abraham to kill?
Post #62For_The_Kingdom wrote:
Cmon now, marco. As familiar you are with Christian theology, I am sure you know that anytime God gives a command, it is morally justified.
So why ask the question?
I do not "know" this. If we are allowing God to issue what we see as wicked commands, then morality has gone. All that remains is a divine tyrant doing what he wants, just like Brennus the Gaul who threw the weight of his sword on the scales to demand more Roman gold, saying: "Vae victis!" Woe to the conquered.
As civilised humans encountering an order to do something wicked, like murder a child, we refuse on the basis that we have our moral code and the God we honour supposedly has given us this for guidance. We would deduce that Satan, not God, issued the order.
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Re:
Post #63Thank you for sharing.marco wrote:
It is arrogant to assume that one infallibly knows the mind of God. It is wicked to ignore minimum standards of civilised behaviour in the belief that one is carrying out a divine command. We are told NOT to kill; if our little voice urges us to do so, we are entitled to refuse; in fact we must refuse. It is a dangerous road to go down to believe that wickedness can be seen as otherwise when God seems to command it.
Was there a reason you chose to share these thoughts with me in particular? If so do you feel inclined to say what that reason was?
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"For if we live, we live to Jehovah, and if we die, we die to Jehovah. So both if we live and if we die, we belong to Jehovah" - Romans 14:8
http://debatingchristianity.com/forum/v ... 81#p826681
"For if we live, we live to Jehovah, and if we die, we die to Jehovah. So both if we live and if we die, we belong to Jehovah" - Romans 14:8
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Re: Was it right for God to order Abraham to kill?
Post #64Well, you know this is true according to "Christian theology". In fact, God's holiness/benevolence is permeated throughout Christian theology.marco wrote: I do not "know" this.
Now, you may not believe in the truth value of Christianity, but you at least know what the theology is all about, and God's holiness is one of central theme of it all.
If you don't believe in God, then objective moral values is out of the window anyway. Therefore, things like evil and wickedness...and even things like good/righteousness are all subjective and relative.marco wrote: If we are allowing God to issue what we see as wicked commands, then morality has gone.
So in essence, your beef with God's commands is based upon an unjustifiable moral compass, of which you can't provide any logical ground as to why any action (X) is right or wrong...other than "It is wrong because I said so".
Unbelieving tactic: Lets ignore all of the Bible where God rewards, forgives, blesses, shows grace, mercy, kindness, etc...lets ignore all of those parts, and lets focus on when God shows anger, justice, and discipline. Lets only focus on the parts of the Bible that gives us "justification" for disbelief.marco wrote: All that remains is a divine tyrant doing what he wants, just like Brennus the Gaul who threw the weight of his sword on the scales to demand more Roman gold, saying: "Vae victis!" Woe to the conquered.
Civilized animals*marco wrote: As civilised humans
All life belongs to God.marco wrote: encountering an order to do something wicked, like murder a child
Please justify why killing is wrong.marco wrote: , we refuse on the basis that we have our moral code and the God we honour supposedly has given us this for guidance. We would deduce that Satan, not God, issued the order.
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Post #65
It was a test of faith. Abram didn't know why he was asked this, he complied to find an answer.
Since God at this point was already planning to sacrifice His only begotten, maybe He wondered how man would react in the same circumstance. Free will and all.
Abram said to his servants he was coming back as well as his son. So, he knew the conclusion would benefit just not the details. God seems to always benefit us. Why doubt?
Since God at this point was already planning to sacrifice His only begotten, maybe He wondered how man would react in the same circumstance. Free will and all.
Abram said to his servants he was coming back as well as his son. So, he knew the conclusion would benefit just not the details. God seems to always benefit us. Why doubt?
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Post #66
Two questions.brianbbs67 wrote: It was a test of faith. Abram didn't know why he was asked this, he complied to find an answer.
Since God at this point was already planning to sacrifice His only begotten, maybe He wondered how man would react in the same circumstance. Free will and all.
Abram said to his servants he was coming back as well as his son. So, he knew the conclusion would benefit just not the details. God seems to always benefit us. Why doubt?
1) Is human blood sacrifice sin?
2) Does God ever tempt anyone to sin?
Something here, does not "compute".
My theological positions:
-God created us in His image, not the other way around.
-The Bible is redeemed by it's good parts.
-Pure monotheism, simple repentance.
-YHVH is LORD
-The real Jesus is not God, the real YHVH is not a monster.
-Eternal life is a gift from the Living God.
-Keep the Commandments, keep your salvation.
-I have accepted YHVH as my Heavenly Father, LORD and Savior.
I am inspired by Jesus to worship none but YHVH, and to serve only Him.
-God created us in His image, not the other way around.
-The Bible is redeemed by it's good parts.
-Pure monotheism, simple repentance.
-YHVH is LORD
-The real Jesus is not God, the real YHVH is not a monster.
-Eternal life is a gift from the Living God.
-Keep the Commandments, keep your salvation.
-I have accepted YHVH as my Heavenly Father, LORD and Savior.
I am inspired by Jesus to worship none but YHVH, and to serve only Him.
Re: Was it right for God to order Abraham to kill?
Post #67For_The_Kingdom wrote:
Now, you may not believe in the truth value of Christianity, but you at least know what the theology is all about, and God's holiness is one of central theme of it all.
I am trained to reassess a belief when I find a contradiction. Christian theology may well advertise its God as good. That is why I am puzzled that a good being would ask for the murder of a man's son. I am reading the attempted replies but find them unconvincing.
Completely irrelevant. We are discussing the tale of Yahweh and Abraham. For the purposes of the discussion they both exist, albeit I agree they may both be fictional characters.For_The_Kingdom wrote:
If you don't believe in God, then objective moral values is out of the window anyway. Therefore, things like evil and wickedness...and even things like good/righteousness are all subjective and relative.
For_The_Kingdom wrote:
Unbelieving tactic: Lets ignore all of the Bible where God rewards, forgives, blesses, shows grace, mercy, kindness, etc...lets ignore all of those parts, and lets focus on when God shows anger, justice, and discipline. Lets only focus on the parts of the Bible that gives us "justification" for disbelief.
This is a particularly weak way to argue. By all means let's examine God's acts of goodness when they are relevant. The case before us is one where Yahweh orders murder. He may well have done something kind the previous Wednesday, but is that relevant?
In fact we are discussing the COMMAND to murder a child not the actual killing. The world I live in - rightly or wrongly - considers an order to kill an innocent child as wicked. I happily submit that this view needs no defence.
Post #68
brianbbs67 wrote: It was a test of faith. Abram didn't know why he was asked this, he complied to find an answer.
A test is to discover what is as yet unknown. It wasn't a test. It may have been a game.
I take this is a jocular submission. God is hardly restricted by man's sun and moon in his "plans." I think your wondering God is a step in the human direction too far.brianbbs67 wrote:
Since God at this point was already planning to sacrifice His only begotten, maybe He wondered how man would react in the same circumstance. Free will and all.
brianbbs67 wrote:
Abram said to his servants he was coming back as well as his son. So, he knew the conclusion would benefit just not the details. God seems to always benefit us. Why doubt?
And is it not clear that Abraham would say this even when he fully intended to kill his son? If he KNEW the outcome, then the whole scenario is silly, serving only to perplex the boy and confuse readers.
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Re: Was it right for God to order Abraham to kill?
Post #69And I'd like to know where you are getting this sense of "good/bad" from...and how are you able to determine its virtue.marco wrote:
I am trained to reassess a belief when I find a contradiction. Christian theology may well advertise its God as good.
That is why I am puzzled that a good being would ask for the murder of a man's son.
No surprise.marco wrote: I am reading the attempted replies but find them unconvincing.
I am just merely asking you how/why is God's command of Abraham to kill his son an evil thing to command?marco wrote:
Completely irrelevant. We are discussing the tale of Yahweh and Abraham. For the purposes of the discussion they both exist, albeit I agree they may both be fictional characters.
Yeah, but if it is left up to a typical unbeliever, it is never relevant..and that is the point.marco wrote: This is a particularly weak way to argue. By all means let's examine God's acts of goodness when they are relevant.
Again, why is killing/murder a bad thing? Please explain.marco wrote: The case before us is one where Yahweh orders murder.
He also may well have a morally sufficient reason as why he would command the killing of someone.marco wrote: He may well have done something kind the previous Wednesday, but is that relevant?
So right/wrong is based upon what the "world" thinks? Ok, so if the "world" concludes that anyone under 6'5 tall needs to be executed, would that be ok (assuming you are under 6'5).marco wrote:
In fact we are discussing the COMMAND to murder a child not the actual killing. The world I live in - rightly or wrongly - considers an order to kill an innocent child as wicked.
See what happens when right/wrong is based on the world/society?
It does, actually.marco wrote: I happily submit that this view needs no defence.
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Re: Was it right for God to order Abraham to kill?
Post #70[Replying to post 68 by For_The_Kingdom]
It s all pretty much hearsay/opinion.
If one wishes to argue that a book claimed to be the word of a GOOD GOD is the way to go to determine right/wrong, well look how that little expedition is going!
What evidence is there that following that path is any better than following the 'right/wrong is based on the world/society' path, or simply following the dictates of ones own conscience for that matter?
At least in going it alone one does not have the stigma of the groups to contend with (worldly or secular) and one has also invested self responsibility into the equation in a more vibrant manner than those other mediums can accomplish.
Indeed, we are experiencing the analogue rather than digital - so on/off, 0/1, right/wrong are not altogether practical to that. It is simply never a case of black/white.
I am not convinced that even if it were based upon something else, we would be any closer to actually knowing what R&W are.See what happens when right/wrong is based on the world/society?
It s all pretty much hearsay/opinion.
If one wishes to argue that a book claimed to be the word of a GOOD GOD is the way to go to determine right/wrong, well look how that little expedition is going!
What evidence is there that following that path is any better than following the 'right/wrong is based on the world/society' path, or simply following the dictates of ones own conscience for that matter?
At least in going it alone one does not have the stigma of the groups to contend with (worldly or secular) and one has also invested self responsibility into the equation in a more vibrant manner than those other mediums can accomplish.
Indeed, we are experiencing the analogue rather than digital - so on/off, 0/1, right/wrong are not altogether practical to that. It is simply never a case of black/white.